Everybody knows about the backstory, there was a civil war, KMT fled to Taiwan creating two Chinas sort of, maybe, neither recognises the other, whole thing. ROC (Taiwan) ended up transitioning from military rule to a multi-party democracy, while the PRC (mainland China) didn’t do that (they did reform economically, “socialism with Chinese characteristics” and all that, but still a one-party state, not a multi-party democracy). The status quo right now is that Taiwan is in the grey area of statehood where they function pretty much independently but aren’t properly recognised, and both sides of the strait are feeling pretty tense right now.

Taiwan’s stance on the issue is that they would like to remain politically and economically independent of mainland China, retaining their multi-party democracy, political connections to its allies, economic trade connections, etc. Also, a majority of the people in Taiwan do not support reunification with China.

China’s stance on the issue is that Taiwan should be reunified with the mainland at all costs, ideally peacefully, but war is not ruled out. They argue that Taiwan was unfairly separated from the mainland by imperial powers in their “century of humiliation”. Strategically, taking Taiwan would be beneficial to China as they would have better control of the sea.

Is it even possible for both sides to agree to a peaceful solution? Personally, I can only see two ways this could go about that has the consent of both parties. One, a reformist leader takes power in the mainland and gives up on Taiwan, and the two exist as separate independent nations. Or two, the mainland gets a super-reformist leader that transitions the mainland to a multi-party democracy, and maybe then reunification could be on the table, with Taiwan keeping an autonomous status given the large cultural difference (similar to Hong Kong or Macau’s current status). Both options are, unfortunately, very unlikely to occur in the near future.

A third option (?) would be a pseudo-unification, where Taiwan becomes a recognised country, but there can be free movement of people between the mainland and Taiwan, free trade, that sort of stuff (sort of like the EU? Maybe?). Not sure if the PRC would accept that.

What are your thoughts on a peaceful solution to the crisis that both sides could agree on?

edit: Damn there are crazies in both ends of the arguments. I really don’t think giving Taiwan nukes would help solve the problem.

I think the current best solution, looking at the more reasonable and realistic comments, seems to be to maintain the status quo, at least until both sides of the strait are able to come into some sort of agreement (which seems to be worlds away right now given their current very opposing stances on the issue)

  • Skavau@piefed.social
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    2 days ago

    Cool! So they don’t support it now. So is the “the reality now” what matters to you or not?

    Because of Chinese intimidation and threats. Many more who voted for a flat ‘status quo’ option absolutely would wish for China to back off so they could officially become independent and a recognised nation. That is my contention.

    I know I, and anyone with an ounce of sanity, including the vast majority of the Taiwanese people (whose opinions you completely disregard), think it would be completely insane to start WWIII just based on some point of pride, instead of enjoying the continued peace that the status quo has provided for decades.

    A good thing that I didn’t say that they should then. As unreasonable as China is being here, I’ve never once said that the Taiwanese should declare independence because of the actual risk of the Chinese reaction.

    In response to the latter you claim that “the reality now is what I care about,” but then you go on and on and on about how important it is to imagine what people would want in the former hypothetical, instead of looking at what they want in the reality now.

    There’s good reason to believe, as I’ve indicated to you in many other replies that many Taiwanese right now, as it is now, would like to push for independence but don’t feel it viable so the polling reflects that. I think that, if true (and to be clear - I think it is) is reason to believe that it ultimately commands a majority.

    • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      Why are we supposed to consider hypotheticals where China’s actions are different, but not hypotheticals where the US’s actions were different? It makes no sense!

      • Skavau@piefed.social
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        2 days ago

        I don’t get the point of comparison here. I haven’t really said anything about the USA. I supposed if the history of USA-Taiwan was different, Taiwan may never have got to the point it is now and been annexed many times over at many different points in many different timelines. But I’m not really talking about Taiwan as it was in the 1950s, 60s, 70s or 80s.

        • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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          2 days ago

          Enough - you are a completely ridiculous, obstinate, unreasonable chauvinist.

