Why Taiwan is NOT Ukraine

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2022
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    Watch episode 2 of my new Nebula Original series on Nebula: nebula.tv/videos/polymatter-w... ("Why China Won't Abandon Zero-COVID")
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @PolyMatter
    @PolyMatter  Před 2 lety +1138

    Thanks for the great feedback on the first episode of my new Nebula Original series. Episode 2 is out now and I think it's even better. This one is about why China is still pursuing Zero-COVID after 900 days and with no end in sight. I've had theories about this for years but feel like it's starting to really crystalize, and the answer is not a pleasant one. If you've been holding off on signing up for Nebula, now is the time to pull the trigger, with the CS + Nebula bundle on sale for less than $1/month right now: curiositystream.com/polymatter

    • @PeterNjeim
      @PeterNjeim Před 2 lety

      Why is Trump omitted from the list of presidents? Why did you joke about Russia's GDP being "formerly" 9.5x that of Ukraine? Unless you're under the assumption that Western sanctions will affect Russia's GDP more proportionally than Ukraine's current destruction, then I really can't see how you made that claim.
      You also falsely claimed that Ukrainian civilian resistance causes slowdown for Russia. This is false. It's Western aid that causes slowdown for Russia.
      You also falsely claimed that tractors were an obstacle to Russia. Again, it's a joke based on a false premise. You can make that joke on your circle jerk platform, but don't make it in a video where you're (seemingly) trying to gain trust and educate others.
      You then continue by claiming Russia's position on the world stage is similar to that of North Korea. I didn't know being part of the G20, part of OPEC+, and a major oil exporter (doesn't matter where they're exporting to) is a North Korean-esque world power.
      I have a feeling you unironically use Twitter, as these jokes based on false premises seem to originate and stay on that toxic platform (where 65% of all information is considered false).
      Why are these weird inaccuracies showing up in your video? This was the first PolyMatter video I've seen where there is explicit bias, and flat out omissions of information (as cryptic as they are).

    • @PapiBocaChula
      @PapiBocaChula Před 2 lety +8

      The things China is doing over there should give people in America Perception, yet it doesn't. Most Fascinating. So many people not really Paying Attention.

    • @astroch
      @astroch Před 2 lety

      China just started easing travel restrictions into the country...

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 Před 2 lety +50

      I think you should be more precise here and tell people that the basic CS + Nebula bundle won't give them access to your China videos. Since they're Nebula Originals, a subscription upgrade for additional 5 bucks a month is needed.

    • @PapiBocaChula
      @PapiBocaChula Před 2 lety

      16:54 "WHY" Of course, you can't see why? Because you don't have all the moving pieces. Now if China's Central Bank is in the Control of the Cabal, The Israel Banking Cartel. That owns All of them!!! Literally!!! Of course, that question is not proven, however, all the evidence still lines up in Israel Tho. How interesting. China can only be seen as an Enemy if they are not doing what Israel tells them to do the way they control every other Country. In every country is a different system, in America is A.I.P.A.C in the UK it's something else. As long as China is bending the Knee everything is Good. Like Putin, that is all part of the Plan. Not to mention prior to the War, the Israeli Prime Minister visited Ukraine a lot leading up to the War. We already know they funded both sides of the world Wars. all just to get Israel and control of all the WOrld's Central Banks. Period. Now, they shrinking the Population of the world. they have a web around the world that has taken Centuries to execute. the world's longest Rally race for Power the world has seen. They control all the Media in almost every Country. In Britain is was Ms.Maxwell's Father Mossad's agent. Media MOgul? The deeper you get, the crazier it gets. the more like a crazy person you sound like. Edwin Snowden is not crazy by a long shot. Its heavily layered. at almost every high level in the Military, in the C.I.A an American with dual Citizenship to America and Israel. How are in fact Mossad agents? there is "Americans" that are in fact Mossad agents, controlling our people In COngress, Most agencies. Chuck Schumer is one of them.

  • @timtebow777
    @timtebow777 Před 2 lety +8689

    I'll admit, I had my suspicions that Taiwan wasn't Ukraine, and this video just confirms it.

    • @99temporal
      @99temporal Před 2 lety +401

      im still not sure... to me, they're the same

    • @99temporal
      @99temporal Před 2 lety +550

      just as once i was going to visit italy and ended up in senegal... I still don't know how that happened

    • @omargerardolopez3294
      @omargerardolopez3294 Před 2 lety +182

      Dunno, all eurasians look the same tome :/

    • @GAMER123GAMING
      @GAMER123GAMING Před 2 lety +15

      @@omargerardolopez3294 ur last name is eurasan

    • @omargerardolopez3294
      @omargerardolopez3294 Před 2 lety +102

      @@GAMER123GAMING I don't think you get the joke

  • @buckyhermit
    @buckyhermit Před 2 lety +3039

    "Taiwanese are less concerned." Reminds me of what I noticed when I worked in Seoul .The South Korean public is way less worried about a North Korean attack than us North Americans. After living there for a few months, I settled into that pattern too and learned it was mostly empty threats, since it makes no strategic or economic sense to attack, not to mention they could lose the support of China (their only ally and lifeline) if they do so, since China does a lot of trade with South Korea. Not to mention the South Koreans and US being a good boogeyman to maintain fear and power over the North Koreans.

