America - The Official Thread

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I do not think China should be permitted to attack Taiwan either. I see it very similar to Russia/Ukraine, where we pushed back hard when Russia attacked. We did not go to war with Russia over it, but I don't know all of the nuances between US-Ukraine and US-Taiwan relations so I can't say exactly what an appropriate response is.
The US didn't have the same sort of agreement with Ukraine as it does with Taiwan as far as I know. With Taiwan, we have the Taiwan Relations Act, which spells out how much support we need to give Taiwan.

This is not really what was asked. What was asked was whether they were engaging in misinformation during the Obama admin. You were citing misinformation, I'm asking that we differentiate between China's actions pre-Trump and post-Trump.
Sorry, maybe I misunderstood what you were asking. You asked whether it was now or before Trump that China was committing genocide, destabilizing the West, and not respecting the sovereignty of nations. The answer is, both. It's doing it now and it was doing it before Trump. The issue is that many of China's more recent issues are the result of Xi's policies and agenda. He took office in 2012 and sort of hit full stride about the time Trumpism became rampant. So, while Trump didn't do any favours with relations regarding China, China was well on its way to being a problem. I don't think that would've changed even if Clinton had been elected.
During COVID, the Trump admin actively attempted to suppress our case reporting. In his view, if we didn't report cases, we didn't have cases, or a pandemic.
Attempted yes, but didn't succeed because we have open media that is harder to suppress. We were all well aware that cases were being suppressed, some just chose to believe Trump's BS instead of what was actually going on. But if you wanted to know the truth, it wasn't terribly difficult to find it.
You were using COVID as a way to establish that they're an enemy.
They suppressed COVID information and didn't allow an investigation because they're the enemy. If we were allies or at least on decent terms, they would've worked with us.
Here's my point. If you want to establish that China was an enemy before Trump, we should be looking at US-China relations before Trump. Not after or during.
Well, the CCP actively fought US forces during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Our relations were completely frozen between 1949 and 1971. JFK thought China was at least, if not more dangerous, than the Soviet Union. Chinese relations sort of normalized, but almost every president had a rather negative outlook on China. US-Chinese relations took a big hit in 1989 with the Tiananmen Square massacre. Things have been relatively frosty since, too, especially with the defense and arms sales to Taiwan. It's a simplified view of the whole thing, but China has been an adversary of the US since at least the 1940s when the CCP really took hold of the country. It's not exclusively a Trump thing, although like I've said, Trump didn't do anything to repair relations either and in some ways made it worse. But Xi did his share of contributing to poor relations too.
 
Sorry, maybe I misunderstood what you were asking. You asked whether it was now or before Trump that China was committing genocide, destabilizing the West, and not respecting the sovereignty of nations. The answer is, both. It's doing it now and it was doing it before Trump. The issue is that many of China's more recent issues are the result of Xi's policies and agenda. He took office in 2012 and sort of hit full stride about the time Trumpism became rampant. So, while Trump didn't do any favours with relations regarding China, China was well on its way to being a problem. I don't think that would've changed even if Clinton had been elected.

They suppressed COVID information and didn't allow an investigation because they're the enemy. If we were allies or at least on decent terms, they would've worked with us.

Well, the CCP actively fought US forces during the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Our relations were completely frozen between 1949 and 1971. JFK thought China was at least, if not more dangerous, than the Soviet Union. Chinese relations sort of normalized, but almost every president had a rather negative outlook on China. US-Chinese relations took a big hit in 1989 with the Tiananmen Square massacre. Things have been relatively frosty since, too, especially with the defense and arms sales to Taiwan. It's a simplified view of the whole thing, but China has been an adversary of the US since at least the 1940s when the CCP really took hold of the country. It's not exclusively a Trump thing, although like I've said, Trump didn't do anything to repair relations either and in some ways made it worse. But Xi did his share of contributing to poor relations too.

Between Tienanmen Square and 2016, Chinese-US relations were, especially during the early 2000s and early 2010s, pretty decent. There was a ton of trade, international travel, and very little saber rattling. US companies began to open offices in China, and directly appeal to Chinese markets, and our cultures were becoming intermingled. The use of Chinese goods and manufacturing created some resentment among Americans, some of whom found their jobs and products being outsourced to the Chinese. This was a big part of the rise of Trump, who promised to fight trade with China.

You describe Xi as someone who was basically going to do what he's done in a vacuum since he took office, and having hit his stride alongside Trump. Isn't it possible that Trump's pandering to US grumblings with anti-Chinese policy influenced Xi? Doesn't it make sense that this would be the case?

I do not think that it's reasonable to declare US-Chinese relations for the quarter century before Trump as being anywhere near as bad as it is today. If we're going back to the 1940s, we had bad relations with Japan at the time too.
 
