72 comments

    1. @Jesus that’s not very Jesus like don’t think that how Jesus would of said r did it just stating my thoughts 💭

  1. If Xi Jinping ever gets his way, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and the Phillipines will be speaking Mandarin. God Bless President Biden on AUKUS. It is a master stroke.

  2. China waking up to the reality of a possible NATO style defence pact in the region given its neighbours are thinking alike now when it comes to how to push back against China , and that’s safety in numbers which has all ready witnessed countries forming their own alliances and like in 2021/22 participated in some of the biggest joint naval exercises ever seen in the region

  3. Our species is foolish. Make threats, build weapons, go to war, destroy that which you seek to aquire, win and gain little or nothing and lose many lives doing it.

  4. Suspected spy balloon?? By now, we should know if it was really a spy balloon or a whether balloon .

    1. @Paul Kent The one who called it as “spy” balloon has the responsibility to prove it can perform spy function.
      The balloon was too big to be a spy balloon and didn’t designed to avoid noticed. How stupid for any guys to believe they were able to watch a real spy balloon.

  5. It would be pretty funny if the US lose against China in the Taiwan conflict. Rarely does the US ever lose in wars but if this Taiwan conflict is the one they lose one in then it will be an extreme shocker to everyone just like how people are shocked when Ukraine is holding strong when Russia is supposed to take it in a couple weeks. USA and Russia both could be considered paper tigers at this point. The times we are living in is crazy and miraculous.

    1. both USA and Russia could be considered as papaer tigers? you know who invented this saying ‘paper tiger’? it’s Chairman Mao.
      after CCP beat USA in Korea and Vietnam, also beat India and Soviet on border.

    2. @FUCKTHESYSTEM70 You skipped one, Saddam was defeated in 100 hours. Again if we lost the Korean war, why is there still a South Korea? Stalemate isn’t a Lost LOL!

      Note, I’ve posted many times that there never should have been a 2nd Gulf War. When we to Afghanistan, we should have gotten Bin Ladin and got the hell out.

    3. @FUCKTHESYSTEM70 But the war machine made a lot of profit. That’s all that seems to matter.

  6. Even with that deal In the process of us preparing all they would have to do is make a move In the middle of that process The way things are looking I hope everybody can come to an agreement of some kind this is just about egos And power now Greed is the root of all evil

  7. “We have only one thing to learn from the barbarians (Europeans), and that is strong ships and effective guns.”
    – Feng Guifen, 1861

    1. ​@The naZi
      😂😂😂
      China is collapsing??
      We have collapsed for more than 40 years. If we didn’t collapse that day, we would not be used to it.

  8. It’s funny how history repeats itself. In the past 500 years, on every change of Empire, we faced exactly the same transition with exactly the same indicators. Financial, military, cultural, linguistic. It started with the Portuguese in the 15th century, the Dutch in the 16th century, the British empire,17&18th century, until now with the American world leading power. The recent banking problem in the US, is only the beginning of a new world order. Since last year military budgets are sky-rocketing all over the world, yet another common indicator over the the past centuries… The question is, who will be next ?

  9. U.S. War crimes around the world

    See also the Nonviolent Actions List.

    There is a reason that most countries polled in December 2013 by Gallup called the United States the greatest threat to peace in the world, and why Pew found that viewpoint increased in 2017.

    But it is a reason that eludes that strain of U.S. academia that first defines war as something that nations and groups other than the United States do, and then concludes that war has nearly vanished from the earth.

    Since World War II, during a supposed golden age of peace, the United States military has killed or helped kill some 20 million people, overthrown at least 36 governments, interfered in at least 86 foreign elections, attempted to assassinate over 50 foreign leaders, and dropped bombs on people in over 30 countries. The United States is responsible for the deaths of 5 million people in Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia, and over 1 million just since 2003 in Iraq.

    Since 2001, the United States has been systematically destroying a region of the globe, bombing Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Libya, Somalia, Yemen, and Syria, not to mention the Philippines. The United States has “special forces” operating in two-thirds of the world’s countries and non-special forces in three-quarters of them.

    See also How Many Millions Have Been Killed in America’s Post-9/11 Wars? Part 3: Libya, Syria, Somalia and Yemen by Nicolas Davies

    The U.S. government provides weapons, military training, and/or military funding to almost every dictatorship and oppressive government on earth. See my 2020 book 20 Dictators Currently Supported by the U.S.

    U.S. weapons are used on both sides of many wars.

    In an attempt to quantify U.S. warmaking, I’ve copied below lists from these sources:
    David Vine: The United States of War
    William Blum: America’s Deadliest Export: Democracy
    Dr. Zoltan Grossman: A Century of U.S. Military Interventions
    James Lucas: U.S. Has Killed More Than 20 Million People
    William Appleman Williams: Empire As a Way of Life

    I can link to some others first. Here is a PDF from 2022 from the U.S. Congressional Research Service admitting to hundreds of U.S. military interventions abroad between 1798 and 2022.

