Liu wrote:well, attack china across Himalays?
if invaders were to survive the highland effect and pneumatorexis,CHinese police would be happy to send them to labour camp.

Liu wrote:well, attack china across Himalays?
if invaders were to survive the highland effect and pneumatorexis,CHinese police would be happy to send them to labour camp.
You see Chairman Mao forgot to add that in his Red Book, so Prachand never got brain washed on that one little item.Liu wrote:well, attack china across Himalays?NRao wrote:Prachanda says India, US planned to attack China through Nepal
There you go. The cat is out of the bag.
if invaders were to survive the highland effect and pneumatorexis,CHinese police would be happy to send them to labour camp.
A Chinese warship will make a “port call” at Kochi on the western coast Aug 8-12, reflecting China’s increasing interest in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), said an official. The Chinese guided-missile destroyer Shenzhen will visit Kochi after completing its anti-piracy mission in the Gulf of Aden.
Arunachal is integral part of India: TharoorNew Delhi, Aug 6 (PTI) On the eve of boundary talks, Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor today said China has no "locus standi" on a key irrigation project in Arunachal Pradesh which it is opposing as the state is integral part of India.
Beijing does a U-turn, praises India-China bondBEIJING: China on Wednesday signaled its desire to adopt a friendlier diplomatic approach towards India as compared to its somewhat aggressive
stance in the past weeks. Zhang Yan, the Chinese ambassador in New Delhi, has lent his name to a highly favorable editorial published by People’s Daily on Wednesday.
Sanjay M wrote:http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ ... 723a2.html
was in response to:Japan Times
Thursday, July 23, 2009
READERS IN COUNCIL
Hyped-up claims against China
By GREGORY CLARK
Tokyo
Regarding Brahma Chellaney's July 15 article, "China's false monoculture": Chellaney is entitled to his dislikes and suspicions of China, but he should not distort facts. He says that post-1949 China gobbled up India's 38,000-square-km Aksai China, part of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, to provide a route linking Tibet with Xinjiang. There are some problems with this statement:
• Most of Aksai China, the Tibet-Xinjiang route especially, lies north of the Himalayan watershed in this area.
• India did not discover the construction of this route until years after the event — proof positive that India was not in control of the area.
• The only pre-1949 border ever formally suggested for most of this area was the British proposal to China in 1899, to which China never responded. Imperialistic Britain at the time had a forward policy to forestall Russian ambitions in the area.
Even so, the 1899 proposal leaves most of the disputed territory under Chinese control. The Indian claim to this area relies on a highly distorted version of the 1899 proposal, as historian Alastair Lamb has pointed out.
• In exchange for its Aksai China claim, China has effectively conceded India's claim to the much more valuable NEFA (North East Frontier Area), grabbed by the British from a weak Tibet in 1914. The China India frontier war of 1962 occurred only after India pushed troops north even of the Indian-claimed NEFA frontier, as historian Neville Maxwell has pointed out.
Incidentally, Chellaney criticizes China's treatment of the Tibetan and Uighur peoples, but China's behavior pales in comparison with India's dismal record with the Muslim majority in Kashmir.
The opinions expressed in this letter to the editor are the writer's own and do not necessarily reflect the policies of The Japan Times.
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ ... 715bc.html
J&K lies right below the Pamir knot and is the meeting place of several of the worlds highest mountain ranges including Himalayas, Hindu Kush, and Karakoram, so simply setting boundary based on Himalayas does not make any sense in this area. As far as I can see, authors assumption is flawed and leading towards wrong conclusions.• Most of Aksai China, the Tibet-Xinjiang route especially, lies north of the Himalayan watershed in this area.
It is not that India has to avoid.RajeshA wrote:The effort should be to avoid war with China for the next 20 years. We would have bridged the gap till then. We would have the bombs to reach Beijing, and we would have a BMD cover.
RayC sir,RayC wrote:This greed is now manifesting in China where they have no qualms of mixing melamine with milk. Life, is after all, cheap in China! There are also the immense bank frauds in the open and building collapsing like nine pins! Money is their God!
