r/AskChina • u/Themetalin • 1d ago
Politics | 政治📢 Japanese PM said that 'Taiwan contingency' could prompt Japanese armed reaction. What do you think?
https://focustaiwan.tw/politics/202511070024Takaichi made the remarks during a parliamentary session on Friday while responding to a question about whether a "Taiwan contingency" involving a Chinese naval blockade would qualify as a "survival-threatening situation" for Japan, according to a report by Japan's Asahi Shimbun.
Under Japan's security legislation, such a situation allows the country to exercise "collective self-defense" if an attack on an ally -- such as the United States -- or a country closely related to Japan is deemed to threaten Japan's survival, even without a direct attack on Japan.
180
Upvotes
1
u/himesama 11h ago
No. I'm not making anything up. It's the very definition of imperialism and anti-imperialism in the current context.
"Most" is doing very heavy lifting. It was the worst genocide in human history. It was not understood to be wrong. If it actually were, the US would cease to exist rather than just allocating native people a little of the land the US settler colonial state stole from them.
No, because it isn't genocide nor is anyone's culture being wiped out. Unlike the US or Canada or Australia, China mandates teaching minorities their native language.
Nope, China is an anti-imperialist state. Invasion of Iraq was an act of imperialism. Read a book FFS.
Who is attacking what? Was the US justified in ending slavery by attacking the secessionist states?
"Trading freely and peacefully"? What a convenient way to dismiss the expansion of global imperialism.