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F Liu
PolyMatter
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Comments by "F Liu" (@F_Liu) on "Why the US Doesn't Support Taiwanese Independence" video.
@paddyotterness Lol, US foreign policy is paid and bought for by the MIC, China scare is how they profit.
35
China is heavily investing in its own microchips industry, it would be naive to think that they would want to be rely on anyone on this forever.
3
Soft propaganda for the West, very subtle indeed, still Taiwan is a part of China whether the US recognises or not.
2
Since when has the US kept its promises to anyone, play on words is futile. Even if it doesn't recognize Taiwan as a part of China, what difference does that make, the time when the US is running the world will soon be ending.
2
A seemingly objective and balanced video on the matter but failed to provide any sentiment and opinion of people from the Mainland as if their views don't matter, the only mention about it was the insinuation that the Mainland government is only putting out those rhetoric about Taiwan to fan nationalism and that is what most Mainland Chinese are capable of: brainwashed and nationalistic, typical anti China Western narrative. It also failed to provide much historical contexts which are very important in explaining the complicated and unique position Taiwan has been in. Taiwan's government has been brainwashing their population to be anti Mainland for decades and the US has clearly broken its historical promises made to the Mainland, not that it is any surprising consider it pretty much has broken most multilateral treaties and deals it has ever signed up to. Who cares what the US has to say, whether it recognises Taiwan as a part of China or not, the US wants a nuclear WW3? I don't think so.
1
This video looks great on the surface, it is actually Western propaganda, hence no (historical) context like most of the time when the West reports on China.
1
@miguelpadeiro762 Poor comprehension much? I explained to the point why I think it is not a well informed video, because it lacks historical context, as I stated. But no I am not going to layout the entire history of China here so people like you could be ''persuaded'' what I say is true, you suppose to do you own research if you really cared.
1
@miguelpadeiro762 You didn't comprehend my last comment either, OK, I see a pattern here, LOL. You know what, why don't you just get lost.
1
@miguelpadeiro762 You intentionally misquoted my original comment, and after I stressed the reason again in my reply to you: the video lacks of historical context, which the OP provided some of it, you continue to insist that I have not provided reason for my conclusion, to me you either have comprehension problem or maybe sight problem. And let me repeat one more time for you, this video lacks large amount of historical background of China and Taiwan, but I don't want to lay out all relevant history because the OP has already provided some and without these context in place, the video could be considered as a piece of nonobjective propaganda with one sided narrative from a Western point of view.
1
@miguelpadeiro762 Here are my other comment for this video. ''A seemingly objective and balanced video on the matter but failed to provide any sentiment and opinion of people from the Mainland as if their views don't matter, the only mention about it was the insinuation that the Mainland China government is only putting out those rhetoric about Taiwan to fan nationalism and that is what most Mainland Chinese are considered capable of by the Western media: brainwashed and nationalistic, typical anti China Western narrative. It also failed to provide much historical contexts which are very important in explaining the complicated and unique position Taiwan has been in. Taiwan's government has been brainwashing their population to be anti Mainland for decades and the US has clearly broken its historical promises made to the Mainland, not that it is any surprising consider it pretty much has broken most multilateral treaties and deals it has ever signed up to. Who cares what the US has to say, whether it recognises Taiwan as a part of China or not, the US wants a nuclear WW3? I don't think so.''
1
One can play the word game all they like, at the end of the day, it is always the country with more economical power and military might have the final say, unless the US wants to start a nuclear WW3, it had better calm down on its provocations to China like arm sales, landing military planes and sailing war ships on and around Taiwan, I doubt that the US is keen to fight with China over Taiwan, it is only using Taiwan to achieve its geopolitical goals as its has been doing forever.
1
LOL, the majority of the Mainland Chinese wants reunification by force asap, and stop dreaming about the ''widespread discontent'', China has never been so unified thanks to the Western anti China hysteria. You think of China with a Western mindset therefore could never understand what is really going on in China.
1
@stephenpickering8063 You watched too much Western MSM, you really think all 1.4 billion Chinese people are under Xi's mind control, don't you? Lol, Xi is popular precisely because he cares about Chinese people's rights and interests contrary to all the BS indoctrinations you have been under in the West, the real totalitarian system that is on its way to collapsing is the West, but you are not even aware of it. Chinese people know way more about the West then Western people know about China, you are the one who has been bullshited and hidden away facts all these years. You don't have a clue about China.
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@Christian-mt5jx There are already several factories set up by the biggest Taiwan microchip company in Mainland China making high end microchips, more than half of Taiwan's entire exports go to China, China is supporting Taiwan's economy to a great extend.
1
They are not that brave nor stupid, too much is at stake, independence will be costly.
1