The US is encouraging all this so that the Chinese society is divided. Rural - Urban, Coastal - hinterland.
And now the ethnic problems.
The US has got China into a weapons race and that costs huge money, even if technologies are stolen!
Unless China introspect and correct the problems, they will go the USSR way!
NRao ji,NRao wrote:engti wrote:New member, so apologies if I am posting in the wrong section.
I was recently checking Arunachal Pradesh out on Google Maps, and almost every place had a chinese name.
You can see what I mean by visiting this link http://maps.google.co.in/maps?q=chitrad ... =9&iwloc=A
Screenshot of it here http://twitpic.com/b7hsu/full
While I don't think the Chinese govt. made Google do this directly, what probably what happened is that Google has used some chinese map which showed Arunachal Pradesh as belonging to China.
Still, those of you who know about how disputed this region is, know that there is definitely no way we can allow this to stand, esp. on a site as popular and as heavily used as this.
So anybody has any idea how we can change this? I have tried to raise this with journalists I know. But journos these days have no appreciation of history. Historical claims have been made on our territory on flimsier grounds.
Anyway, if I huffing and puffing for nothing please do tell me so
I can swear that that was not there a few weeks ago.
Besides, Assam has it in Devanagari, and Arunachal P in Chinese!!
GUWAHATI: A huge controversy has erupted over Google satellite maps showing areas of Arunachal Pradesh in Mandarin rather than Hindi or English,
effectively making them appear as part of China. The changes were first noticed on Thursday, just hours before Friday’s crucial Sino-Indian talks over border dispute.
Apart from some major cities like Itanagar and Tawang, most other regions have been marked in Chinese. What’s more, the map shows Arunachal’s southern boundary with Assam and northern boundary with China in broken lines, while the state’s eastern and western boundaries with Bhutan and Myanmar are shown in continuous white lines.
There is suspicion in some quarters that Chinese trouble-makers may have hacked into Google and changed the names.![]()
Google authorities could not be contacted at the time of filing this report. The images have caused a flutter in New Delhi and Arunachal.
‘‘This is shocking. How could Google change the names of places of a sovereign country without the country’s knowledge?’’ fumed Congress’s West Arunachal MP Takam Sanjoy.
Former BJP MP from the state, Kiren Rijiju, said this was an old Chinese gameplan. ‘‘The Chinese know how to time their statements ahead of a bilateral meeting. This map surfaced just when the two countries were to discuss the border dispute. Had Google changed the names of Chinese locations, Beijing would have summoned Google officials. India, too, should deal with it firmly,’’ said Rijiju, who had raised the issue of Chinese military incursions in Arunachal in the Lok Sabha.
Sanjoy has informed AICC general secretary in charge of Arunachal, Narayan Swami, and urged the Centre to take action against Google.
‘‘The government should come out openly with its stand and take Google to task. Google must explain under what authority did they include Chinese language in Arunachal Pradesh’s map,’’ the MP said.
on the contary ,the gap between India and CHna is going to be widened in the coming 10-20 years,IMHO.RajeshA wrote:The effort should be to avoid war with China for the next 20 years. We would have bridged the gap till then. We would have the bombs to reach Beijing, and we would have a BMD cover.
You don't live in China because:Liu wrote: of course, the gap will be diminished eventullly, but after all of us retire and our grandkids go to school..
improving india's infrastructure is just one aspects. it is also very important to get rid of theRajeshA wrote:RayC sir,RayC wrote:This greed is now manifesting in China where they have no qualms of mixing melamine with milk. Life, is after all, cheap in China! There are also the immense bank frauds in the open and building collapsing like nine pins! Money is their God!
The US is encouraging all this so that the Chinese society is divided. Rural - Urban, Coastal - hinterland.
And now the ethnic problems.
The US has got China into a weapons race and that costs huge money, even if technologies are stolen!
Unless China introspect and correct the problems, they will go the USSR way!
I still have to do some deeper analysis of PRC, so I can't make too many claims or prophesies.
