Taiwan’s story is the mirror image. Twenty-three million people built a world-class economy and a resilient democracy by pairing technological excellence with open debate and free exchange.
Subordinating that success to the dictates of an authoritarian system holds no appeal, especially after the unraveling of Hong Kong’s “one country, two systems” — the very template once marketed to Taiwan. If Beijing wouldn’t keep that promise for Hong Kong, why would it honor it for Taiwan?
Taiwan sits at the center of global semiconductor production. Moving it into Beijing’s orbit would concentrate, not diversify, risk, placing the world’s most advanced chips and manufacturing know-how under the political leverage of an authoritarian state.


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I did not suggest that. I want Taiwan fiercely defended from authoritarian China.
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Pretty sure he was responding to the article, not you.
The article is against trading in Taiwan for any bs…
And sometimes replies are concurrences instead of rebuttals. Think “yes, and” instead of “no, but”.
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China has no right to annex other countries.
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It is our choice to decide whether to protect it.
(I think it is)
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They do have the goal to reunify before 2049 to celebrate a century of the PRC so hardly tomorrow and therefore they could very well decide to use military force.
They’ve used force before and could use it again but even if it’s some referendum that beings about reunification I don’t see how that’s beneficial to the Europe really. Of course by then maybe the stuff they’ve got won’t be as valuable.
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You do realise this is a pro-european community ?
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Oh, you .ml people are a hoot!
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