
Fuck you, China.
John J. Xenakis wrote: > Ever since the Anglo-Japanese alliance and Anglo-Japanese treaties
> of the early 1900s, I actually think of Japan as being part of the
> "West."
Yeah, there was lots of xenophobia prior to WW II. There was AmericanBob Butler 54 wrote: > I could agree with the term, but not the date of the switchover.
> Japan remained autocratic, warlike and blatantly xenophobic until
> the cultural reboot at the end of World War II. Well, we were
> blatantly xenophobic too before that point. Japan was actually
> ahead of us for a while in switching to the racial part of the
> Information Age values.
> "Diplomatically, China declared war on the world in
> 1900 through the Boxer Rebellion, blaming their poor economic
> situation on Christianity and other foreign influences.
> But Japan went in the opposite direction signing, in January 1902,
> a treaty with Britain called the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. The
> Japanese public were unrestrainedly overjoyed by this treaty,
> because it proved that Japan had emerged from its feudalism to
> become a major international member, worthy of an alliance with a
> European power. They saw it an offensive-defensive alliance
> (koshu domei) in the same mold as the Franco-Russian alliance and
> the triple alliance of Germany, Austria and Italy, except that its
> bounds were unlimited.
> You can argue about the motivations of Britain and Japan in making
> this alliance -- Japan wanted agreement with its commercial
> concessions in Korea and China, while Britain wanted to use the
> alliance as a lever to prevent Japanese militarism and
> expansionism. And you can argue about the motivations of China in
> declaring war on the world in the Boxer Rebellion. But whatever
> the motivations, this moment confirms a major contention of this
> book, that Japan consistently and repeatedly defeated China in
> international diplomacy."
Not because the Japanese gave a shit about Naziism, but becauseBob Butler 54 wrote: > Still, there is a reason that Japan was with the Axis.
This is similar to some of the things that Chinese nationalists say> "The Japanese are firmly persuaded that they have no
> friends, and that the Americana are their implacable foes. One
> gathers that the Government regards war with America as
> unavoidable in the long run. The argument would be that the
> economic imperialism of the United States will not tolerate the
> industrial development of a formidable rival in the Pacific, and
> that sooner or later the Japanese will be presented with the
> alternative of dying by starvation or on the battlefield. Then
> Bushido will come into play, and will lead to choice of the
> battlefield in preference to starvation. Admiral Sato (the
> Japanese Bernhardi, as he is called) maintains that absence of
> Bushido [Bushido is the code of honor and morals developed by the
> Japanese samurai] in the Americans will lead to their defeat, and
> that their money-grubbing souls will be incapable of enduring the
> hardships and privations of a long war. This, of course, is
> romantic nonsense. Bushido is no use in modern war, and the
> Americans are quite as courageous and obstinate as the Japanese. A
> war might last ten years, but it would certainly end in the defeat
> of Japan."
Guest wrote: ↑Wed May 20, 2020 9:58 am
Japanese and Filipino territory is right next to Taiwan, that is, in the theater of war. An invasion of Taiwan would draw in both countries. Also, an amphibious invasion of Taiwan would not be easy. Taiwan is not tiny; it's huge. If China nuked Taiwan, they would be conquering a boneyard. How would that benefit Beijing's gangster clique?
This will go over well at Beijing HQ...
China to impose sweeping national security law in Hong Kong, bypassing city's legislature"Beijing has opted for the most risky route," said Ho-Fung Hung, a professor of international relations at Johns Hopkins University. "It will show the world that 'one country, two systems' is, if not already over, almost over."
He added: "It will be very difficult for anyone, especially the United States, to say Hong Kong is still autonomous and viable."
threateningChina to pass law threaening full control of Hong Kong
Thanks for the correction!Jack Edwards wrote: ↑Thu May 21, 2020 10:26 pmTypo alert:threateningChina to pass law threaening full control of Hong Kong
Great article
regards,
Jack
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