    • @lawbringer9857
      @lawbringer9857 Před 2 lety

      The Ukrainians thought the exact same right until Russia finally pulled the trigger and attacked. Complacency is very dangerous. Especially Since unlike Ukraine, Taiwan will not be getting armed once China launches the attack.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Před 2 lety +245

      Taiwan has lived with Chinese claims over it for over half a century. The public there isn't even mostly for rash independence declarations - their own surveys show only about 10% of the population favors that (half the population favors it eventually, but they're in no hurry). Even the Chinese were mostly content to maintain the status quo - China is even Taiwans' largest trade partner, by far (contrast that with the US and Cuba, an island in a similar position that actually HAS been invaded by the US before, and been sanctioned to oblivion ever since). The current tensions started in 2017 - nothing changed in China then (Xi came to power in 2012), it changed in the US. Specifically Trump came to power and launched an anti-China crusade, which his successor has just continued.
      Taiwan isn't about Taiwan, it's about the US (which already has bases close to China, and already allied with Taiwan) versus China.

    • @lawbringer9857
      @lawbringer9857 Před 2 lety

      @@ArawnOfAnnwn If believe that China with it's current rhetoric isn't planning on one day invading Tiawan if they don't agree to a union then you're either very delusional/ignorant or just a CCP shill spouting disinformation.

    • @seungjunrhee
      @seungjunrhee Před 2 lety +182

      As a South Korean, I completely agree with your analysis. Still, like the video says, nobody really knows what is going through these madmen's heads, so we should still be vigilant.

    • @user-og6ws6cy5l
      @user-og6ws6cy5l Před 2 lety +1

      - Soviet Union gives weapons to Cuba
      USA: Soviet Union bad
      - USA: gives weapons to Taiwan
      USA: its democracy

  • @shoking9825
    @shoking9825 Před rokem +229

    man i wanted to go to ukraine but i booked my flight to taiwan thank god this video saved me and showed me they arent the same

  • @mrflag250
    @mrflag250 Před rokem +289

    I had my doubts that an island off the coast of China was the same as a country on the North of the Black Sea and sandwiched between Russia and the west but thank you for confirming it

  • @RichM3000
    @RichM3000 Před rokem +1224

    Well, this explains why I was having trouble getting by speaking Ukrainian while in Taiwan. Taiwan really isn't Ukraine at all.

    • @hilljackzack7284
      @hilljackzack7284 Před rokem +43

      Same thing with speaking Russian in China.

    • @BandytaCzasu
      @BandytaCzasu Před rokem +54

      @@hilljackzack7284 But soon, all Russia will be speaking Chinese.

    • @hilljackzack7284
      @hilljackzack7284 Před rokem +14

      @@BandytaCzasu no they won’t

    • @BandytaCzasu
      @BandytaCzasu Před rokem +8

      @@hilljackzack7284 So you think Ukaine will take Russia before China?

    • @hilljackzack7284
      @hilljackzack7284 Před rokem

      @@BandytaCzasu Uhh no I think if China even tried invading Russia the war would end with China being broken up into 5 or 6 small countries and several cities being nuked. Also Russia would finally have warm sea ports.

  • @norsefire0110
    @norsefire0110 Před 2 lety +806

    5:39 Not completely true. You omit that Ukraine is very muddy in the seasons of spring and autumn leaving winter and summer the best time for invasions. That's the reason the Russians were mostly on the roads where they could get droned, because they would get bogged up everywhere else.

    • @brianwestberry9117
      @brianwestberry9117 Před 2 lety +18

      On that graph of u.s. administration's. Why wasn't there a president in 2018?

    • @obsidianstatue
      @obsidianstatue Před 2 lety +54

      shhh, this is an amatuer channel, who's purpose is to talk about hot button issues, so the guy can make a living, he's not an academic that needs to have academic integrity.

    • @Ildskalli
      @Ildskalli Před 2 lety +15

      @@brianwestberry9117
      Because in practice there wasn't one.

    • @Ildskalli
      @Ildskalli Před 2 lety +3

      Rasputitsa is the exception that he mentioned, and it's indeed a big factor, but it's neither predictable nor permanent.

    • @tellyboy17
      @tellyboy17 Před 2 lety +12

      Also crossing a river is remarkable challenging apparently.

  • @nanjiang1953
    @nanjiang1953 Před rokem +36

    Unlike Ukraine, the island of Taiwan is more difficult to invade but also near impossible to get any support from outside.

    • @monk786
      @monk786 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It seems that way, difficult to invade and easy to defend, but in early last century, the Europeans invaded and occupied Taiwan. They renamed Taiwan to Formosa (beautiful in Spanish), the Chinese sailed across the strait and kicked the Europeans out to the ocean and the Chinese renamed Formosa back to Taiwan.

  • @glenngilbert7389
    @glenngilbert7389 Před rokem +18

    This is an excellent presentation which provides reasonable ideas to explain the situation in a non sensationalist way.

  • @luishernandezblonde
    @luishernandezblonde Před 2 lety +3339

    Taiwan has a far better economy than Ukraine and is far more competitive, as well as having greater international influence despite not being internationally recognised as a state by almost everybody. Not to mention: semiconductor weapons. Taiwan also realises this and is diversifying its investment in the United States and the West to serve as plan B in case of a Chinese invasion. Though I will cast a big "if" when China also needs economic benefits from Taiwan.

    • @Ilovecruise
      @Ilovecruise Před 2 lety +121

      Doesn’t diverting the semiconductor make it more vulnerable? because after such action it is no longer the only one who hold such strategic interest?

