I’ll take that as my cue to take a left turn: to what extent is the repression/possibly genocide in Xinjiang/Uyghurstan an instance of settler colonialism? Like in Tibet, it’s systematic repression of an indigenous population that won’t cooperate with the CCP coupled with (that’s the important part) massive immigration of Han Chinese to skew the demographic balance away from the indigenous population. It’s not an exact parallel to European settler colonialism, but it’s reasonably close.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Wed Apr 03, 2024 4:00 pm I was surprised to see that the thread I split off from the discussion of the Israel-Palestine conflict specifically to talk about larger underlying issues of colonialism and racism has become so active. Now I see it's because y'all are just using it to discuss the Israel-Palestine conflict.
I’d even argue that settler colonialism has been part of official Chinese policy since before the Communists. The Chinese settlement of Taiwan has always struck me as uncomfortable close to the violent settlement and takeover of North America by Anglos: the indigenous population was pushed toward more and more marginal land, typically violently so, with the heavy lifting done by individual settlers or groups but always with the blessing of the Qing government. And the demographics now are similar, as is the celebration-cum-paternalism of more progressive Taiwanese Chinese.