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South China Sea Forum

That is why it's useless having a discussion or providing proof to these wackos. Regardless maps/history/articles only their versions are right and the stuff we post are fake. In the meantime our rigs keep on coming :cheers:
You're right trying to educate them is like breaking a rock with an egg.

They can masturbate that Vietnam was the origin of everything but nothing will change reality.

we are Southern Vietnamese, were Yuechang people in native. we speak same language with northern Vietnamese. Its different in China

Champa people is Malayo. They were new comers in coast of Vietnam. Indo-Chine peninsula, there is native land of Mon/Khmer/Muong/Khmu/Viet people who speak Mon/Khmer languages..
Yuechang was originally not in Vietnam read the original text:cheesy:

It doesn't matter if someone speaks Mon/Khmer languages Khmers,Munda etc don't identify with Kinh.

Are you seriously going to claim that that that all Mon/Khmers are Vietnamese?

While Hakka,Yue,Gan,Xiang,Min,Wu,Jin and Guan all identify as Han.
 
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China territory is ended at Hainan Island, :sarcastic:

Spratly-map-1904.4.jpg




Hoklo people is Min Yue, no Han.
Han people speak Mandarine, they do not understand hokkien language.

Sorry bro, China's territory range stretches far beyond yours. Take a lesson, my son.

Img401305427.jpg
 
You're right trying to educate them is like breaking a rock with an egg.

They can masturbate that Vietnam was the origin of everything but nothing will change reality.


Yuechang was originally not in Vietnam read the original text:cheesy:

It doesn't matter if someone speaks Mon/Khmer languages Khmers,Munda etc don't identify with Kinh.

Are you seriously going to claim that that that all Mon/Khmers are Vietnamese?

While Hakka,Yue,Gan,Xiang,Min,Wu,Jin and Guan all identify as Han.

we speak mon/Khmer language, but we identified in to different ethnic groups: Khmer, Mon, Munda, Khmu, Muong/Trai and Viet/Kinh.

same as in China Hakka,Yue,Gan,Xiang,Min,Wu,Jin and Guan. It is people in different ethnic groups.
 
Sorry bro, China's territory range stretches far beyond yours. Take a lesson, my son.

View attachment 36266

It is fake map, modified recently by chinese.

It is true map of China, Mr. Xi is received from Madam Merkel.

Image courtesy of the John H.W. Stuckenberg Map Collection, Special Collections/Musselman Library, Gettysburg College
A map of China from the 1700s by cartographer Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville.
g7810_1738_regni_sinae_vel_sinae.png



481183571.jpg


What madam Merkel siad to Mr. Xi "China territory is ended at Hainan Island." :sarcastic:
 
It is fake map, modified recently by chinese.

It is true map of China, Mr. Xi is received from Madam Merkel.

Image courtesy of the John H.W. Stuckenberg Map Collection, Special Collections/Musselman Library, Gettysburg College
A map of China from the 1700s by cartographer Jean Baptiste Bourguignon d’Anville.
g7810_1738_regni_sinae_vel_sinae.png



481183571.jpg


What madam Merkel siad to Mr. Xi "China territory is ended at Hainan Island." :sarcastic:

It's not fake, it's official map, recently published.
 
we speak mon/Khmer language, but we identified in to different ethnic groups: Khmer, Mon, Munda, Khmu, Muong/Trai and Viet/Kinh.

same as in China Hakka,Yue,Gan,Xiang,Min,Wu,Jin and Guan. It is people in different ethnic groups.
No they don't you liar,they are labeled Han.
 
China Moves Prompt Closer Ties Among Neighbors
June 25, 2014

The Philippines this week backed the Japanese prime minister's push for a broader military mandate - the latest move among China's maritime neighbors to unite against China's increasing assertiveness in the East and South China Seas.

As Beijing continues to assert a vast territorial claim in the South China Sea, Japan, the Philippines and Vietnam are strengthening their military and diplomatic bonds.

Ely Ratner, of the U.S.-based Center for a New American Security, says the three are overlooking historic conflicts with each other in reaction to China's sustained aggressive reach.

"There's no doubt that countries in the region are collectively spooked by what they're seeing as an increased pattern of Chinese assertiveness from the East China Sea down through the South China Sea," he said.

Regional Reactions

It's been a tense past two months. In May, China moved an oil rig into waters that Vietnam claims. A few weeks later, Vietnamese and Philippine troops spent a day socializing on a disputed island - neither asserting dominance, but both unified in their resistance to China's encroaching power.

Then, during a state visit to Japan earlier this week, Philippine President Benigno Aquino publicly supported Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's plan to broaden the Japanese military mandate to allow Tokyo to aid allies who are attacked.

"Japan is a strategic partner of the Philippines," Aquino said. "It is thus incumbent upon us to have continuous dialogue as we jointly face the changing dynamics of our regional security environment."

To expand the military’s mandate, Abe must first get his party’s coalition partner New Komeito on board.

But nearly two-thirds of Japanese voters oppose a reinterpretation of Article 9 of the Constitution, according to a poll released in April by Japan's leading newspaper Asahi Shimbun.

“There is a problem I think Prime Minister Abe has in selling this to his own people, and then of course explaining it to the region,” says Bonnie Glaser, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

Meanwhile Tokyo, along with the United States, has pledged to help Vietnam and the Philippines upgrade their maritime patrol ships.

No Backing Down

But China shows no signs of backing down. At meeting in Myanmar in May, Defense Minister Chang Wanquan told regional counterparts his country wants a negotiated solution in the South China Sea, but multilateralism can't solve the problem.

And that position isn't likely to change, according to Glaser.

"The Chinese believe that other nations are so economically dependent on China that these other nations will not directly confront China or not do so for a long period and at the end of the day will accommodate to Chinese interests so the Chinese think that they have time on their side," she said.

Ratner says Beijing may be miscalculating.

"I think people often think, 'Well, war isn't possible in Asia or conflict isn't possible because these economies are so interdependent,’" he said. "But when it comes to these passionate political issues and nationalism, often those considerations get thrown out the door."

After all, Ratner noted, Germany and England were vital trading partners before World War I.

China Moves Prompt Closer Ties Among Neighbors
 
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