    • @surajkumar-gx6gf
      @surajkumar-gx6gf Před 2 lety

      Ukraine conflict explained: czcams.com/video/O326BZFTIw4/video.html

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 Před 2 lety +86

      But Taiwan is much older and wealthier/educated/urban which might be hinder a resistance in comparison to Ukraine. My parents is from there and many relatives still live there. I wish Taiwan well but there is both positives & negatives in comparison to Ukraine in resistance to war.

    • @everythingisfine9988
      @everythingisfine9988 Před 2 lety +73

      Economy isn't a very useful indicator. More importantly, what allies do you have. How strong is your military and most important of all how is your geography. Ukraine is flat as a pancake and very easy to walk across on foot. That's bad news or anyone living there. On the other hand Taiwan is an island. That is an advantage to anybody trying to get there

    • @obsidianstatue
      @obsidianstatue Před 2 lety +30

      China would take Taiwan in the 2030s, by then, China and the US would monopolize semiconductor manufacturing, both are pouring money and resources, Taiwan's advantage won't last to the end of this decade.

  • @alcaulique8358
    @alcaulique8358 Před 2 lety +1793

    Apart from mistakes other people outlined, I think that you overlooked one major element, urban warfare. Taiwan has a density of 652/km2, Ukraine 73/km2. During the first phase of the Russian invasion, we have seen Russia bypass major cities without trying to take them (apart from cities impossible to bypass). And there is a good reason for this, urban warfare (i.e. fighting in town or cities) is a real pain for modern armoured forces, especially when attacking. You are exposed to small groups of fighters, booby traps and snipers. So usually, attacking in urban environment you are left with two possibilities, clear building after building which takes times and men or obliterate the city. While the russian army bypassed every urban environment they could, they went for the destruction of other urban environment. But as I said, Ukraine is far less densely populated than Taiwan. Thus, when you factor in urban warfare, amphibious warfare and mountain warfare, you are left with a clusterfuck that takes time, men and logistic to take. While the alternative means the total destruction of Taiwan.

    • @thelieutenant7732
      @thelieutenant7732 Před 2 lety +124

      This is exactly why the PRC has considered using the PAP during the hypothetical invasion, the People's Armed Police is much more prepared for urban combat compared to the PLA or Russian military. It would be foolish to think that China isn't learning from Russia's mistakes.

    • @alcaulique8358
      @alcaulique8358 Před 2 lety +116

      @@thelieutenant7732 I totally agree that every army is currently learning from what is happening. I just wanted to outline the overlook urban warfare component of invasion of Taiwan

    • @magnem1043
      @magnem1043 Před 2 lety +12

      They could just carpet smoke bomb and bring them in as paratroopers lmao, also Taiwan morale is different then Ukraines

    • @bluemarlin8138
      @bluemarlin8138 Před 2 lety +134

      @@magnem1043 Go read up on Iwo Jima and Okinawa in WWII. The US bombarded both with battleships and aircraft for weeks before the invasion and reduced them to barren wastelands. But they barely killed any of the defenders because they were hiding in tunnels dug into the mountains. Taiwan has these tunnels too (many actually dug by Japan in WWII), and has far more of them defending a far larger area. China can’t just bomb out the defenders. It would be a bloody cave-by-cave struggle that would last for months if not years. And that’s assuming the US didn’t get involved.

    • @fgfgdgdfgdfgiidfgdfgdfgdfgdfgd
      @fgfgdgdfgdfgiidfgdfgdfgdfgdfgd Před 2 lety +29

      @@bluemarlin8138 go read up on japanese invasion of taiwan 1895. an amphibious operation by japan that took less than 5 months with japanese losses fraction of taiwanese. and china is a lot closer to taiwan than mainland japan was.

  • @DxModel219
    @DxModel219 Před rokem +1

    brilliantly written and well produced!

  • @kentvonseverin1257
    @kentvonseverin1257 Před rokem +6

    Thank you for this incredibly well done piece.
    One must not under calculate the certain economic consequences to China should they attempt to invade Taiwan. This alone is the most probable deterrent (factor).

    • @qiuweida
      @qiuweida Před rokem

      但是,丢失台湾是任何中国政府都不能承受的损失,中国阻止台湾独立是不惜一切代价的,哪怕让台湾变成人间地狱。

    • @jonathanbowers8964
      @jonathanbowers8964 Před 7 měsíci

      Agreed. Russia is an oil based economy and they always knew they could find a market for their oil (outside a complete blockade, which would be impossible to enforce as Russia could always just use trucks to ship its oil to Kazakhstan and China). Meanwhile China needs NATO and its allies to buy its manufactured goods, which can be built by other countries, albeit at a relatively large cost, for roughly the same price. Russia was set up to be an Autarky apart from its oil exports and doesn't really need imports to satisfy the average Russian citizen. Meanwhile China depends on trade with the outside world to maintain its social contract with its citizens.
      Lastly China has not been at war since the late 1970s, when it was finishing up a conflict with Vietnam that started under Mao. China has not been in a single war or major armed conflict since it started its economic transformation. That means that China has no real military experience with modern logistics or how its people will handle external conflict.

  • @OkachaWasTaken
    @OkachaWasTaken Před 2 lety +1235

    Taiwan: Is an island
    Ukraine: Isn't an island
    Therefore Taiwan is NOT Ukraine

  • @tullochgorum6323
    @tullochgorum6323 Před 2 lety +1351

    Interesting point about the US WWII invasion plan, and the conclusion that the island is such an extremely difficult target. That was based on a depth of practical experience of amphibious landings that no modern military can match.