But I don't think, the Chinese can go the way of the Soviet Union. They will also not lose the Arms Race. It is the Americans who in the long run cannot afford the Arms race, because of their trade and budget deficits. The Chinese have in the mean time a huge manufacturing base, and a captive world market, and it will continue to finance all Military and Space projects of PRC. What it needs is lots of energy for the equation!
So PRC's weak spots are actually its hold over the world market and the availability for raw materials.
India is in really a bad equation with China. We carry out $40 billion of trade with them. We export $8 billion, and import $32 billion. All we export is raw material, and all we import is finished products. This is as stupid as it gets. India is the country which cannot keep up an arms race with China, because even here we are the country doing all the importing and not building up our local arms manufacturing base.
Indian market is taking the easy way out. Many shopkeepers don't even worry about looking for local manufacturers. They just buy Chinese. We need to change that fundamentally.
We can push China into a spin, if we are able to attract the manufacturing base to India. Manufacturing with European quality, Indian Management and Bangladeshi costs in India should be our aim. The more the manufacturing moves to India, the less power is left with China. Many 'democracies' may not be averse to transfer production to India, if we can improve our infrastructure, streamline our legal processes, and liberalize our labor laws.
We have to move steadily from importing goods from China to exporting goods to China. Let us also stop exporting raw material to them. Pronto.
Only if India gets a better manufacturing base, retains a more agreeable, a more affable business relationship with the rest of the world, less confrontational, there is a good chance that some day we will have a bigger market share than China. That is when we will start winning.
The Doha talks are not in our favor. It only gives China more opportunity and a more better climate to continue exporting. We should have a Free Trade Agreement with Japan, EU, USA, Gulf and ASEAN, but no Global Comprehensive WTO.
Oil and water.Chinese officals may be corrupted, but they are also efficient too.
Interesting. This is sideways praise of corruption. "It is OK to be corrupt if you are efficient". This policy can go only so far and no further.Liu wrote: Chinese officals may be corrupted, but they are also efficient too.
Possible.on the contary ,the gap between India and CHna is going to be widened in the coming 10-20 years,IMHO.
1.now,I indeed live in china now, in a grade c city in hinterland of China.shiv wrote:You don't live in China because:Liu wrote: of course, the gap will be diminished eventullly, but after all of us retire and our grandkids go to school..
1) You are able to see and login to this forum
2) You speak of "grandkids". In China you can only have one "grandkid" and not "grandkids" unless you change the ChiCom policy or break the law after bribing a party official. Either way it does not suggest the outcome that you predict.
So kindly cut the rhetoric. Check your need to "appear strong" and talk about reality
Liu wrote: 2. well "one kid policy" is not as strict as before.
ethnnic minorities like Uyghuy,tibet and Manchus are excempt from "one kid policy".
rural Chinese are allowed to had 2 children too.
Urban chinese also are allowed to have 2 childern ,if both the husband and the wife have no brothers/sisters.
if you still think "one kid policy" is as firm as before, then it just proves west medias succeed in misleading you again.
my prediction:NRao wrote:Possible.on the contary ,the gap between India and CHna is going to be widened in the coming 10-20 years,IMHO.
Unless Indians wake up. And certainly if the Communist Party of India (CPI) is defeated badly - you can already witness the change right now (in decision making) when the CPI cannot influence politics.
Have you thought of the age distribution in the two nations?
1.chinese governmental medias indeed tend to mislead people,just as its west cousins like CNN and BBC do.shiv wrote:Liu wrote: 2. well "one kid policy" is not as strict as before.
ethnnic minorities like Uyghuy,tibet and Manchus are excempt from "one kid policy".
rural Chinese are allowed to had 2 children too.
Urban chinese also are allowed to have 2 childern ,if both the husband and the wife have no brothers/sisters.
if you still think "one kid policy" is as firm as before, then it just proves west medias succeed in misleading you again.
My dear man, it is China's media that is misleading. China hides its warts and publicizes its successes.
What is the current population of China? What is the expected population if the policy is reversed?
i believe you may be bluffing. There was some talk in the media of a reversal of China's once child policy but there is no official confirmation.
