Stas Bush wrote:Iron Bridge wrote:What the US did was not justifiable, but still pales in comparison to the conduct in Bohemia-Moravia, Generalgouvernment Poland, or the Congo Free State.
How exactly killing everyone over ten pales in comparison with the Congo Free State? It certainly does not.
1. They US didn't do that. Are you seriously claiming the US literally wiped out >80% of the population of the Philippines?
2. Just read the goddamn wiki about the Congo Free State if you can't be bothered to do the least research. The whole thing was a slave plantation, and it wasn't an attempt to fight a war, that's just what King Leopold planned the whole society to be like forever.
Iron Bridge wrote:The best outcome would be that the Philippines surrenders to the US and asks to become a state.
They surrendered after a military defeat and were colonized. The Bill of Rights was extended to the Philippines.
After they already lost the war US also ceased to commit atrocities, even offering independence before it was fashionable and then protecting them from the even worse Japanese (a dictatorship - surprise!).
Iron Bridge wrote:Only example of any prosperous non-democracy you can produce are petrostates, and China plainly isn't one of those.
Obviously petrostates are not the only example of a prosperous dictatorship; the Third Reich was a First World nation, was not a petrostate and I'm pretty sure it was not a democracy.
The Third Reich had also been a democracy like 12 years before it collapsed, unless you think the wealth should all disappear overnight.
Iron Bridge wrote:The question is not whether democracy always results in prosperity but whether democracy will make China less prosperous, or even whether China can become western-level prosperous at all without it.
You can't be seriously redefining your own statements so easily
You said "that's what democracies often
do". I just pointed out that most nations are in fact democracies, but are not rich.
I think you do not read the discussions you're trying to critique. Or else how can I explain your statements? Someone responded to my saying China was bad because it was not a democracy by saying, but wouldn't it be worse if China's economy wasn't growing? He implied there was a hard trade-off between the two things when there isn't. You aren't arguing that such a hard trade-off exists (I don't think you would, since you seem to be just dishonest or confused rather than stupid), you're arguing some other thing that exists only in your head.
Of course China would be better of with a functional democracy, but democracy does not bring riches. It brings power to the people depending on how directly they are involved in its structures, that's why it is desireable. China is already becoming rich. What is a problem is that you can, in fact, become rich without being a democracy - like South Korea did - or, alternatively, be rich and have a deeply dysfunctional democracy like Japan. This is a worrying fact. I support democracy unconditionally; not because it makes one rich, in fact it might not. But some things are more important than being rich.
1. SK is surely the perfect example of a dictatorship not being stable in the face of a market society with increasingly wealthy citizens.
2. Japan is a functional democracy.
3. China is still, in fact, extremely poor. It has a high
rate of growth. That is not the same as being already rich. So while it is at least possible, it remains to be seen whether Western-style wealth can be compatible with dictatorship in anything other than corner cases.
Iron Bridge wrote:Japan isn't a nuclear power.
It can easily become one if it so desires, the tech level more than allows it.
If it does, China's probability of attacking it will drop substantially. Nonetheless it is not one and there would be substantial practical impediments (even if not technological impediments) to becoming one.
I also am not sure China would think Japan would nuke over the Senkakus. If that is the case it creates a maximally dangerous situation, where an initial limited conventional confrontation could escalate, along the lines of the Cuba Crisis.