China will do the soft incursions first:
back door under the table assimilation as much as they can get away with it...

Vietnam, Thailand,

Of course Hong Kong is practically a done deal.

They will infiltrate said country, pour in as much Chinese products and make the people depend materialistically and financially.

It is essentially an economic take over, the Chinese are heavily investing on Africa, providing them with the products they need, in exchange for access to their favors and country foothold.

That's is why they are able to get the Bricks effort going, those countries have nothing to lose going with them...

Vietnam being so close to China, is basically in bed with China, being their puppets, despite any denial.
China is fine with it, as long as they can control that country, manipulate it to their advantage.


The tarrifs on China, they don't care, they are shipping the goods to Mexico, or Canada, they those goods will just end up in the US via trucks/rails... Avoiding arriving by boat.
 
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Between Tienanmen Square and 2016, Chinese-US relations were, especially during the early 2000s and early 2010s, pretty decent. There was a ton of trade, international travel, and very little saber rattling. US companies began to open offices in China, and directly appeal to Chinese markets, and our cultures were becoming intermingled. The use of Chinese goods and manufacturing created some resentment among Americans, some of whom found their jobs and products being outsourced to the Chinese. This was a big part of the rise of Trump, who promised to fight trade with China.

You describe Xi as someone who was basically going to do what he's done in a vacuum since he took office, and having hit his stride alongside Trump. Isn't it possible that Trump's pandering to US grumblings with anti-Chinese policy influenced Xi? Doesn't it make sense that this would be the case?

I do not think that it's reasonable to declare US-Chinese relations for the quarter century before Trump as being anywhere near as bad as it is today. If we're going back to the 1940s, we had bad relations with Japan at the time too.
Economically, our ties were good because they were mutually beneficial. Diplomatically though, China was still very much an adversary. In 1995, we nearly entered a conflict with China during the Third Taiwan Strait Crisis. We "accidentally" bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, which further hurt relations. Also, in 1999, we caught two Chinese nationals stealing nuclear secrets from Los Alamos. In 2001, there was the Hainan Island incident where China attempted to down one of our aircraft, and when the Chinese plane damaged it and forced it to land, they captured all 24 crewmen aboard.

While Obama made strides to strengthen our economic ties, there were still conflicts between the two nations. The US doesn't recognize China's expansion in the South China Sea, which has caused issues, especially around Paracel Island. China also suspended several cooperative operations over the sale of weapons to Taiwan in 2010.

As I said, Trump didn't help the situation, but we've never really been friends with China in the way that we're friends with the UK, Canada, etc. We tolerate China because they build our stuff cheaply.

Xi was likely always going to push forward with his plans, too. I'm sure Trump's pushing back helped Xi strengthen his position and get buy-in from his government to push forward his policies. Xi's goal was always to make China the number one nation and take over America and do it through fascism. His "Chinese Dream" is at odds with America's policies. They were always going to clash.
 
Economically, our ties were good because they were mutually beneficial. Diplomatically though, China was still very much an adversary. In 1995, we nearly entered a conflict with China during the Third Taiwan Strait Crisis. We "accidentally" bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, which further hurt relations. Also, in 1999, we caught two Chinese nationals stealing nuclear secrets from Los Alamos. In 2001, there was the Hainan Island incident where China attempted to down one of our aircraft, and when the Chinese plane damaged it and forced it to land, they captured all 24 crewmen aboard.

While Obama made strides to strengthen our economic ties, there were still conflicts between the two nations. The US doesn't recognize China's expansion in the South China Sea, which has caused issues, especially around Paracel Island. China also suspended several cooperative operations over the sale of weapons to Taiwan in 2010.

As I said, Trump didn't help the situation, but we've never really been friends with China in the way that we're friends with the UK, Canada, etc. We tolerate China because they build our stuff cheaply.

Ok, none of that strikes me as similar to where we are now. No, we weren't friends with China the way we are with our very closest allies. Of course not. That's obviously not what I'm saying. What I'm saying is that we weren't anywhere nearly as at odds with each other before 2016. If your thesis is that trade was the only thing keeping us from pointing guns at each other, then what does it mean that Trump comes along and undermines trade?

Diplomatically, China used to be a mixed bag. Not anymore.

Xi was likely always going to push forward with his plans, too. I'm sure Trump's pushing back helped Xi strengthen his position and get buy-in from his government to push forward his policies. Xi's goal was always to make China the number one nation and take over America and do it through fascism. His "Chinese Dream" is at odds with America's policies. They were always going to clash.