Did you bribe an efficient official for this info?
does china need any propaganda?brihaspati wrote:Thanks Liu!
The Chinese should continue to believe in their own propaganda. Thats the best that can happen to Indians, if they also believe in the same propaganda of increasing gaps and falling behind. As far as I know everytime, a central/southern Chinese kingdom/empire fell, it always fell before a more "primitive", "backward" and "barbarian" society. Those who fall behind are driven forward by jealousy, and they also need less to survive. This is good!
From what little I have read that seems to be the general consensus. However, what I am suggesting is that China is not being honest in her accounting. Which is what I referred to as "transparency".my prediction:
In 2020, CHina's per nominal GDP will be 10000-15000 USD and can be looked on as " quasi industrialized countries".
At that time, mainland CHinese people's life quality will be equal to Taiwanese and S.Korean today.
In 2020 ,India's nominal GDP may be 2500-3500 USD.but the wealth disparity in India will be more terrible. Indian steet beggars will not decrease but more India millionnairs will appear.
there will be more skyscrapers in Indian big cities but there will also be more slums there.
I don't think that chinese offical statistic is "inflated".on the contary, it is "deflated".NRao wrote:From what little I have read that seems to be the general consensus. However, what I am suggesting is that China is not being honest in her accounting. Which is what I referred to as "transparency".my prediction:
In 2020, CHina's per nominal GDP will be 10000-15000 USD and can be looked on as " quasi industrialized countries".
At that time, mainland CHinese people's life quality will be equal to Taiwanese and S.Korean today.
In 2020 ,India's nominal GDP may be 2500-3500 USD.but the wealth disparity in India will be more terrible. Indian steet beggars will not decrease but more India millionnairs will appear.
there will be more skyscrapers in Indian big cities but there will also be more slums there.
You observation of the disparity within India IMHO is sadly true. However, I am not sure if you have followed events in the past month or two - there is a very large, huge in fact, sums allocated to infrastructure development - more than a $100 Billion just for roads (actually since Indian companies cannot complete this task, the GoI has invited foreign companies - which is very, very rare for the GoI to do). Electrification is another element that should show some dividends.
However, poverty, like you say, will remain a concern.
But, my argument is that the computed disparity - between India and China - IMHO is not as bad as it is made out to be. There is plenty of inflationary figures in the Chinese data. The good is inflated to make it look better than ground reality and the bad is deflated even more.
Well, let us see what happens.
All the best.
Great foresight brihaspati. Looks like this is China's move:brihaspati wrote:^ that means get ready for the pandragon's move against India, indirectly. Another terror strike in the offing? The days after 15th August?
PratikDas wrote:Not sure if this is the right thread for this...
Google shows parts of Arunachal in Chinese
Frankfurt airport is cr@p. period. Bottled water, <1 liter, cost 4.75 euros. No water fountains to drink from anywhere around, besides. Makes one wonder what kinda tax and disincentive structure there must be for the emerged euro mkts to price bottled water the way they did. In comparison, the in the khanate, you can peacefully buy a gallon of mineral water in less money. Less said about yindia the better.For example, someone taking a flight to Germany or France from the massive new Delhi airport terminal 3 when it is completed next summer, will very likely find Frankfurt or Paris airports to be crap in comparison.
well, case is beyond the "infrastructure"Suraj wrote:The transition from lower-middle income to middle to high income is seldom smooth for a large country. There is a point where the the cost-effectiveness of low-cost manufacturing becomes sufficiently eroded that it is no longer viable, and higher cost/tech manufacturing and related industries simply cannot absorb the large population hitherto occupied by the low cost manufacturing engine. The transition is easier for smaller nations, i.e. smaller populations. There are several cases of countries whose growth matures once they reach $3-4K/capita, and it takes a sustained push to increase it further. I would hestitate to draw a linear growth projection for any large nation at those critical transition points. Besides, there's only so much you can keep knocking down bridges and rebuilding them.