          I just could not believe you’d have the audacity to say “the reality now is what I care about” after I spent 40 comments trying to convince you that the reality now is what matters. You are just impossible.

          • Skavau@piefed.social
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            2 days ago

            I just could not believe you’d have the audacity to say “the reality now is what I care about” after I spent 40 comments trying to convince you that the reality now is what matters. You are just impossible.

            The reality of what people in Taiwan now think, not alternative history scenarios regarding a different USA reaction to Taiwan at specific points of divergence. I think a majority of the would-be pro-independence bloc across Taiwan likely do wish to move towards independence, but feel it unrealistic and dangerous to do so because of the potential reaction from China, and so answer “status quo” or “status quo, decide later” on polls out of that specific resignation.

            • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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              2 days ago

              The reality of what people in Taiwan now think, not alternative history scenarios regarding a different USA reaction to Taiwan at specific points of divergence.

              Just alternate present scenarios, gotcha.

              I think a majority of the would-be pro-independence bloc across Taiwan likely do wish to move towards independence, but feel it unrealistic and dangerous to do so because of the potential reaction from China, and so answer “status quo” or “status quo, decide later” on polls out of that specific resignation.

              Right, and I think a majority of the would-be pro-unification bloc across Taiwan feel currently feel that unification is not necessary because there isn’t a looming alien invasion.

              You’re acting as though “pro-independence” or “pro-unification” are just these abstract things that can be understood in a vacuum, utterly unconnected to geopolitical realities, except, for some reason, when the geopolitical realities pertaining to China are involved. But these positions will always be dependent on what they actually mean for the people Taiwan, in existing reality. US investment breaks this vacuum, this “Platonic form” of pro-independence just as security concerns from the PRC do.

              You cannot, fundamentally, talk about what they would support “in a vacuum” or “if security concerns did not exist” because they will never be in a vacuum and security concerns will always exist. This gets back to something I asked previously:

              I don’t believe you can just look at those specific polls and say “Gee, I think the Taiwanese must be completely divided or overtly support the status quo purely because they prefer it to either unification or independence”. The “status quo” is a result of geopolitical realities that, for obvious reasons, is better than the geopolitical alternatives.

              Fucking hell! Why else would you support any course of geopolitical action than it being better than the geopolitical alternatives based on geopolitical realities!?

              • Skavau@piefed.social
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                2 days ago

                Just alternate present scenarios, gotcha.

                One specific one, I suppose.

                Right, and I think a majority of the would-be pro-unification bloc across Taiwan feel currently feel that unification is not necessary because there isn’t a looming alien invasion.

                You think an alien invasion is on the same level of likelihood of a Chinese change of policy here?

                You’re acting as though “pro-independence” or “pro-unification” are just these abstract things that can be understood in a vacuum, utterly unconnected to geopolitical realities, except, for some reason, when the geopolitical realities pertaining to China are involved.

                China could hypothetically change in a number of ways that would change pro-independence attitude itself, but assuming nothing else changed within China but their willingness to accept an independent Taiwan - I think Taiwan would move pretty fast on this. I suppose the USA could also change and behave in such a way that alienates Taiwan from their position and drive them to the mainland, but I maintain strongly that the only reason that ‘status quo/status quo-choose later’ currently lead the polling on this issue in Taiwan is due to the well-understood threat from China to Taiwanese people if the Taiwanese decide to formally explore pathways to official independence. ‘Status quo’ itself is a halfway house that no-one in Taiwan or China is especially happy with, but works well enough for both sides to last at least as of now - a long time (which is why I am not calling for any independence moves for Taiwan).

                What we also do know is contained within the site that you linked me are also polls on Taiwanese identity, and that the population has broadly moved towards seeing themselves as and identifying as prominently Taiwanese over Chinese. This tells me that a sense of national identity is taking hold within Taiwan, and combined with the actual pro-independence outlook being about 4 times more popular than unification according to polls, I think I’m making fairly reasonable observations.

