What's new

China Has Plans To Sink US Fleet In Any Upcoming Battles

US got its a$$ kicked the last time it tried to mess with China. US military cannot ever defeat China. Despite its chest thumping, the US military can never defeat China in war, it can cause damage but can never defeat China.
China beat the US and its stooges in the Korean War when we were at our weakest.

The US damn well knows this, it can bomb all these worthless third world countries like Iraq and Afghanistan all it wants but messing with China or Russia in war is a whole different game.

Indians can jump up and down all it likes defending their slave masters because they still are humiliated by the 1962 goo smacking. The PLA fights to the death.
We kicked the American military out of North Korea in the 1950s, what other military have done that? If the Indian military was fighting the US, Indians would have surrendered the second they realised they had to face the US military.

Don't you ever again compare the PLA to an incompetent rag tag joke like the Indian military. We fight with honour and pride, Indians just wave the white flag.

China can cause MASSIVE damage to the American mainland, the PLA has cold, brutal and absolutely ruthless generals. Any war with China, the Americans won't be better off than China. If it wasn't for the PLA, Japan would have colonised China. While the KMT were getting its a$$ kicked the PLA were giving the Japanese military heavy defeats that destroyed Japan.

Even at our weakest we have defeated powerful militaries, WTF have the US done? Beating Iraq? :lol:
The shanghai police force would beat the Iraqi military.

Anyone thinking the US will have its way in a war with China is utterly delusional keyboard warriors, the PLA has never ever been a pushover to any military. In an all out war, the Americans will get it just as much as they are dishing out. You can take that to the bank son.
I was active duty back in Desert Storm and there were all sorts of dire prediction about casualties. Yes, the US led alliance would win over the Iraqi military, but that victory would come at a steep price. Instead of keyboard warriors like today, we have paper warriors like the PLA who also made the same prediction for the Politburo. Guess who was forced to take back their reports/predictions, ordered to reform while with eggs on their faces in front of their political leadership, and began to adopt many of the American ways of waging war?

May be conscript rejects like you who are truly keyboard warriors and can only be so are one of the many consequences of that reform? :lol:
 
Who says we ARE super power now? Who keeps on comparing india with China and deluding themselves that bombay is 20 years ahead of Shanghai (that's really a good one, I enjoy it very much). Yeah, we are not as rich as you guys who can purchase almost everything from others to build up your own military force. I guess you guys must earn lots of coupons somewhere... as for the imagination stretching, nobody dare to say a word in front of you indians, from LCA to Arjun...I should say your imagination is way beyond our imagination!
Firstly, you Hans are no 'super power'. Don't delude yourselves. You're still a third rate power trying your damnedest to join the elite club. A couple of missiles and cheap fancy planes that look good only on paper don't make you a super power by any stretch of imagination. Don't delude yourselves.

Well, plenty of imaginations... a six-day artillery fire exchange and 62 indians casualty can really turn you on huh?
Secondly, remember the pasting your robotic soldiers got from the Indian Army at Nathula in 1967? That nightmare still makes your PLA bots piddle in their pants. You're heads are so full of emptiness! Feather-brains like you use it just to keep your ears apart!

I don't know if you are insulting our Chinese or the Americans, if Americans treat their credit like $hit as you indians do, we won't bother to nationalize their property in China as well.
Thirdly, the American bonds you guys hold can be trashed by the USA at any time leaving you holding the can. They're not even worth the paper they're printed on!
 
Happy Indian mentality keeps on rising - Globaltimes.cn

04ac6bca-1b0f-44ee-b55f-c041c5aac5b3.jpeg


Is it possible for an Indian to be happy in India? On the face of it there is nothing for an Indian to be happy about in the country: a venal, self-seeking political class dedicated to aggrandizing and enriching itself; growing economic disparity; rising cost of life and living; increasing corruption and crime; mounting inequalities; little value for human life, health and education; a vast majority - deprived of water, shelter, food, education, healthcare and minimum needs - uncared for and all but abandoned by the state. :rofl:

Yet there is an entity called the "Happy Indian," transcending class and occupation. If the middle class feels "exploited" at being heavily taxed and having to pay a high cost for the poor quality of living standards it has to put up with, it is also the happiest.