    • @SocietyKilledTheUnicorn
      @SocietyKilledTheUnicorn Před 2 lety +8

      Afghanistan has never been successfully taken. Despite it being
      |
      V

    • @samuellubell4557
      @samuellubell4557 Před 2 lety +192

      @@SocietyKilledTheUnicorn Afghanistan is landlocked

    • @captiannemo1587
      @captiannemo1587 Před 2 lety +29

      Amphibious landing craft is the easy part. The hard part is driving from surf to shore.
      See Andrew Hills book Wading Ashore for the development leading up to D-Day…

    • @ThorSuzuki1
      @ThorSuzuki1 Před 2 lety +58

      @@captiannemo1587 Amphibious landings when not facing modern Anti Ship misslies may be easy.

    • @truthsRsung
      @truthsRsung Před 2 lety +8

      Words to key on when looking for signs of bad information:
      Interesting...the opposite of boring and says just as much about the vanilla person behind it.
      Extremely...Trying too hard to make a point out of a detail.
      We finish with a Superiority Statement that relies on 80 year old info and attempts to apply it to current situations.
      Was it an advantage that educated men used Intelligence info on weather and geography to keep their man safer?
      The alternative was a Supreme Leader being infallible. That's what our adversaries had to overcome. Strict adherence to the Lunatic at the Top.
      This video plays like the Farmers Almanac reads.
      I think you should reconsider the military objectives of both China and Russia.
      Everyone keeps assuming that they want to occupy Tiawan and Ukraine.
      I think that they would be nearly as happy with them GONE.
      For some one who wants to use Math for War, I suggest you recalculate using Subtraction from Earth instead of Addition to a Nation.
      Military always have problems setting up their Word Problems.

  • @karjala.
    @karjala. Před rokem +3

    In 11:30 why you didnt write the name of the president?

  • @CrystallineFoxCF
    @CrystallineFoxCF Před rokem +20

    2 minute version: Geography forbids that two countries on opposite sides of the globe from being the same place

  • @thomaslavery684
    @thomaslavery684 Před rokem +1129

    I think it is also important to mention that Taiwan produces 90% of the world's advanced chips. Without them straight up every single industry will collapse. There are two reasons why this is important. One it will literally force the US to defend Taiwan whether they want to or not, plus the US also already has national security reasons for defending Taiwan. The second is that China straight up buys their chips from Taiwan too, it would be self-sabotage to invade Taiwan.

    • @sunahamanagai9039
      @sunahamanagai9039 Před rokem +77

      But wouldn't that be an additional incentive for China to take Taiwan? To have the chip industry for themselves.

    • @kyleterry5190
      @kyleterry5190 Před rokem

      @@sunahamanagai9039 that is the wettest dream out of all of china's wet dreams, but unfortunately all of taiwan's factories,universities, libraries, research centers , and data banks are all designed to self destruct when a hypothetical chinese invasion has overwhelmed all lines of defence.

    • @sunahamanagai9039
      @sunahamanagai9039 Před rokem

      @@kyleterry5190 Se, Seriously???

    • @kyleterry5190
      @kyleterry5190 Před rokem +107

      @@sunahamanagai9039 yep, taiwanese strategy has long concluded that they would never be able to repel a full scale chinese invasion, so their military strategy had always been to delay the invasion until the allied reinforcements arrive or until all facilities have been destroyed

    • @AreaBoy01
      @AreaBoy01 Před rokem +8

      @@sunahamanagai9039 China has its eyes on those chips. Everyone needs it, and China would be in control of them

  • @Nukesnipe
    @Nukesnipe Před 2 lety +910

    "Conscript armies are more apathetic and less effective" except when it's their home on the line. I think we have seen in Ukraine just how hard it is to break someone's morale when A: you're trampling their stuff and B: they hated your even before that

    • @weirdo1060
      @weirdo1060 Před 2 lety +105

      Home on the line means not only means motivation, but knowledge of terrain. Some Russian forces allegedly used outdated paper maps since commercial GPS does not have level of detail needed for military use.

    • @yzy8638
      @yzy8638 Před 2 lety +18

      unfortunately, only the ruling elite and those vested interest would tell you how the people love them and hate their enemy. come to think of it, who you would hate more, some 1 on the other side of the sea, and bunch of cronies suxking your blood.
      Ukraine is virtually in a civil war for years, while taiwan, if you follow their news, are debating if soldiers should trained under hot sun, or should rest when its too hot.

    • @idkbruhimhigh
      @idkbruhimhigh Před 2 lety +17

      A well trained soldier will have no problem dealing with a mad civilian in 10 out of 10 cases. The only reason Ukraine has appeared so valiantly tough is because Russia has been sending in essentially untrained teenagers up until a couple weeks ago. Now that special forces are on the ground, you see nothing of mad civilians taking on soldiers.

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P Před 2 lety

      @@yzy8638 I would hate the one saying my nation has no right to exist, destroys my home, kills my children and rapes my wife. Yes there are a few in Ukraine who would rather live under Putin. The majority don't.

    • @Andy-P
      @Andy-P Před 2 lety

      @@idkbruhimhigh Indeed. The Russians will have shot all the civilians.

  • @d173928
    @d173928 Před rokem +27

    When people say Taiwan is similar to Ukraine they speak in the sense that US and the rest of the world will not be involved militarily not referring to the difficulty to invade. It's been made pretty clear before that invasion is not going to be walk in the park and most likely very brutal.