On another point, the comparative age of Chinese infrastructure is way less than that of other mature economies, and it is natural that the former appears fresher. It applies just as well as India builds its infrastructure, which will then of course be newer than the Chinese one, making the latter look jaded. For example, someone taking a flight to Germany or France from the massive new Delhi airport terminal 3 when it is completed next summer, will very likely find Frankfurt or Paris airports to be crap in comparison. Building infrastructure isn't necessarily an insurmountable exercise in India. Delhi, for example, had 0kms of metro as of end of 2002, and will have about 200kms by end of 2010.
you misunderstand me. I just prove that China's stastic is not "inflated" ,but "deflated".Suraj wrote:Absolutely, when you develop infrastructure quickly, it is very easy to compare it to an established economy and interpret the developing nation to have comparable or better attributes in that regard. Nothing wrong with that - I just mentioned the example of the new Delhi airport and some older European one. But there's a lot more to wealth and quality of life than merely the visible infrastructure in a big city. While Chinese visitors may see Chinese cities comparably fresher infrastructure, hundreds of thousands of Chinese still emigrate every year to those same western nations. There's a good recent why they continue to do so, despite the strides China has made, and that is that there's a lot more to quality of life, that a superficial view of Istanbul or Paris doesn't address.
China has troubled times ahead.Liu wrote:
on the contary ,the gap between India and CHna is going to be widened in the coming 10-20 years,IMHO.
of course, the gap will be diminished eventullly, but after all of us retire and our grandkids go to school..
I disagree. It would seem the Chinese perspective of 'development' hinges largely on how superficially nice a city is to look at. There's a good reason why countries like Turkey, Czech Rep, Hungary or Chile have significantly higher per capita incomes than China, that you cannot discount because a few Chinese cities have nice roads and bridges. These countries are significantly richer both in absolute and PPP terms, that even the higher relative cost of living does not negate.Liu wrote:you misunderstand me. I just prove that China's stastic is not "inflated" ,but "deflated".
those "upper mid-income economies" or "moderate industrialzied economies" like east Europe, ,Turkey and Chile in fact are not "more developed " than CHina,although their "per nominal GDP" is 5000-20000 USD and much more than CHina's.
However, compared with those mature industrialized economies like north America, west Europe and Japan, CHina still has long way to go,from the infrastructures ,industry to social security system.
I don't think you understand the ramifications of what you are saying, but without getting into too many details the reason you see this difference between Turkey/Chile and China is because the Chinese government has artificially fixed the exchange rate of Yuan with US dollar. If Chinese government allowed the Yuan to float, Chinese exports would become more expensive to the outside world and hence exports would decrease.Liu wrote: those "upper mid-income economies" or "moderate industrialzied economies" like east Europe, ,Turkey and Chile in fact are not "more developed " than CHina,although their "per nominal GDP" is 5000-20000 USD and much more than CHina's.
Chinese government media tells people what to think. Western cousins such as CNN and BBC try to influence what people think. Unlike in China there are also non-mainstream media in west which is generally more trustworthy than western mainstream media such as CNN, BBC, etc. While Chinese media is directly controlled by the government, western media is under indirect control. On the other hand Indian media guards its independence fiercely and in my opinion does not try to influence people like the Chinese or the Western media does. Perhaps the only bad part about the Indian media is that they tend to sensationalize things too much many times. In general, Indian media is much more trustworthy that either western "mainstream" media or Chinese media.Liu wrote: chinese governmental medias indeed tend to mislead people,just as its west cousins like CNN and BBC do.
What is important is that China wants to rise up to dominate the world; while as, India wants to rise up to make the world a more equitable and better place. And this is the exact reason why the world welcomes India's rise; while as, China's rise is looked upon with apprehension. If I was Chinese government, I would be thinking hard as to why people in the rest of the world view China's rise with apprehension; while as, people in the rest in the world genreally have a very positive view of India's rise.Liu wrote: on the contary ,the gap between India and CHna is going to be widened in the coming 10-20 years,IMHO. of course, the gap will be diminished eventullly, but after all of us retire and our grandkids go to school..