I don't see anything in that article suggesting that China wanted to take over America. I suspect you meant something else. An article about what Xi thinks from 2024 is difficult to assess against pre-Trump China, or pre-Trump Xi.

Mostly, our conflict with China right now is rhetorical. There are tariffs, there are discussions about more. There is US policy favoritism in industries that China would like to be more dominant in. There is tension over Taiwan. But mostly, our tension is stated - they're the enemy. Why? No real reason, just because we seem to need an enemy to be angry at. Ok sure, if Trump were going on and on about the Uyghurs or Tibet or Hong Kong or whatever, then we could talk about some kind of reason to be angry at China. But he's not.

We have no blood feud with China. We have no real axe to grind. We have no painful history to overcome. In fact, we have a decent history of peace and mutually beneficial trade. We just, as best I can tell, need to call someone an enemy. Is it helping the Uyghurs? Not a chance.
 
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What surprises me is not that Trump is popular among the masses. There is SOME sense in the logic that stupid people would rather be ruled by someone stupid than by someone intelligent.

No, what surprises me is that the Republican Party has let him hijack them and completely destroy them, to the point that all their intellectuals have been bullied away and they are now practically endorsing Hitler.
To date, this podcast by Ezra Klein is the best explanation of Donald Trump I've encountered
 
I'm not sure you understood what I was trying to say. I'm not saying that Xi became an expansionist because of Trump, or that China's military development, or infrastructure, were a direct result of Trump administration policies. Though it is an open question how much Chinese authoritarianism was spurred by conflict with the US.

I'm saying that China-US relations deteriorated because Trump was an asshole to them both in rhetoric and in policy. We had a good relationship with China prior to 2016. Not perfect, good. It's not good now.
We had an effective relationship economically but that was it. That was enough to pacify Americans and make them not worry about it. Strategically, China has been a problem since at least when Xi became president and enacted his policies, but he's held high offices since at least 2008 when he became VP. You may be looking at this issue as an economic consumer but I'm trying to view it as a government official developing contingency plans decades into the future. It's likely we've known about Xi and his mindset for at least 20 years already, well before China's official policies evolved outward.
I don't know why so many Americans feel threatened by this. Of course they will try - they are an ambitious group of people. But China is not 10 feet tall. Even if they manage to hold things together long enough become the largest nation by GDP in the world, it won't be sustainable. There's clear evidence that the young people of China are becoming burned out (just like Japan from the mid-90s to now) and they are facing structural long term problems. China has had the monetary policy foot to the floor for decades now, and they have a population problem that isn't easily fixable because nobody other than Chinese people in other countries want to immigrate there. China would have to become a lot more like the USA (more free & open, less culturally xenophobic) to become "greater" than the USA in the long term. Being a welcoming & diverse country is not some wokey trope - it's a genuinely useful statecraft advantage. People want to be here*, and until that stops being the case, it will continue to be our most strategic asset.

*I'm not saying everyone wants to be here - I'm not sure even I want to be here sometimes - but the USA for me is unique in that it doesn't have a specific culture other than that it's relatively free and opportunity rich. Anyone can be an American in a way that few other countries (Australia & Canada I think are similar) manage.
The biggest threat from China is that they don't follow rules. As a cultural value, they simply do not follow basic core concepts that we do in the West, something like copyrights or property. Obviously their government has heavily influenced that over time. I'm not worried about nonsense textbook metrics like GDP, I'm worried about the quality of life I would have under their leadership, the type of human they would tell me I am, and their willingness to ignore everybody else's rules to make sure it happens. I'm very confident the Western way of life is the most stable method but China's willingness to cause us tremendous hardship is very realistic. Ignoring that is so incredibly naive. You mention that China has very serious economic and demographic problems - those are backing them into an ever tightening corner, and they know it, and who knows what they'll do in times of desperation. Historically, that causes bad situations.

If China were to invade Taiwan, that would be the time to become adversarial.
Did you ignore the part where we already have a treaty to protect Taiwan? Taking steps to prevent that is by definition adversarial. As I've stated, China is not pacified by economic cooperation anymore. They expect us to cooperate with them, and due to their international lawlessness that will not happen. @Joey D gave it 25 years for war to break out in the SCS, I give it 10. Twenty five years from now, China will already be sliding steeply into a demographic crisis. They will definitely try to bolster their position before that happens.
 
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If anyone is pressed for time here's the transcript:
I just listened to the podcast and read the article and the thrust of Klein's argument is that not only does Trump have no filter, no inhibitions on his behaviour, but that the only thing that prevented his first term from being a disaster, and that resulted in the achievements his supporters provide as a justification for voting for him again, simply will not exist in a second administration.

