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Global anti-China sentiment on the rise: poll

Not to mention the entire SE Asia which also scared sh.it by the Chinese rise.

In fact except in India's own neighbourhood, everywhere else people are more comfortable with India's rise than China. In fact they are eagerly waiting for India to act as a counterweight.
 
Not to mention the entire SE Asia which also scared sh.it by the Chinese rise.

In fact except in India's own neighbourhood, everywhere else people are more comfortable with India's rise than China. In fact they are eagerly waiting for India to act as a counterweight.

I am sure the CIA and RAW would have gathered extensive intelligence about China.

China is just making too many enemies, reason is not its economic power. The only reason is unjustified military spending and communist rule which is also commiting genicide in Tibet among other reasons like stealing innovative technology from western countries and not following the copyright laws.

I am sure the world will join hands to screw up china, at the fall of a hat.
 
I am not sure of this.

China is too well integrated with the world economy and I don't think anyone wants a military showdown unless really forced.
 
The world economy is too much interdependent and nobody would want to disturb these delicate equilibrium.These is one of the reason why India did not cross loc during kargil
 
Not to mention the entire SE Asia which also scared sh.it by the Chinese rise.

In fact except in India's own neighbourhood, everywhere else people are more comfortable with India's rise than China. In fact they are eagerly waiting for India to act as a counterweight.

Dude! spare the crap. Only the US which sees china a very possible threat of the future is happy with india growing as a counter weight and the very reason such remarkable offers being made to india which the indians couldnt have even imagine in their wildest of dreams. Reason is US is too damn scared of china's build up and that too with this massive speed and they want someone to take care of their dirty work and that someone is India. Rest assured to you and all those indians day dreaming about india taking on china's place, get one fact straight in your head, there is not doubt that india is growing and there is not doubt that you guys will have the blessings of the US, still you cant compare your self with china even in the slightest of manner. China falls into an altogether different league. Stop protaying your self as the next superpower and smell the real coffee. The sooner you get this, the better it would be for the whole region.
 
The world economy is too much interdependent and nobody would want to disturb these delicate equilibrium.These is one of the reason why India did not cross loc during kargil

Ohh please! are you implying that india was too damn concerned about the world economy and so it didnt crossed the loc, go read the damn cold start doctrine again. India didnt cross the loc because it just couldnt.
There was a huge flaw in india's doctrine according to that article which needs to be resolved and that is why the new doctrine was introduced so that the response time of the IA could be reduced inorder to take pakistan by a surprise not giving us enough time to react.
India was taken by surprise in kargil and india couldnt mobilize its troops fast enough in 2002 to take pakistan by a surprise. And it had nothing to do with the world economy. Just a failure in strategy.
 
Not the world economy but defnetly Indian would have suffered greatly.war is easier said then done indian economy was just taking off at that time.
Economy is not "the" factor but defnetly one of the many
 
I guess "global" now means, "western" -- after all what can one expect from people who no longer question, who are no longer critical -- notice the respondents are from countries presently engaged in conflicts - whereas China is not involved in any conflict.

We are scared, so went beserk, it's someone else's fault -- it's old already. :china::china::china:
 
OMG....i've been repeating Japan, Korea and Taiwan but nobody seems to consider them.
 
Japan, has a long history of misdeed in China, but they has a huge and powerful navy and ofcourse given their WWII history it is the rest of Asia that is threatened by the Japanese failure to not send troops to support US aggression against the world. However; the Japanese are not a lost cause, they are big investors in China and can be and ought to reasoned with.

Korea, has a long history with China and being the smaller, weaker protagonist through out history, the effect of a China reinvigorated on it's national psyche is understandable. Korea is a huge investor in China.

Taiwan is not a country but a renegade, which is in reality a part of China and the US itself recognizes this.

In all three cases, their alliance with the US is a result of WWII adjustments and ofcourse that opinion in these places closely reflects opinion in the US is not a accident.

