I think that the future of the whole world depends on two monstrous gambles, in which most of us are concerned. One is to do with Islam: the effort to tame the rebellious and Titanic spirit of this religion by continued acquaintance and collaboration with a world that now includes not only the West but also the Far East and India. The other is the
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Among Taiwanese the matter of identity is fast changing and also much fluctuating; the very rough estimate would be to say that one third is for indepedence, one for unification and one has no clear opinion. If you want me to go into details, I can post fragments of the article I co-authored on the subject of the legal status of Taiwan (can't post whole one, hasn't yet been published).
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I might have worded it inapropriately, but by no means I underrate the int'l law: above I quoted its very definitions asserting Taiwan's factual independence.
And I would add that while no doubt public opinion in Taiwan is divided, the political situation itself must be a factor.Current developments contribute especially to the large (e.g. 10%) fluctuations in "Taiwanese/Chinese identity" as measured in the polls within months, which is scale not found in the more "stabilized" societies (stabilized w/regard to the sense of identity, not economically or politically. In the latter regards Taiwanese are v. stable). More finely constructed questionnaires reveal quite a brad spectrum of opinions, from hard-core unioninst, through "possibly in the future, if China changes enough", "maybe yes, maybe not", "indepedence only if there is no war because of it" to hardcore independists. There are even more attitudes listed and present ( ... )
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Incidentally, whatever The Epoch Times says, I think the possibility of a cross-strait military conflict anytime in the forseeable future is really low. It would be, as you point out, disastrous for almost everybody involved ( ... )
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