
Originally Posted by
JBI
It's simple, Tibet, seized, and recently, Xinjiang is currently undergoing something one would call colonialism - Dali was conquered during the early Ming - border pushes within sichuan itself, including the integration of the Tibetan and Yi portions are 20th century enterprises. The border with North Korea has a large Korean speaking population.
If we take the Han Dynasty though, where was Guangdong then, a renegade vassal state as was the area around it under the leadership of Nanyue - the Xixia regime outwest was pretty much wiped off of history, as was the Liao regime in the north. The uyghar autonomous regimes that coexisted with Qing land claims are still being fought over today, often bloodily. Likewise, a North South, East West divide is culturally and linguistically there - in addition to various pockets of land that never were really under Chinese authority, like the Southern part of Hunan, or Guizhou as a whole - generally where the minority groups lived. Likewise the Mongolian nomads who ran up up top.
If one wants a clue as to how divided the country historically was, one need only look at breakdowns of religion, language, or better yet, look at food. Are you telling me there was always a Chinese presence in Xinjiang, Tibet, Qinghai? Or Yunnan, or Manchuria, or Mongolia? Those are all new ideas that haven't even to this day really settled in. The Ancient Chinese concept of the end of the world is right near Dunhuang at the 玉门。 Hainan before it was beach resort was desolate place of exile.
Yes, all countries have expanded, and we have novels like Blood Meridian which give s an idea of what that expansion was like. We don't have 60th anniversary parades where all foreign spectators are kicked out.
Likewise, most countries today have historical identities that try to understand the darkness in their path, China has no humor about it - they just don't talk about the bad, and act like it wasn't there.
The reason why China didn't go out to conquer as far as they could was because they failed, not because they didn't try. Even the Mongols failed their expansion southward into Indochina. China tried to take Korea more than once, and got told to beat it by delegations from modern day Afghanistan.
As to the point about other countries doing it in the past, well, we aren't in the 19th century are we? Americans have a dark history, does that give China the right to take its turn creating its own dark history? London got polluted during Wordsworth's time, so does that give China the right to dump all sorts of trash everywhere, and to clog up their skies?
You forget something, we are in an international world, in the 21st century, to be a part of it, you cannot be playing with 19th century rules. You do not get a get out of jail free card for not being developed.
Truth be told, China had just as dark a history in the last centuries. One or two centuries ago they were doing just as nasty things as they are now. Just because plumbing is a new idea, and modernity is newer doesn't mean they can get away from social responsibility. Taking forever to develop doesn't give a country a right to not develop basically accepted ideas, especially ones like the UN Charter of Human Rights that they've even signed onto. They signed it themselves, with a quote from Confucius to head the thing off.
My question of expansionism was not to take a stab at ancient expansion, it was more to point out what 5000 years really means - basically if you are from Henan, you will come close to it - you've had 5000 years of Chinese writing, or not quite, or... Beyond that - no resemblance. The regime changed, the culture changed, the language changed, the territory changed - massive migration and blood mixing occurred. Which is what occurred everywhere. Truth be told China proper spent more of those 5000 years divided than it did united - the idea of continuous national history is ridiculous, but alas, it is still part of the propaganda model.
As for me being superior or not, I don't find myself superior, as that is a difficult thing to claim, or justify. I just think people take things and they put them under this we don't touch this category, and as soon as I shake the boat a little, everyone drops the racist, white, imperialist western guy line to shut me up, well, it won't work that easily. The same way Chomsky can yell about American policy, he can yell about Chinese policy, he's a coward in that regard. Does he hate his country? Not at all, but he thinks he has a social responsibility to point out what it does wrong.
You can criticize without hating something. I enjoyed my year in China, but there is a difference between enjoying something and being stupid about it. They literally paid me to have a good time, and spread the word of their benevolence but it isn't likely to happen. It's not about superiority, it is about leveling the playing field.
You do not need to be racist to criticize. Feel free to take that nonsense and can it - Apartheid in South Africa ended because of international criticism - just because those complaining weren't South Africans doesn't mean they didn't have a right to complain and pressure the country. Did that mean that everyone involved was looking down on South Africans?
Geez, quit putting the country on a pedestal. IT shouldn't be immune from criticism just because I am white.