More and More US is irrelevent, the more it organizes public opinion to be hostile to the world, the more it isolates itself, and sadly, sinks those who ally with it. The world does not want to be dragged in to any more American crusades, but some johnny come latelys are failing to see that it's time for the US to sing a diffferent tune, one which is not hostile to the world and is circumspect.
 
Korea, has a long history with China and being the smaller, weaker protagonist through out history, the effect of a China reinvigorated on it's national psyche is understandable. Korea is a huge investor in China.

Is it the same reason why India's smaller neighbours have an 'effect on the national psyche' of a India reinvigorated? :coffee:
 
That is certainly an element in the fear a revitalized India represents for it's smaller neighbors, however Japan has a substantially larger economy than China and a huge huge navy. If any power in power in Asia provokes or induces fears, it is Japan.

These are not the issue, the issue really is the organization of western, in particular US public opinion to be hostile to the world. What did it win the US?, on the other hand, it did win a particular section of US opinion power to reorient the American state, it allowed this particular segment of political opinon to use fear of and hostility towards the rest of the world, to effect changes in US values. In effect, it is device to gain power, a free peoples now turned in to a scared peoples willing to sacrifice their liberties.
 
Dude! spare the crap. Only the US which sees china a very possible threat of the future is happy with india growing as a counter weight and the very reason such remarkable offers being made to india which the indians couldnt have even imagine in their wildest of dreams. Reason is US is too damn scared of china's build up and that too with this massive speed and they want someone to take care of their dirty work and that someone is India. Rest assured to you and all those indians day dreaming about india taking on china's place, get one fact straight in your head, there is not doubt that india is growing and there is not doubt that you guys will have the blessings of the US, still you cant compare your self with china even in the slightest of manner. China falls into an altogether different league. Stop protaying your self as the next superpower and smell the real coffee. The sooner you get this, the better it would be for the whole region.

Thx. for your sincere advice but then no thanks.

We will see what we can or can't achieve. And we don't need cheer leaders (the IPL variety) along the way.

Instead of just assuming things why don't you read up on what the countries in SE Asia think of the rise of India and China and who they are more comfortable with. Same for Europe and in fact at any place except our own dear friendly neighbors.

BTW, dirty work is what you seem to be doing on your western borders. Give me some instances of where India has done the dirty work for USA.
 
A cautionary tale for those who think planting anti-china attitudes is actually successful -- be careful of what you want, you just may get it - and then will you be in a better place?



Big Brother, Tibet, and the earthquake —Andreas Ni


Tight media control of the unrest in Tibet has been followed by what, to some, looks like far more open coverage of the devastating earthquake in Sichuan province. Is this a change in China’s media strategy, or just a short term change in tactics?

This question stands out in view of Chinese public opinion in the latter phase of the Tibet crisis. Much to the consternation of the Western media, Chinese people worldwide lashed out against its allegedly biased coverage of the Tibetan riot. Throngs of Chinese expatriates and students took to the streets, protesting the prejudice they perceived in Western media reports. Angry youngsters even founded Web sites such as anti-cnn.com to express their outrage
.

Western reporting, once commended for its veracity, now seems discredited across China, although sympathetic coverage of the loss of life in Sichuan may have redeemed the Western media somewhat. Even Chinese liberals admit that Western journalists blundered badly in Tibet, using cropped images and false captions as evidence of China’s heavy-handed rule. One sarcastic posting on China’s popular Web portal Tianya even went so far as to say that “CNN is of the same ilk as CCTV (China Central Television). Both talk grandiosely and profusely about impartiality. Ironically, both turn out to be hypocrites.”

One can argue that this trend bodes ill for China. But pessimism is misplaced. Much of the Chinese wrath is directed at biased reports, not at Western media in general. And when one looks more closely at how Chinese responded, both to the unrest in Tibet and the Sichuan earthquake, one sees tangible signs that the Chinese are embracing a greater degree of free speech.

