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Most Chinese doubt superpower status for China

LOL...Common you could have come up with better excuse.:lol::lol:

Not an excuse, some people don't even have the guts to cheat, and there are no cheaters that have answers better than the people they copied off of, but China has plenty of things that it innovated on.

The US also stole the cotton gin, railroad, steam engine, gas lighting and electricity from Britain.
 
by Dragon Emperor

Originally Posted by IND151
[/COLOR] will you tell name of that nation
Who else other than the Big Boaster India. India should learn more to be humble like Chinese, Japanese, and Koreans!
India is not big boaster. but its fact that that Indians aim to make their nation superpower and seeing our increasing economic power after 30 to 40 years we will be definitely a superpower. :smitten:
 
by ChinaRocks
India is world superpower of talking no one can deny tha
no friend thats not true. their are other nations which are self claimed superpower not we. we know that we are not superpower but we will be if our economic strength continues to grow.
 

India is not big boaster. but its fact that that Indians aim to make their nation superpower and seeing our increasing economic power after 30 to 40 years we will be definitely a superpower. :smitten:

India boasts the cwg is better than the beijing olympics, mumbai is better than shanghai, the $35 ipad is invented in india, need i say more?
 
Korea: yesterday yesterday yesterday yesterday yesterday yesterday...... o(╯□╰)o
USA: today today today today today today...... o(╯□╰)o
India: tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow...... \(≥▽≤)/


China: Give me a bottle of soy sauce,please.... o(∩_∩)o
 
India boasts the cwg is better than the beijing olympics, mumbai is better than shanghai, the $35 ipad is invented in india, need i say more?

Dude give some proofs for what you have written.
Don't post what you think.Thats a fanboy attitude.
Without proof anyone can claim of walking on the moon and climbing the everest.
 
Most Chinese doubt superpower status for China

December 31st, 2010 | Global Times

Despite an increase in national pride, the Chinese public seems more cautious in evaluating the country’s relative international strength, with fewer people in this year’s Global Times survey categorizing China as a world superpower, compared with the previous four annual polls.

Despite wide acknowledgement of China’s economic might and its political and diplomatic leverage – the two major parameters in defining a superpower – only 12 percent of respondents deemed China to be a “superpower,” down by 14.4 percent from 2008.

In all, 57 percent of respondents voted China as the most promising emerging nation among BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), a 10 percent drop from last year’s result.

“The result shows that Chinese people are becoming more objective when considering these issues,” said Wu Xinbo, deputy director of the Center for American Studies at Fudan University.

The diplomatic rows China encountered this year fueled public awareness about the difficult factors China will face as it continue to grow, he added.

Conducted by the Global Poll Center run by the Global Times, the poll is based on telephone interviews of a random sampling of 1,488 people in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Wuhan and Chongqing to analyze how Chinese see the world.

The patriotism of Chinese people is seen in the findings, with China topping the US as the most favored country to travel in.

Additionally, 19 percent of participants selected the US as the foreign country they would most like to visit, followed by France, with 21 percent saying they had no desire to visit foreign countries.

More than half of participants in the survey said China’s international status was boosted in the past year by the Shanghai World Expo, while more than 60 percent denounced corrupt officials for tarnishing China’s global image.

The poll also reflects the belief that the quality of “made-in-China” products is gradually getting better, with 80 percent of those polled expressing their hope that improvements were being made.

This positive attitude also extends outside the Chinese border, with 84 percent of respondents optimistic on the future global setting for China’s rise, seeing either improving or stabilizing ties with other major global players.

More than a third of respondents saw the relationship between China and Europe improve during the past year, with fewer negative factors such as trade friction, human rights and religious issues compared with previous years.

Ties with South Korea, drawing more attention in this latest survey, were seen stabilized without dramatic changes, with 46 percent of respondents saying the tensions on the Korean Peninsula will be eased in the coming year due to China’s diplomatic role.

Su Hao, director of the Strategy and Conflict Management Research Center at China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times that the result showed that Chinese people have high expectations for China to ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

Looking at relations with Japan, more than half of participants said the ties were unlikely to deteriorate next year.

However, the poll also shone a light on concerns, with more than 80 percent of the participants expressing their worries about Western intentions to contain China’s development, with around 40 percent calling for countermeasures to be taken against threats to China.

Among the issues of greatest concern, US intentions to strategically contain China placed ahead of trade disputes as the most important bilateral issue this year. Ties with Washington were chosen as the most significant bilateral relationship for China for the fifth consecutive year.

Jin Canrong, vice director of the School of International Studies at Renmin University of China, told the Global Times that the survey findings reflect the dynamics of this year with the US strengthening its presence in Asia.

“Some Chinese people remain suspicious of the outside world, especially the Western countries. They still don’t trust these countries,” he said.

Song Shengxia contributed to this story

‘Superpower’ tag in doubt | CHINA-WIRE

ROFL
Chinese people need to open their eyes a little wider (sarcasm intended :partay:).
then perhaps they will finally see that china is a super power.
 
USA is the only superpower. The US economy is still three times as large as China’s. The US is still the world’s largest manufacturing base. The US dollar still dominates world’s financial affairs by far.
China's GDP per capita is still miles behind its European, American, and Japanese counterparts. China just wants to develop itself to better prosperity for its people, never mind that “superpower” nonsense talk.
 
Chinese don't talk and bullshit about their achievements. In addition they are always humble unlike our next door neighbours who always hide under the umbrella of "we are a democracy hence we are better" when compared to China. Sad but true.

ya like our western neighbour who always talk about poor people in my country forgetting that they are one among the failed nation in the world
 
USA is the only superpower. The US economy is still three times as large as China’s. The US is still the world’s largest manufacturing base. The US dollar still dominates world’s financial affairs by far.
China's GDP per capita is still miles behind its European, American, and Japanese counterparts. China just wants to develop itself to better prosperity for its people, never mind that “superpower” nonsense talk.

US economy is only 2.5 times larger.
 

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