    And here is a PDF of a journal article about something called the Military Intervention Project, which can also be found here and here and here. The authors claim to have a list of 392 U.S. military interventions between 1776 and 2019, but do not seem to actually produce the list. There are, however, extensive descriptions of it at those links, including:

    “The United States has carried out 34 percent of its 392 interventions against countries in Latin America and the Caribbean; 23 percent in East Asia and the Pacific region; 14 percent in the Middle East and North Africa; and just 13 percent in Europe and Central Asia, according to a newly refined version of the Military Intervention Project (MIP) dataset — a venture of the Center for Strategic Studies at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.”

    From David Vine’s The United States at War:

    1941-1945 World War II (Europe, North Africa, Asia/Pacific)
    1946 Trieste
    1947-1949 Greece
    1948-1949 Berlin, Germany
    1950 Formosa (Taiwan)
    1950-1953 Korea
    1953-1954 Formosa (Taiwan)
    1955-1975 Vietnam
    1956 Egypt
    1958 Lebanon
    1962 Cuba
    1962 Thailand
    1962-1975 Laos
    1964 Congo (Zaire)
    1965 Dominican Republic
    1965-1973 Cambodia
    1967 Congo (Zaire)
    1976 Korea
    1978 Congo (Zaire)
    1980 Iran
    1981 El Salvador
    1981 Libya
    1981-1989 Nicaragua
    1982-1983 Egypt
    1982-1983 Lebanon
    1983 Chad
    1983 Grenada
    1986 Bolivia
    1986 Libya
    1987-1988 Iran
    1988 Panama
    1989 Bolivia
    1989 Colombia
    1989 Libya
    1989 Peru
    1989 Philippines
    1989-1990 Panama
    1990 Saudi Arabia
    1991 Congo (Zaire)
    1991-1992 Kuwait
    1991-1993 Iraq
    1992-1994 Somalia
    1993-1994 Macedonia
    1993-1996 Haiti
    1993-2005 Bosnia
    1995 Serbia
    1996 Liberia
    1996 Rwanda
    1997-2003 Iraq
    1998 Afghanistan
    1998 Sudan
    1999-2000 Kosovo
    1999-2000 Montenegro
    1999-2000 Serbia
    2000 Yemen
    2000-2002 East Timor
    2000-2016 Colombia
    2001 – Afghanistan
    2001- Pakistan
    2001- Somalia
    2002-2015 Philippines
    2002- Yemen
    2003-2011 Iraq
    2004 Haiti
    c2004- Kenya
    2011 Democratic Republic of the Congo
    2011-2017 Uganda
    2011- Libya
    c2012- Central African Republic
    c2012- Mali
    c2013-2016 South Sudan
    c2013- Burkina Faso
    c2013- Chad
    c2013- Mauritania
    c2013- Niger
    c2013- Nigeria
    2014 Democratic Republic of the Congo
    2014- Iraq
    2014- Syria
    2015 Democratic Republic of the Congo
    c2015- Cameroon
    2016 Democratic Republic of the Congo
    2017- Saudi Arabia
    c2017 Tunisia
    2019- Philippines

    The supreme international crime according to 2017 U.S. media reporting is interferring nonviolently in a democratic election — at least if Russia does it. William Blum, in his book Rogue State, lists over 30 times that the United States has done that. Another study, however, says 81 elections in 47 countries. France 2017 makes that total at least 82. Honduras 2017 makes it 83. Russia 2018 makes it 84. The 2020-revealed 1964 coup in British Guiana makes it 85. Somalia 2022 would be 86. There are clearly dozens more.

    In a reality-based assessment of U.S. crimes, the serious offenses begin beyond that threshold. Here’s Blum’s list of over 50 foreign leaders whom the United States has attempted to assassinate:

    1949 – Kim Koo, Korean opposition leader
    1950s – CIA/Neo-Nazi hit list of more than 200 political figures in West Germany to be “put out of the way” in the event of a Soviet invasion
    1950s – Chou En-lai, Prime minister of China, several attempts on his life
    1950s, 1962 – Sukarno, President of Indonesia
    1951 – Kim Il Sung, Premier of North Korea
    1953 – Mohammed Mossadegh, Prime Minister of Iran
    1950s (mid) – Claro M. Recto, Philippines opposition leader
    1955 – Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime Minister of India
    1957 – Gamal Abdul Nasser, President of Egypt
    1959, 1963, 1969 – Norodom Sihanouk, leader of Cambodia
    1960 – Brig. Gen. Abdul Karim Kassem, leader of Iraq
    1950s-70s – José Figueres, President of Costa Rica, two attempts on his life
    1961 – Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier, leader of Haiti
    1961 – Patrice Lumumba, Prime Minister of the Congo (Zaire)
    1961 – Gen. Rafael Trujillo, leader of Dominican Republic
    1963 – Ngo Dinh Diem, President of South Vietnam
    1960s-70s – Fidel Castro, President of Cuba, many attempts on his life
    1960s – Raúl Castro, high official in government of Cuba
    1965 – Francisco Caamaño, Dominican Republic opposition leader
    1965-6 – Charles de Gaulle, President of France
    1967 – Che Guevara, Cuban leader
    1970 – Salvador Allende, President of Chile
    1970 – Gen. Rene Schneider, Commander-in-Chief of Army, Chile
    1970s, 1981 – General Omar Torrijos, leader of Panama
    1972 – General Manuel Noriega, Chief of Panama Intelligence
    1975 – Mobutu Sese Seko, President of Zaire
    1976 – Michael Manley, Prime Minister of Jamaica
    1980-1986 – Muammar Qaddafi, leader of Libya, several plots and attempts upon his life
    1982 – Ayatollah Khomeini, leader of Iran
    1983 – Gen. Ahmed Dlimi, Moroccan Army commander
    1983 – Miguel d’Escoto, Foreign Minister of Nicaragua
    1984 – The nine comandantes of the Sandinista National Directorate
    1985 – Sheikh Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, Lebanese Shiite leader (80 people killed in the attempt)
    1991 – Saddam Hussein, leader of Iraq
    1993 – Mohamed Farah Aideed, prominent clan leader of Somalia
    1998, 2001-2 – Osama bin Laden, leading Islamic militant
    1999 – Slobodan Milosevic, President of Yugoslavia
    2002 – Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, Afghan Islamic leader and warlord
    2003 – Saddam Hussein and his two sons
    2011 – Muammar Qaddafi, leader of Libya

    Let me know of any updates or corrections, and I’ll add them.
    Thanks to Said Zulficar for pointing out the need to add Jaime Roldos, President of Ecuador, assassinated May 1981. John Perkins, in his book Touching the Jaguar, makes a case that both Jaime Roldos of Ecuador and Omar Torrijos of Panama (also in 1981) were very likely U.S.-backed assassinations.

    According to the evidence in Nicholson Baker’s 2020 book Baseless, we also need to add the 1948 assassination of Jorge Gaitán in Colombia.

    1. @khmerkidz2600 If you have any self respect, you need to volunteer for Ukraine. One year into the war, a typical battalion of 500 men at the start of the war was completely wiped out with 100 dead and 400 wounded who can no longer fight. If you’re just a coward hiding behind the keyboard, at least you need to sell your house to support Ukraine.

  10. What if China decided to support the indigenous Hawaiian movement for separation from the US and restoration of the Hawaiian monarchy? Starts selling arms to the movement. Sends warships to the islands?

  11. We didn’t listen to our WW2 veterans enough. We are repeating history. Only if we would have listened.

    1. ​@TheBlackIdentity
      Who is authoritarianism?
      You can ask the people of the world who is authoritarianism.

    2. Best we all agree to disagree. That’s what makes America great. People can think however they choose To.

    1. @Prakash Thapa Again, the ROC constitutional court decided otherwise in 1993.

      A court that was filled with pro-KMT judges that made their career during the KMT dictatorship which claimed exactly that the constitution determines mainland China s ROC-territory.

      Even these judges, when they had to make a ruling, were not able to find an argument that the constitution determines the ROC national territory.

      Sais a lot for anyone who knows about Chinese history…

    2. Our constitution also mentioned democracy, freedom of speech, sovereignty and so on. Why don’t you mention them? Apparently your eyes only works when reading something you wanna see.

    3. @Martin Fiedler you are good at wordplay, do you really pretend there’s no ONE CHINA POLICY and U.N. charter? cut the crap, just go to join Taiwan army.

  12. I don’t think market is still worth trading and profit oriented..
    The losses made in this economic downturn are so on the increase….

  13. 14 nation recognize republic of china(the official name of taiwan government),and in ROC‘s constitution ,it says roc is the only legal represent of China,and claimed mainland ,Mongolia ,11 dash line in south China sea as its sovereign territory

  14. If the West, particular US loves Taiwan that much, why not recognize Taiwan as a sovereign nation and establish official diplomatic ties with Taiwan? Let me remind you, United Nations abide to One China Policy, meaning Taiwan belongs China as a sovereign territory.

    1. Based on this, they can make a case that sending arms to the island is unlawful. They should act through the UN and resolve this peacefully.

    2. ​@tomtube1012 UN wouldn’t be able to do anything. US would just veto any resolution that goes against its interests

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