                • OBJECTION!@lemmy.ml
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                  2 days ago

                  You think an alien invasion is on the same level of likelihood of a Chinese change of policy here?

                  Never said anything that would remotely imply that, no.

                  ‘Status quo’ itself is a halfway house that no-one in Taiwan or China is especially happy with, but works well enough for both sides to last at least as of now - a long time (which is why I am not calling for any independence moves for Taiwan).

                  Exactly! You get a 1000 political philosophers around a table, and not one of them would invent such a scenario or describe it as ideal or logical. But that doesn’t matter. It is a “vulgar” compromise that doesn’t allow for abstract principles to be satisfied. But it is an effective compromise that has worked and has maintained the peace.

                  In what universe are we supposed to judge political solutions to conflicts based on how much they satisfy abstract principles, how “neat” they are in the abstract, instead of the actual results they produce in reality??? And in what way is someone “pro-independence” if they support that position purely as an abstract ideal, if what they actually support in practice, and when asked, is the status quo? To be in favor of the status quo is to support in in practice, as pretty much no one supports it in the abstract.

                  The thing I find completely baffling is that you seem to think that the abstract world is in some way more real or more relevant than material reality. That the only way we could know what the Taiwanese people “actually” support is by placing them in a vacuum. This is nonsense. What they “actually” support is what they do support, in the actual, real world as it currently exists. But, despite insisting that “the world as it is now is what I care about,” you try to say that what actual matters, what actually reveals their true preferences, is this hypothetical reality where you arbitrarily remove China as a factor, and the opinions of your mental model of Taiwanese people in that hypothetical somehow “overrules” what they say they want in material reality.

                  • Skavau@piefed.social
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                    2 days ago

                    Never said anything that would remotely imply that, no.

                    You made the comparison.

                    Exactly! You get a 1000 political philosophers around a table, and not one of them would invent such a scenario or describe it as ideal or logical. But that doesn’t matter. It is a “vulgar” compromise that doesn’t allow for abstract principles to be satisfied. But it is an effective compromise that has worked and has maintained the peace.

                    Sure. And I haven’t said it should suddenly stop, so no idea why you keep saying this.

                    In what universe are we supposed to judge political solutions to conflicts based on how much they satisfy abstract principles, how “neat” they are in the abstract, instead of the actual results they produce in reality??? And in what way is someone “pro-independence” if they support that position purely as an abstract ideal, if what they actually support in practice is the status quo? To be in favor of the status quo is to support in in practice, as pretty much no one supports it in the abstract.

                    I think there’s a fundamental difference between not supporting your regions independence because you think it economically non-viable and not supporting your regions independence because another nation threatens to invade you if that happens. Especially as Taiwan is already de facto independent in the first place. You aren’t even disputing my analysis here that the wider population can be reasonably observed to be far more pro-independence than pro-unification, you’re just saying that I can’t point out that they only don’t push for it further because of Chinese intimidation and threats because it makes their ideal outcome rooted in hypothetical circumstances.

                    The thing I find completely baffling is that you seem to think that the abstract world is in some way more real or more relevant than material reality. That the only way we could know what the Taiwanese people “actually” support is by placing them in a vacuum.

                    I don’t at all see how you’ve concluded that at all from anything I’ve said.

                    I’d also add that status quo is already de facto independence, so in that sense, a supermajority for status quo is effectively a majority for independence as best they can within the circumstances that exist.

                    But, despite insisting that “the world as it is now is what I care about, you try to say that what actual matters, what actually reveals their true preferences, is this hypothetical reality where you arbitrarily remove China as a factor, and the opinions of your mental model of Taiwanese people in that hypothetical somehow “overrules” what they say they want in material reality.

                    What they (a majority) want, I suspect, is independence officially already - but will continue on settling for ‘status quo’ and relay this on polls on grounds of not wanting to antagonise China and inciting them to bomb them (The Taiwanese rather like not being bombed or blockaded more than directly pursuing independence in this way). You don’t even seem to dispute this. You just complain about it being a hypothetical that could only be realised if China backed off.