The people didn't "go" anywhere. They're still there. Their descendants make up around 10% of the population. They're US citizens and the majority of them aren't part of any independence movement. Did some die during the period where the US overthrew their monarchy? Of course! It was an armed conflict, after all. Did we slaughter all or even a significant percentage of the natives? No, we didn't.
We have slaughtered native populations elsewhere. You want to point fingers at the US, there's plenty of places to point. But your Hawaiian argument reeks of ignorance.
And again, that has nothing in common with the PRC/ROC division.
You claim that the US is the only reason Taiwan doesn't want to be part of the PRC. Is that what the PRC government tells its people? That the Taiwanese desperately want to dissolve their government and submit to the PRC but us evil Americans won't let them? Why not ask some Taiwanese people about that?
You admit that there is a "problem in Taiwan," but maintain the illusion that the PRC controls Taiwan? You can't have it both ways. Either you control it, or you don't.
There is nothing else you can say to me, because you ran out of arguments a while ago and keep trying to push some narrative about Hawaii. You haven't answered any of the questions from my last comment. You haven't given me any reasons why Taiwan is really part of the PRC in any practical sense, because there isn't one.
When did I ever claim that? When did I ever justify the actions of the US in Hawaii? You are making a lot of assumptions about my opinions and have nothing to back them up with.
I stated that it was irrelevant to the actual discussion about Taiwan. Remember the topic we were actually discussing? If you want to talk about Hawaiian history, then make a separate post about it.
Recently finished reading Kanojo mo Kanojo. Can't say I like everything about it (can't stand the Youtube girl), but I'm going to miss it as I love the mangaka's style.
It feels like there was a lot more potential in the series, so I'm sad that it ended.
YKK is great. It leaves you with a lot of questions and never really goes anywhere, but it's such a relaxing read and the world it's based in is so interesting.
Totally agree on the skill part. The ability to read documentation and understand it is extremely important. Especially if you need to coordinate with nonprogrammers like engineers, or if you work in fields that SO doesn't cover well like I do.
That part of it, sure, but the guy was good at business and made some smart bets (that the microcomputer industry would explode, for one). Microsoft didn't get as big as it has based only on their technical ability. They got there because they made the right decisions and were cutthroat against their competitors.
Bill was at the right time and right place, but he was also the right guy. You gotta have them all.
Well, to be fair, they wouldn't be allowed that. We had a bit of a war about that sort of thing, and the supreme court maintains that a state has no right to leave the union. But you're exactly right that independence isn't popular in Hawaii.
And that would make no sense at all, since the Hawaiian independence movement is so tiny as to be nonexistent. But again, that has nothing to do with this discussion.
You're back to repeating yourself. I'm not the one doing mental gymnastics here. Riddle me this, Batman: if Taiwan is de facto part of the ROC, then why do we get our chips - the irreplaceable ones, not the 555 timer knockoffs - from Taiwan and not the mainland? Why aren't semiconductors produced in the PRC common in the global supply chain? Why do US companies invest so much money in Taiwanese fabs? Why does only Taiwan and South Korea have the ability to make chips at a 5nm process or smaller?
In short, why can we live without the PRC's fabs but not Taiwan's? It's because for all intents and purposes, they're different countries. They just share a fantasy that they're not, and we go along with it because it's not worth the trouble. Until one of them quits dreaming and actually takes the other one over, they're going to be two different countries.
And the Hawaii stuff has exactly what to do with China? Oh wait, it doesn't. The US being "nice" isn't even part of this discussion. And really, neither the PRC or ROC have any leg to stand on when it comes to accusations of atrocities.
As far as the rest, none of that matters. Does the PRC control Taiwain now? No, no it doesn't. Has the PRC controlled Taiwan for all these decades it's played this game of pretend? No, no, it hasn't. Until the PRC has actual control over Taiwan, its claims of ownership are meaningless.
The governments of Texas and Hawaii don't pretend to control the entire United States.
The China/Taiwan thing is downright silly. They can pretend all day long and make all the claims they want, but at the end of the day it's just make-believe. The PRC doesn't control Taiwan, and Taiwan doesn't control the PRC. The rest of the world will smile and nod and say whatever we have to in order to get what we want, in the same way you'd smile and nod until your crazy neighbor stops ranting and goes back in his house.
Just looked it up on Youtube. Holy shit, that was amazing. Perfect update to the original. It doesn't have the punch the last verse of the original did, but otherwise it's fantastic.
foreach is useful when you don't need to know the index of something. If you do, conventional i, j, k, etc. are useful.
A lot of it depends what you're doing (number crunching, for instance) or if you're in a limited programming language (why won't BASIC die already?) where parallel arrays are still a thing.
When the practice started, most (if not all) programming languages used capital letters. IIRC the computers that ran early FORTRAN (which is where the I,J,K, etc. convention comes from) didn't even support lower case letters.
I've had fuel pour out once - but not from the pump. We had someone replace the fuel pump and they forgot to put the gasket on.
I agree it sounds like a crazy idea, but it works. The automatic cutoff on those fuel dispensers works really, really well. I've been driving for over 30 years and have never seen it fail.
The people didn't "go" anywhere. They're still there. Their descendants make up around 10% of the population. They're US citizens and the majority of them aren't part of any independence movement. Did some die during the period where the US overthrew their monarchy? Of course! It was an armed conflict, after all. Did we slaughter all or even a significant percentage of the natives? No, we didn't.
We have slaughtered native populations elsewhere. You want to point fingers at the US, there's plenty of places to point. But your Hawaiian argument reeks of ignorance.
And again, that has nothing in common with the PRC/ROC division.
You claim that the US is the only reason Taiwan doesn't want to be part of the PRC. Is that what the PRC government tells its people? That the Taiwanese desperately want to dissolve their government and submit to the PRC but us evil Americans won't let them? Why not ask some Taiwanese people about that?
You admit that there is a "problem in Taiwan," but maintain the illusion that the PRC controls Taiwan? You can't have it both ways. Either you control it, or you don't.
There is nothing else you can say to me, because you ran out of arguments a while ago and keep trying to push some narrative about Hawaii. You haven't answered any of the questions from my last comment. You haven't given me any reasons why Taiwan is really part of the PRC in any practical sense, because there isn't one.