    • @markcoleman7246
      @markcoleman7246 Před rokem

      Well the US will actually have reason to defend Taiwan, it has zero reason to defend Ukraine.

    • @d173928
      @d173928 Před rokem +2

      @@markcoleman7246 I think being the right thing to do is a good reason, also Ukraine exports 12% of world's food supply and 6th largest steel exporter. I think it also ties into politics, I think realistically speaking US hold so much military power even China takes Taiwan, it would not dare to pick a fight with the US, so I don't think it would be preferred by the US voters to defend Taiwan against China or Russia, that could potentially strike US soil, true Taiwan supplies a large percentage of advanced chips are made in Taiwan, but I think US most likely already have the technology and skills to supply, just not the plants, it will just take time to catch up again and probably raise prices on many goods in the process, and TSMC has already begun construction of factories in the US I think partially reimbursed by the US government to prepare for this type of situation.
      But don't get me wrong It would be nice if US can back us up, but just saying we are not and should not be counting on it.

    • @Nathan-jh1ho
      @Nathan-jh1ho Před rokem +1

      It depends on who you are talking about. Many Chinese nationalists saying this don't think it'll be a big deal invading Taiwan. The latest I've heard from a retired PLA general was they can take over Taiwan in 3 days.
      Even about what you said is not the same. Ukraine has very little value to US interest, while Taiwan does due to their high tech industry does.
      The US is also more focused on China while Russia has become a sideshow

    • @d173928
      @d173928 Před rokem

      @Nathan 556 but would the American people risk a nuclear escalation with an unpredictable dictatorship? As of now US can intercept 225 icbms (according to estimation by infograpgics channel) and China according to the US now has over 450 so in the event nuclear escalation happens earth might be looking at a total nuclear fallout. Worse than having no chips, and I feel like even if China ends up unable to take the island they would destroy the factories, as we have seen in Ukraine, them dictators have no problem striking civilian buildings, so if a war breaks out, we are petty much guaranteed to have no high end chips from Taiwan. But if Taiwan can be defended at least trade routes through Taiwan straits won't be sanctioned.
      I am not from the US so I can't speak for them but if you are, would you be in support of US getting involved with actual US troops?

    • @yaya5tim
      @yaya5tim Před 10 měsíci

      It's made clear by what? By Biden said 4 times that US will engaging the war when China launched ii against Taiwan?

  • @globalmyths6580
    @globalmyths6580 Před rokem +13

    "Ukraine is not Taiwan, and Taiwan is not Ukraine"
    Learn something new everyday

  • @Karlach_
    @Karlach_ Před 2 lety +255

    11:36 Why didn't they include Trump in this timeline? I'm no fan of Trump personally, but Trump was an official president of the US so he shouldn't be removed from the timeline imo

    • @bloobblop8508
      @bloobblop8508 Před 2 lety +1

      Ye I don’t get why? Is it out of protest? The names of the presidents that destabilized the Middle East for oil were included so I’m confused

    • @Average-mi6ih
      @Average-mi6ih Před 2 lety +97

      Thanks for pointing out this bit of censorship... very disappointed with PolyMatter!

    • @Karlach_
      @Karlach_ Před 2 lety +70

      @@Average-mi6ih Same, I know it doesn't do much but I disliked the video. I don't support censorship by either side and am very disappointed in PolyMatter right now

    • @majesticface3631
      @majesticface3631 Před 2 lety +60

      I noticed that too, you don’t need to like him for him to still have been a former potus

    • @Lightningdude
      @Lightningdude Před 2 lety +1

      It's a shame that Polymatter fell for the orange man bad narrative. Trump was infinitely better than Biden, who is causing record inflation, handed Afghanistan to the Taliban along with 80 BILLION in military equipment and now the war in Ukraine.

  • @demonzabrak
    @demonzabrak Před rokem +760

    6:33 Going from a 3:1 attacker to defender ratio to a 24:8 ratio isn't actually changing anything, that isn't how force multipliers work in this context. You wanted to leave the defender number unchanged.

    • @definitelynotnick2454
      @definitelynotnick2454 Před rokem +113

      made me laugh

    • @paolokraft2414
      @paolokraft2414 Před rokem +76

      Haha I saw this, stopped the video and went straight to the comments

    • @Tanky98
      @Tanky98 Před rokem +3

      Wait I’m confused, how does this work?

    • @demonzabrak
      @demonzabrak Před rokem +115

      @@Tanky98 So, ratios, like fractions, are always equal to their lowest common forms.
      When an attacker receives a "Force Multiplier" from something like "advanced armor" that reduces enemy effectiveness, or "longer range weapon systems" that allows them to kill the defender from out of range, the Defender Required Troops (the 1 in 3:1) is increased, leading to a different fractional ratio, like 3:2, or something more fancy like 3:1.5 (which becomes 6:3, which becomes 2:1), or 3:1.4 (which becomes 15:7, because ratios and fractions don't like decimals jelly in their peanut butter) and so on.
      When the defender receives the advantage, as is discussed in the video, the Attacker Required Troops number (the 3) increases.
      If both sides receive advantages that literally and directly offset each other, nothing has actually changed about the situation. Going from 3:1 -> 24:8 is saying "The defenders are eight times as effective, and the attackers are eight times as effective, meaning they have the same odds as winning as before the changes." It reduces right back down to 3:1.
      These ratios tell you roughly how many times bigger one army needs to be compared to the other to have a roughly equal chance of winning. US Infantry military doctrine is literally to avoid combat whenever possible unless you outnumber the enemy 3 men to 1 man. Could be 30 men in a platoon vs 10 men in a field, could be literally 3 to 1, could be 30,000 vs 10,000, doesn't matter. As you add trenches and bunkers and indirect fire supports to the defending side, those 10 men become more able to hold back increasingly more troops. Might actually need a company to take the spot, which is 120 vs 10, or 12:1.
      Helpful?