Despite a news blackout during the riots in Lhasa, for example, Chinese Internet users managed to dodge the country’s censorship. Much as they loathed domestic publications for blindly following the guidelines of Xinhua, China’s state news agency, they were similarly contemptuous of Western media that mishandled the story.

As a result, those Chinese who use the Internet as a source for news awakened to the fact that no account — Chinese or Western — is flawless
. Such scepticism, which is a fundamental attribute of the democratic mind, may have played a role in pushing the government toward more openness in Sichuan.

Indeed, the fact that many school buildings were flattened in Sichuan prompted an outcry from ‘netizens,’ who grilled local officials about whether it substandard building codes or even a notorious “toufuzha construction scandal,” namely, jerry-built projects, that had led to the disproportionate number of dead pupils. Under mounting public scrutiny, government officials felt compelled to promise that those responsible will be brought to justice.

Unlike in the past, when Chinese Internet users passively received information, years of exposure to concepts such as human rights and democracy have emboldened them to challenge entrenched yet dubious views, even if it means iconoclasm. Chinese audiences are as fed up with the glowing encomiums broadcast by CCTV as they are with the simplistic, context-free reporting of Western media. Caught in the middle, Chinese increasingly sift for the truth on their own.

Many, indeed, tried to present to the outside world their own version of the Tibet story, rebutting the orthodox narrative — be it Chinese or Western — and posting comments and footage on YouTube and the BBC’s bulletin board. Moreover, due to their repeated queries for explanation, a few Western media outlets eventually owned up to their mistakes
.

After China’s government became aware that independent grassroots movements could convince ordinary Chinese where government propaganda had failed, it lifted its initial ban on reporting on Tibet. “Net nannies” — as China’s Internet censors are often dubbed — blocked sensitive articles less frequently. China’s government has apparently begun to appreciate the limitations of cover-ups and stonewalling, and perhaps also the merits of allowing some room for free speech.

This thirst for unbiased information highlights the dramatic change that the Internet has brought to China’s political landscape. Nowadays, the government no longer monopolises information and the right to process it. Insightful bloggers attract considerably more clicks than do official mouthpieces. A “virtual civil society” is in the making.

But can Web activism mature into a full-blown campaign for free speech without being manipulated by the government or blindfolded by Western media? The answer may prove to be mixed. Admittedly, the fierce popular backlash against Western media was partially motivated by nationalist ardour, which played into the government’s hands. The Internet can foster more demagoguery than sober analysis. But the best way to prevent this is to create an environment in which opposing views can clash freely, enabling truth ultimately to triumph.


On the government’s part, the more open media in Sichuan may be mere posturing to appease critics after the Tibet upheaval and the scuffle over the Olympic torch. The government’s willingness to address squarely questions about shoddy infrastructure will be a key test of the genuineness of its supposed new found tolerance of freeish speech.

Although free speech is no panacea for China’s woes, only when it is established will the country’s progress be sustainable. Despite the watchful eyes of Big Brother in Beijing, the Internet is sowing the seeds of free speech in China. That may be the most important lesson of the crisis in Tibet and Sichuan.

Andreas Ni is a writer living in Shanghai
 
Erm, and how many of iqbal's childern get to see the inside of a classroom?

Out of those lucky few, how many are taught the quran and nothing else of madarassas, and how many drop out before completing their first year?
You sound so naive about Pakistan's education system! lol plus if you think all Pakistani go to madrissas only then i would like you to inform that still you need to know urdu in ordor to read Quran ( iam talking ab9ut Pakistanis since arabic and urdu alphabeticals are same and its common to teach kids urdu as of start off in madrissasaa) still they have Map of Pakistan and quaid's picture and a flag in almost every single class lmao you are funny. You make me laugh:victory::rofl::pakistan::cheers::guns::sniper::azn:
 
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