• Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    3 days ago

    International recognition in line with the principles of customary international law as codified in the Montivedeo Convention make right, but that’s not very snappy.

    • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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      3 days ago

      No, you said:

      I would simply win the civil war instead of losing

      Which indicates quite clearly that you believe military power should decide whether a nation has the right to independence. You don’t get to try to deflect that ex post facto. You either admit that this is what you genuinely believe in spite of its obvious morality problem, or you admit that you were wrong to make such a statement and acknowledge that your ideas about national independence need changing.

      • CascadeOfLight [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        3 days ago

        The Chinese Nationalists thought that military power should decide that they were in charge of China, right up until the People’s Liberation Army fucking bodied them and they fled to their little island with their tails between their legs (and then conducted massacres against the native population and anyone remotely leftist).

        This “”“independence dispute”“” would have been resolved seventy years ago had the US Navy not stuck their fucking imperial beak in and stopped the communists chasing down these fascist war criminals and finishing the job.

      • frippa@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        The United states used military power to defeat the slavers in the south(and to get their independence in the first place), and the allies used military power to crush nazi Germany and their fascist allies. Not every use of military force is unwarranted or “immoral”

      • Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        3 days ago

        The outcomes of civil wars is widely acknowledged by both state practice and opinio juris as being a legitimate factor in the determination of sovereignty over a territory. If you don’t believe me, ask the Confederate States of America and the Republic of Vietnam about their experiences and get back to me.

        There is no “morality problem” because there is no issue of morality here. Morality is not a factor in international law.

        • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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          3 days ago

          We’re not talking about what is ‘widely acknowledged’, we are talking about what you have expressed as your personal belief. And you do have a morality problem:

          Skill issue. If I wanted to have a recognized independent country I would simply win the civil war instead of losing and then hiding in America’s skirt like a coward.

          You believe that in order to be independent from mainland China, Taiwan should have used military force - or again, that might makes right.

          You made this statement. It is not about international law, or opinio juris, or any other deflection you want to attempt. It is about what you believe justifies a nation’s independence, and it is solely based on the exercise of military power.

          • Tankiedesantski [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            3 days ago

            Taiwan should have used military force - or again, that might makes right.

            “Should have” used military might? Are you from a parallel dimension where the First United Front didn’t end in the Shanghai Massacre? Tell me how it went down in your reality then. Chiang embraced the CPC from behind with hugs and kisses as a show of his appreciation for their alliance against the warlords?

            I don’t have a morality problem because Chiang was an incompetent and corrupt jackass who started the civil war that he ended up losing on the mainland and having to flee to Taiwan Island.

            It is about what you believe justifies a nation’s independence

            My arguments as to international law go precisely towards your factually incorrect and repeated assertion that Taiwan Island is a “nation” or a “country”. You accuse me of “deflection” but you repeatedly asserted a factual and legal inaccuracy and refuse to address it. Your problem if you can’t engage with the argument, not mine. There is no such thing as a country or nation called “Taiwan” in the world.

          • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            3 days ago

            What is the weird childish liberal need to reduce everything to good guys and bad guys and what’s “right and wrong” (as if we, the genocidal collective west could recognize either at this point) without ever looking into the facts, the history of a place or what the people living there have decided already. This is a conversation about geopolitics, about the logical and predictable working of state machinery. “Justified” is not a word that means anything in this field. You might as well hold up everything to weepily condemn the authoritarianism of physics. Something either is or it isn’t. “Right” is a nonsense hueristic in this situation. Might makes reality.