    • @jono4000
      @jono4000 Před rokem +6

      @@demonzabrak that makes sense

  • @dnice374
    @dnice374 Před rokem

    Wow. Very educational, thanks for this vid. Subbed

  • @megalonoobiacinc4863
    @megalonoobiacinc4863 Před rokem

    been avoiding this because the title felt like click bait, but the actual video was surprisingly good

  • @jypsridic
    @jypsridic Před rokem +500

    24:8 is the same thing as 3:1 when you multiplied the defender's advantage it should have gone to something like 24:1 instead of what you did.

    • @JonahNelson7
      @JonahNelson7 Před rokem +68

      Yeah that was definitely a miscommunication between writer and editor there lol, that was dumb. It's probably not all him. Otherwise it would've been right probably

    • @youtubehatestruthtellers8065
      @youtubehatestruthtellers8065 Před rokem +8

      Who cares they were nonsensical numbers to most of us

    • @V3racious3
      @V3racious3 Před rokem +24

      So his video editor doesn't know how to do 4th grade math; multiplying fractions.

    • @tacobellappreciater
      @tacobellappreciater Před rokem +12

      He probably meant 24:1 and made a mistake

    • @tannergordon8302
      @tannergordon8302 Před rokem +7

      @@youtubehatestruthtellers8065 fair enough, but some of us have experience in the field, and those numbers do mean something

  • @hassansci2436
    @hassansci2436 Před rokem +128

    Just on a side note: 24:8 is the same as 3:1.
    Multiply the number of attackers not defenders.

    • @patrickkaczka1284
      @patrickkaczka1284 Před rokem +2

      Thank you! I noticed this too haha

    • @bizichyld
      @bizichyld Před rokem

      Yeah I wasn’t sure what he was going for there and I just assumed I was missing the point.

  • @dgillies5420
    @dgillies5420 Před rokem +2

    11:29 love it that He Who Shall Not Be Names is indeed NOT NAMED. yeah, voldemort.

  • @jacksonteller1337
    @jacksonteller1337 Před rokem +1

    Not only the ROC would mobilize. The US would have two to three carrier groups on station within three weeks plus the Japanese Izumo class carrier and the two or three LHD/LHA that would be unloaded on the ROC coast and subsequently used as auxiliary carriers. After two months the Australian navy would be present and most likely one or two of the Indian navy ships.

  • @JohnCrossman
    @JohnCrossman Před rokem +792

    I had not heard the concept of China using Taiwan as a convenient "nationalist enthusiasm button" before. Now that you pointed it out, it seems so very obvious. I have lived and worked in both Taiwan and Shanghai so I would like to compliment you on how well you have researched, understood and characterized each side. Well done!

    • @VashtheStampede007
      @VashtheStampede007 Před rokem

      When a part of your territory became a puppet of someone who wants you dead, maybe a little nationalism isn’t so bad

    • @VashtheStampede007
      @VashtheStampede007 Před rokem

      However it is the other way around. Very little about Taiwan is mentioned in mainland China media. Let alone in textbooks. Nothing negative at all. While Anti-China became the mainstream propaganda of ruling DPP to attract “nationalism” and votes in Taiwan. And to please the puppet master

    • @WellBattle6
      @WellBattle6 Před rokem +14

      Yeah but Xi may want to completely eliminate the button if he wants to cement his legacy as better than Mao.

    • @eurekarx2048
      @eurekarx2048 Před rokem +9

      @@WellBattle6 yeah a big if

    • @adoatero5129
      @adoatero5129 Před rokem +20

      - "I had not heard the concept of China using Taiwan as a convenient "nationalist enthusiasm button" before."
      Are you sure you haven't heard before that governments are using external threats - real or made-up ones - to raise nationalism? The only new thing here is the word "button" (which is just a colourful way to refer to repetition). The maker of this video seems to like to make it sound like he is personally bringing something new to the subject when he is just presenting ideas already well established by others.

  • @astrumespanol
    @astrumespanol Před 2 lety +844

    Ah, tractors, the greatest impediment to land invasions

    • @JohnRaffy
      @JohnRaffy Před 2 lety +99

      Tractors > Russian tanks

    • @monsterboomer8051
      @monsterboomer8051 Před 2 lety +64

      John Deere. The TOP USA weapons company.

    • @frankgesuele6298
      @frankgesuele6298 Před 2 lety +21

      @@monsterboomer8051 Gotta pull those abandon Russian tanks to rearm the Ukrainian army😃

    • @hamzamahmood9565
      @hamzamahmood9565 Před 2 lety +29

      Russian soldier: "I fear no man but that....(points to Ukrainian tractor)....that scares me."

    • @prettyboyjeremy
      @prettyboyjeremy Před 2 lety +12

      You laugh now but get your million dollars tank towed away by Bubba and you'll quickly change your mind

  • @giselle0131ae
    @giselle0131ae Před rokem +1

    Thank you for making this video!!

