😀It was an eleven-dash line on the map published back in 1947 by the ROC (Republic of China) and it remains so till today in ROC (in Taiwan Province). PRC (People's Republic of China) somehow reduced it to a nine-dash line in 1952.
It is a game of chess. I don't know what the answers are . One should not necessarily cave in to China's "requirements". Perhaps it should be less about words and more about actions. The way the west thinks is talking and dialogue is the way to go. Maybe in western world yes that is the way, but when dealing with countries like China / North Korea we may need to consider a different approach. Communication is often indirect and we don't have the complete or transparency of what the long game is politically. It would be interesting if we ever get a president of the US who could speak mandarin and understand this culture with a clearer or at least a bit of a scholar to the way China operates. One of the Australia Prime Ministers could speak Chinese, Kevin Rudd but still behaved in quite a western way when he was the prime minister.
China's perspectives on national unity: Its long history of dynastic cycles and foreign invasions has shaped its views on unity. Confucianism, with its emphasis on hierarchy and harmony, has influenced Chinese thinking on governance. Its vast territory and diverse population have made maintaining unity a complex challenge.
“Another one”
Tawain is Tawain's period!
Is that China's final warning again? 😆
Of course. Always again and again.
Nobody listens to china's red lines because they are all dashed lines, not solid red lines, so you can cross them as needed.😅
Compelling and rich !🤟🏼🤟🏼
What legal basis are these four red lines actually based on? Are these red lines listed in the UN Charter? Can I actually publish my four red lines?
I have quite a lot of red lines as well! Perhaps I'll make a list and give it to everyone I meet so they don't 'cross me'.
@@chopsticksandtrains my frist red line would be: ban all wumaos from Western media...
😀It was an eleven-dash line on the map published back in 1947 by the ROC (Republic of China) and it remains so till today in ROC (in Taiwan Province). PRC (People's Republic of China) somehow reduced it to a nine-dash line in 1952.
@@oneplacegifts5946 China is Germany`s 17th province. ☺
Thank-you for explaining. I have a feeling they will all be crossed sooner rather than later!
The Taiwan thing is so absurd and embarrassing.
It is a game of chess. I don't know what the answers are . One should not necessarily cave in to China's "requirements". Perhaps it should be less about words and more about actions. The way the west thinks is talking and dialogue is the way to go. Maybe in western world yes that is the way, but when dealing with countries like China / North Korea we may need to consider a different approach. Communication is often indirect and we don't have the complete or transparency of what the long game is politically. It would be interesting if we ever get a president of the US who could speak mandarin and understand this culture with a clearer or at least a bit of a scholar to the way China operates. One of the Australia Prime Ministers could speak Chinese, Kevin Rudd but still behaved in quite a western way when he was the prime minister.
He can issue as many warnings as he wants. They're all empty. His daughter lives in the USA
2027 is a red line
who cares
China's perspectives on national unity: Its long history of dynastic cycles and foreign invasions has shaped its views on unity. Confucianism, with its emphasis on hierarchy and harmony, has influenced Chinese thinking on governance. Its vast territory and diverse population have made maintaining unity a complex challenge.
No 4 is not a red line.
a red lion!
I loved discovering your channel but now I become hating this I want you show us China, I don't care at all about your actual topics,