Time was when the middle-class man, for example, living in Delhi had to queue and jostle his way into a bus, which might break down en route, leaving him stranded without a rickshaw or taxi; without a phone anywhere in sight to call in that he would be late for work.

Yet on the way back home, the middle-aged, middle-class man thanked his stars for having survived a difficult day. By way of thankfulness he, probably, picked up flowers for the deity in the roadside shrine, fruit for the wife, toffees for the kids and, perhaps, a drink for himself. Why not, he would tell himself, when I have had a hard day?

Today, this middle-class Indian feels rewarded and, therefore, "happy." Life has come full circle: He drives to the office in a car of his choice, as does his wife; the kids are safe traveling to school and back in a world-class metro or a secure bus; there are phones everywhere - in the office, in the home and in their hands; food of all kinds is available at all times; the shops are full of goodies that he can buy with his credit card; and, if there's a goodie that can't be found, he can order it on the Internet.

There are computers, TVs, films, video games and every gizmo in his house which is powered 24/7 with a generator. In short, life's good. Maybe there is not enough money for a larger house, but for everything else.

True, he should be earning 20 times more than he does - after all, he did all the hard work setting up that venture in Silicon Valley before moving to the Indian end of the operations. He has to guard against excess drinking, smoking or eating given his high cholesterol, diabetes and weight. He needs exercise more than watching TV series and cricket matches or sitting around in clubs.

But it is certain that he won't be doing what the doctor - medical or economic - ordered. Life's dark sides are grim enough without brooding over it in the little time between the end of a day's work and going to bed. He thanks his stars, gods, fate or whatever, and retires every night to rise again and shine through another day.

The Indians, unlike the Chinese or the Americans, has the extraordinary ability to be satisfied and find contentment, even if his yearnings and cravings remain unfulfilled. They are not "driven" to constantly earn money, develop themselves and keep pushing up the country's GDP. An Indian will be what he is fated to be, or so he believes. There's nothing Protestant or Confucian about him and his economic values.

A professor living in a two-bedroom flat hardly loses sleep over the taxi service owner living in a much larger house. He tells himself: I have a PhD, thousands of students listen to my lectures, my papers and books are published and read in India and abroad, my wife is educated and talented, I may not be wealthy, but I have more than enough from eight to 10 hours of decent work in a famous university, I have social security and medical coverage for myself and my family. My kids won't starve or be jobless. Why should I chase more? I should enjoy what I have and can afford, including the joys of leisure.

On the other hand, the taxi service owner is content with his lot: I am lucky that despite lack of education, I have managed a safe, profitable business that keeps me and my family well-fed; and have enough money for my daughter's marriage, son's education and my parents' medical expenditure.

Neither the academic who has a steady, secure and tenured job, nor the small-time taxi owner will take risks. They will not seize opportunities to increase their income or assets - because of the risk of losing a bit of their assured earnings.

Both are averse to a few more hours of work a day, because it means less time meant for recreation, relaxation and socializing with friends and family members.

There are no "tiger" moms in India - and if there are, they are certainly not celebrated like in China. The Indian parent in China is weary of being asked: "Your child just does school, eh? Why not after-school sports, music and dance?"

The Indians attach great importance to leisure. Rest, relaxation, recreation are more important than growth, development and success - for most individuals, at least

This may be a colonial hangover, :rofl: but leisure is valued, especially for pursuit of the arts and creative activities. The problem is not with demarcated leisure. As the Chinese or Americans might observe, the Indians are leisurely about everything. Even his "working" lunch is leisurely and can extend to a few hours. The rush hour and the rat race are for others - or so an Indian tells himself.
 
Look at yourself..... nothing but a third world hole filled with envy and jealousy. All you have is self-delusion hoping that China is a third world hole like you :rofl: Keep defecating verbally, it won't make a difference.

Now that China is a superpower, even the US cannot stop us though they try. India is easy pickings..... all India's neighbors are buying JF-17 and other Chinese weapons. Once we smash India into smaller countries you will stay a third world hole forever ;)

Yeah the same Junk Fighter and your copied third rated junk weapons
 
Back
Top Bottom