Capt.Popeye
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Tibetan Buddhism do.
You are speaking about a "class system", that is not the same as a "caste system". They are not synonymous.
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Tibetan Buddhism do.
why a powerful China would put India in a painful thorn
You are speaking about a "class system", that is not the same as a "caste system". They are not synonymous.
The Huttington "Civilisational appraoch" to international relations is a flawed appraoch and has so many loopholes that no one worthy of concern looks at it to explain international relations.
All the peaceful talk is well and good, but the fact of the matter is that rising powers will expand and try to undermine rival powers. Its just something that happens in the International system.
Historically Chinese influence was coastal and never across the Himalayas. But with the close partnership with Pakistan it has done something it never did before in its history. Mainly out of concern against India. There are more than enough examples last year that China will try to alter the balance of power in its favor like the Japan fishermen incident. And until a democratic form of government comes into being that will be transparent with its intentions, there will be this issue.
All we can hope for is that this dilemma is managed and doesn't become a full blown security competition. And one way to do that is that China sticks to its traditional area of influence i.e. north of the himalayas, while India sticks to its traditional area - south of the himalayas.
The Huttington "Civilisational appraoch" to international relations is a flawed appraoch and has so many loopholes that no one worthy of concern looks at it to explain international relations.
Historically Chinese influence was coastal and never across the Himalayas. But with the close partnership with Pakistan it has done something it never did before in its history. Mainly out of concern against India. There are more than enough examples last year that China will try to alter the balance of power in its favor like the Japan fishermen incident. And until a democratic form of government comes into being that will be transparent with its intentions, there will be this issue.
All we can hope for is that this dilemma is managed and doesn't become a full blown security competition. And one way to do that is that China sticks to its traditional area of influence i.e. north of the himalayas, while India sticks to its traditional area - south of the himalayas.
After exterminating most of Native Indians, European colonists in N America felt bad and established reserves for the vanished, well feed them, and called for human rights and democracy all over the world. Dont you think the story sounds similar to that of Ashoka? Do you love the colonists?
I meant your invention of non-violence, which was only under British rule. Before and after that, it is very violent. But again your statement also refuses what the article touted about peaceful India.
By the way, when Buddhism in China was at its height, China also went through its greatest period, the Sui and Tang dynasty.
Actually most indians find chinese amusing and vice versa .Both are an enigma to each otherEvery people have their own brand of conceit. What I am starting to understand is about India and Indians is that their reason for thinking itself superior is based on spirtuality and the effemoral realm of religion. Superstitions and gods is what they think is important, and because China and the rest of east asia adopted buddhism, a dharmic religion, they see themselves as superior to us.
Think carefully about the response Ghandi gave when a westerner asked him about western civilization, he said "western civilization? It would be a good idea". Clearly admitting to no such thing as a western civilization. Incredible when you think about, this is coming from an Indian at a time when western hard power ruled over them absolutely and when the standards of living in the west exceed theirs in every measurable metric, education, health, etc etc.
To myself (and probably other Chinese here), being brought in a scientific family and without a religion, this mentality probably escaped me for the longest time.
(also this kind of thinking probably offers an insight into Indian thinking on Tibetan matters, they see the Tibetans as civilized and the godless, and areligious Chinese as heathens)