  • @aaronlowe3156
    @aaronlowe3156 Před rokem +1

    Needed to hear this. Having less panic about an invasion now.

  • @atomatolol
    @atomatolol Před 2 lety +201

    What point were you trying to make at 6:20 about defender's advantage? It starts at 1 defender per 3 atackers ratio and then climbs to 8-24, which is the same thing.

    • @ahahuehafook4207
      @ahahuehafook4207 Před 2 lety +16

      Right lol

    • @theneedytechie2468
      @theneedytechie2468 Před 2 lety +35

      but but, what about 7-21

    • @uncoolbob9653
      @uncoolbob9653 Před 2 lety +15

      It to show how fast the scale would be as 1-3 would quickly become 1000-3000 which is a enormous difference between the two

    • @Dis_Dis
      @Dis_Dis Před 2 lety +19

      @@uncoolbob9653 Yeah but 1:3=1000:3000

    • @werewolf4030
      @werewolf4030 Před 2 lety +31

      The point being made is that the ratio of defender to attacker is 1:3, and when it is scaled to the level of entire active military of Taiwan (scaling up means multiplying), it becomes 200000 Taiwanese soldiers to 600000 Chinese soldiers. China will have to ferry 600000 Troops just in order to encroach and get a hold of the coast of Taiwan. That's like 30% of the entire military in one amphibian invasion

  • @lesdickson9765
    @lesdickson9765 Před 2 lety +678

    This invasion, if it happens, could possibly do more damage to the global economy than the Russia-Ukraine war, mainly because TSMC have partnerships US based tech and consumer electronics companies like Apple & Intel (about 25% of TSMC's revenue comes from Apple which is about US$17b). Due to Taiwan's importance in the semiconductor industry and partnerships with companies in the West, if the invasion happens, you can almost guarantee the US will get involved.
    But outside of the semiconductor and tech talk, the geography of Taiwan makes this geopolitical tension a double-edged sword as it means that China could struggle with invading Taiwan since they are an island, and have irregular coastlines. However, they can easily declare a naval blockade as they do not border any countries in SE Asia. If China do go ahead with this invasion, I'd imagine it would be done with a somewhat similar approach to how Russia invaded Ukraine.

    • @theonewhojumpinlava4175
      @theonewhojumpinlava4175 Před 2 lety +14

      I disagree.

    • @firemochimc
      @firemochimc Před 2 lety

      Then the US would blockade China......

    • @Sandeep-cz7ls
      @Sandeep-cz7ls Před 2 lety +91

      i genuinely believe it would definitely start the third world war, considering how important TSMC is to every superpower in the world

    • @anhkhoanguyen8562
      @anhkhoanguyen8562 Před 2 lety +108

      You can only declare a naval blockade if you are willing to sink any ship coming to the destination. Taiwan is not like current Russia and Ukraine, where the Black Sea and Azov sea only have 1 route to go through, that Turkey and Russia, respectively, can easily block it. For Taiwan they sit right in Pacific Ocean, there is no clear gate that China can block incoming ships from coming, but rather only Taiwanese can block the beaches. So China have to resort to sinking ships as warning, if they are willing to make any kind of blockade. Yeah, sinking US, Japan or Australia ships, good luck doing that without declaring war on them.

    • @bruhdabones
      @bruhdabones Před 2 lety +3

      @@anhkhoanguyen8562 they can sink all our ships easily with the new weapons. It is obviously a huge risk but they have the power to enforce a blockade with OTH hypersonic missiles

  • @chillinlee
    @chillinlee Před rokem +2

    There is a huge difference between having military power and projecting military power. And attacking a well fortified island with few possible landing sites requires a massive projection of power. One of the huge problems with Soviet style military doctrine is the lack of sustainable power projection as shown by Russia's inability to supply its own troops over land routes. This task gets much more complicated when you have to cross a body of water (even if it is a mere wide river), and much more so an ocean or sea or strait.

    • @infoprod7731
      @infoprod7731 Před rokem

      It's especially difficult when there are very few place for landing and very few good times for an amphibious invasion.
      D-day was still difficult despite the German army literally being shattered with dispersed armored forces
      An invasion of Taiwan will be far far harder

  • @latye8713
    @latye8713 Před 7 měsíci

    As a Taiwanese, I have to correct the placement of 陽明山國家公園,觀音山, and 林口.
    From north to south it should be 陽明山國家公園then觀音山then林口each distanced about 5~10km

    • @latye8713
      @latye8713 Před 7 měsíci

      Oh and the 77% willing to fight should be the opposite with young ones in Taiwan

  • @andriypredmyrskyy7791
    @andriypredmyrskyy7791 Před 2 lety +343

    Uh, I'm pretty sure a ratio of 24:8 still simplifies to 3:1.
    I get what you meant, it could be 4.2 attackers to 1 defender, but the fractions are funny.

    • @Gwoshbock
      @Gwoshbock Před 2 lety +72

      I'm glad someone else said this because I was confused haha. Me I my head "it's the same no?"

    • @PolyMatter
      @PolyMatter  Před 2 lety +280

      I realized this approximately 5 minutes after this video went life. Ugh.