The "disloyal" staffers who acted as checks and balances on his most crazy and extreme behaviour will all be vetted and prevented from serving under him, to be replaced by a bunch of Don Jr. appointed yes men, like JD Vance who would have refused to certify the election he lost, as Mike Pence would not do. People who think as he does, that their leader's first impulse is always right and that there's no room for consideration.

You can see this demonstrated in the spokesmen he chooses, monsters like Steven Cheung, who baselessly asserted that an Arlington Cemetery employee who was roughly shoved aside when she tried to prevent them from filming the graves of dead veterans without their permission was "suffering from a mental health episode" and accused her of TDS when she refused to press charges for fear of running afoul of the thugs in Trump's campaign team. And Jason Miller, a man who slipped one of his many mistresses an abortion smoothie and refuses to pay for the education of a child he fathered by another woman he wasn't married to.

You can hear it in the sneering contempt embodied in every word they speak.

And those people who feel like he embodies their own values, who says the things they wish they could say, who "tells it like it is", are the people who will vote for him in their millions and celebrate as he proceeds to dismantle everything America has achieved in the last two and a half centuries in terms of enlightenment and social progress.

Because they just want to watch the world burn.
 
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We had an effective relationship economically but that was it. That was enough to pacify Americans and make them not worry about it. Strategically, China has been a problem since at least when Xi became president and enacted his policies, but he's held high offices since at least 2008 when he became VP. You may be looking at this issue as an economic consumer but I'm trying to view it as a government official developing contingency plans decades into the future. It's likely we've known about Xi and his mindset for at least 20 years already, well before China's official policies evolved outward.

The biggest threat from China is that they don't follow rules. As a cultural value, they simply do not follow basic core concepts that we do in the West, something like copyrights or property. Obviously their government has heavily influenced that over time. I'm not worried about nonsense textbook metrics like GDP, I'm worried about the quality of life I would have under their leadership, the type of human they would tell me I am, and their willingness to ignore everybody else's rules to make sure it happens. I'm very confident the Western way of life is the most stable method but China's willingness to cause us tremendous hardship is very realistic. Ignoring that is so incredibly naive. You mention that China has very serious economic and demographic problems - those are backing them into an ever tightening corner, and they know it, and who knows what they'll do in times of desperation. Historically, that causes bad situations.

Did you ignore the part where we already have a treaty to protect Taiwan? Taking steps to prevent that is by definition adversarial. As I've stated, China is not pacified by economic cooperation anymore. They expect us to cooperate with them, and due to their international lawlessness that will not happen. @Joey D gave it 25 years for war to break out in the SCS, I give it 10. Twenty five years from now, China will already be sliding steeply into a demographic crisis. They will definitely try to bolster their position before that happens.

I didn't ignore anything.

Ok, you and @Joey D believe that China has had it out for the US geopolitically and militarily (because of Taiwan?) for decades. Fine. I admit that I cannot unseat that conviction. But at the very least, trading with China, intermingling our companies and economies, was keeping the peace. It was putting pressure on making concessions, to prevent conflict. It may have even been protecting Taiwan.

Where are we now? Now that Trump has gone after trade with China, how's it going? Better? We feeling good about how we sit with China now compared to 10 years ago? I'm not. I don't see why anyone else would either.
 
Where are we now? Now that Trump has gone after trade with China, how's it going? Better? We feeling good about how we sit with China now compared to 10 years ago? I'm not. I don't see why anyone else would either.
From a geopolitical perspective, I feel the same about China as I did 10 years ago. Economically, the relations are worse due to Trump's trade war. So yes, Trump harmed our economic relationship with China, but I don't think he altered the diplomatic course much. We've been edging towards conflicts with China since at least the 1950s, and I don't think that will stop no matter who's in the White House. It won't let up until China reaches the number one status and bumps America as the world's gold standard. Even though America has problems, I'd much rather have us influencing the globe over a bunch of outright fascists. That's why China is a rival in my opinion. They want to usurp America's status around the world and replace it with themselves.

Economic ties with China need to be severed, but not through tariffs and government intervention. People should realize they're buying goods made by what's effectively slave labor and controlled by fascists. Buying Chinese goods should be seen in the same way as buying goods from Nazi Germany. It's just something that we should avoid. But we need to let the free market sort it out. Trump's plan with tariffs is just going to ruin the US economy along with the Chinese economy. By letting the free market figure it out, in theory it should only sink China or force them to reconsider their policies to attract new businesses.

As for Xi's plans, he's said since he took office that his plans were to elevate China to the number one status. He's similar to Trump in that he wants to "Make China Great Again", but unlike Trump, Xi isn't a bumbling idiot with dementia and who poops himself. He's smarter and has a much larger cult of personality (also, presumably, better control of his bowels).
 
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