• @Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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    101 year ago

    Tibet had a popular revolutionary party whose views were in line with the rest of China that wanted China’s help overthrowing the Dalai Lama, under whom slavery and serfdom was common in the region.

    Yes Tibet was a theocratic slave state. But China still invaded and annexed them.

    Was the US invasion of Iraq justified because Saddam was a dictator? If we annexed Iraq and didn’t make them speak English it would be fine?

    • Roflmasterbigpimp
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      91 year ago

      Forget it. He is too far gone. We are just Strangers on the Internet, and he lives inside a paranoid nightmare. I tried my best but got nowhere.

      • DarkThoughts
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        71 year ago

        He’s clearly a tankie. I wonder if lemmy.zip is just as bad as lemmygrad or lemmy.ml.
        I know why I went to kbin though. I just have no desire to directly support those developers.

      • @Arelin@lemmy.zip
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        -11 year ago

        he lives inside a paranoid nightmare

        Lmao I wouldn’t go that far. But we can’t all see eye-to-eye ig unfortunately.

    • @Arelin@lemmy.zip
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      -9
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      1 year ago

      China invaded and annexed them.

      Again, the popular Tibetan revolutionary party fought the feudal rule and welcomed Chinese intervention; their views were in line with the rest of China, and the autonomous nature of the region while being part of China reflects that.

      the US invasion of Iraq

      Not even comparable. There were no popular pro-US movements fighting Saddam’s rule, and Iraq was destabilized in the first place because of US sanctions, not Saddam’s decisions unlike the feudalism in Tibet. This was purely a strategic invasion to set up military bases and secure oil and resources by making up false claims of WMDs.

      • @Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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        131 year ago

        popular Tibetan revolutionary party

        If they were popular, they wouldn’t have needed China to invade. China was supporting them just like the US supported revolutionaries that overthrew their governments.

        There were no popular pro-US movements fighting Saddam’s rule

        The Kurds.

        This was purely a strategic invasion to set up military bases and secure oil and resources by making up false claims of WMDs.

        Their are no us military bases in Iraq and all the oil money goes to Iraq.

        • @Arelin@lemmy.zip
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          -51 year ago

          If they were popular, they wouldn’t have needed China

          Why wouldn’t commoners in a feudal slave state not want help from a nearby government whose views match their own?

          just like the US supported revolutionaries that overthrew their governments

          The US overthrew democratically elected popular governments, like Mosaddegh’s in Iran, or Salvador Allende’s in Iraq, replacing the latter with a military dictatorship, because their policies benefitted their own countries instead of the US.

          Their are no us military bases in Iraq and all the oil money goes to Iraq.

          …What? There are still military bases in Iraq even now, and the economic dependence on the US that Iraq is now in is exactly what the US wanted/wants. ExxonMobil, Chevron etc. extracting oil for cheap from a war-torn country that doesn’t have a choice; even CNN admits it.