    • @PeterNjeim
      @PeterNjeim Před 2 lety +65

      @@PolyMatter Why is Trump omitted from the list of presidents? Why did you joke about Russia's GDP being "formerly" 9.5x that of Ukraine? Unless you're under the assumption that Western sanctions will affect Russia's GDP more proportionally than Ukraine's current destruction, then I really can't see how you made that claim.
      You also falsely claimed that Ukrainian civilian resistance causes slowdown for Russia. This is false. It's Western aid that causes slowdown for Russia.
      You also falsely claimed that tractors were an obstacle to Russia. Again, it's a joke based on a false premise. You can make that joke on your circle jerk platform, but don't make it in a video where you're (seemingly) trying to gain trust and educate others.
      You then continue by claiming Russia's position on the world stage is similar to that of North Korea. I didn't know being part of the G20, part of OPEC+, and a major oil exporter (doesn't matter where they're exporting to) is a North Korean-esque world power.
      I have a feeling you unironically use Twitter, as these jokes based on false premises seem to originate and stay on that toxic platform (where 65% of all information is considered false).
      Why are these weird inaccuracies showing up in your video? This was the first PolyMatter video I've seen where there is explicit bias, and flat out omissions of information (as cryptic as they are).

    • @maxluthor6800
      @maxluthor6800 Před 2 lety +8

      @@PeterNjeim it's quite sad to see what he's doing now. The world is literally starving and the entire world economy is imploding because Russia is the biggest energy and food exporter and the western world decided to say "okay we're gonna starve ourselves".

    • @anguswaterhouse9255
      @anguswaterhouse9255 Před 2 lety +11

      @@PeterNjeim I mean really, he says it was larger than Ukraines but he doesn't say why it changed, it could be because we don't know what will happen.

  • @pooter7263
    @pooter7263 Před rokem +634

    “In reality, the war was never meant to be won, but to be continuous. The war isn’t waged by one nation against another, but by the ruling classes against their own population.”
    Got that from my reading of 1984.

    • @RoflcopterLamo
      @RoflcopterLamo Před rokem +1

      Personally I find the book “Brave New World” to be more inline with the modern era since it goes on about consumption of entertainment and dumbing down the population as a way of control but they both talk about brainwashing and absolute power as they aren’t too different both have the citizen seeing the whole as a body and them as it’s cells in a sense.

    • @pooter7263
      @pooter7263 Před rokem +1

      @@RoflcopterLamo
      Read that one too, and I agree.

    • @The_KingDoge
      @The_KingDoge Před rokem +5

      For China taking Taiwan? Eh, not really.

    • @DrFumiya
      @DrFumiya Před rokem +8

      Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is great too! If you like 1984. It was written by George Orwell’s High school French teacher.

    • @DrFumiya
      @DrFumiya Před rokem +3

      10/10 book would recommend.

  • @robertmeshew1935
    @robertmeshew1935 Před rokem +1

    Well thought out commentary!

  • @asianip
    @asianip Před rokem +1

    Very informative, thank you!

  • @LiveFreeOrDieDH
    @LiveFreeOrDieDH Před 2 lety +194

    On Ukraine: "The biggest natural impediments are trees, grass, and tractors." 😂

    • @Arcaryon
      @Arcaryon Před 2 lety +12

      Which does not sound like much but take a look at it on google streets/ satellite images and compare with live map etc. and you realize that this ”steppe” is filled with rows of trees which can conceal units and make a clear view of the terrain hard for ground forces without good reconnaissance. It’s a lot less steppe than people may assume and flat can include small hills that make advancing difficult. There are also many small villages which, for obvious reasons, are ideal to set up ambushes etc.

    • @peequod1647
      @peequod1647 Před 2 lety +10

      tractors are indeed the apex predators in ukrainian steppes

    • @taipeistp5660
      @taipeistp5660 Před 2 lety

      It's all US propaganda, false information, hyping up the Taiwan issue without talking about historical reasons. War is now a war of information, electronics, drones. And there is no need for China to attack Taiwan militarily. Just beat the US and Taiwan will naturally return to China.

    • @peequod1647
      @peequod1647 Před 2 lety +1

      @@taipeistp5660 actual bot

    • @BBarNavi
      @BBarNavi Před 2 lety

      @@peequod1647 more like a fifty center

  • @PaulGuy
    @PaulGuy Před 2 lety +239

    The reason there's more searches about an invasion in the US now than in the past can be easily explained by the simple fact that the internet makes people outside the region more aware of international events than in years and decades past. We now hear about things around the world more, and have the ability to look it up far easier and more frequently.

    • @karel-de-Grote
      @karel-de-Grote Před rokem +3

      No war is needed to conquer Taiwan. When 150 warships around the island, it remains isolated and without resources. It will be the inhabitants of Taiwan who will raise the white flag, without having to fire a cannon shot. Passive siege.
      3 months? 6 months? 2 years? patience, the weapon to win is patience.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Před rokem

      @@karel-de-Grote yup, and the USA will close all 3,500 Wal Marts as a result of such actions, no Chinese goods will enter or be sold in the country, and China will suffer the greatest economic collapse in its history. Joking of course, but we see in Russia today, China's future, a pariah state, which eventually no Westen nation will trade with.

    • @karel-de-Grote
      @karel-de-Grote Před rokem

      @@ronschlorff7089 the United States is close to default. 30% of the government bonds are owned by the Bank of China. Just one click and down ...
      -----------------------------------------
      this is the real reason they want to destroy China, they can always use the 11,000 nuclear warheads. They have already shown the world how the evil Empire thinks. Hiroshima and Nagasaki are still a witness.
      ----------------------------------------------
      In the future you will have some surprises, when you realize that walmart is just a chain of shops and nothing more.
      We have lived 150,000 years without walmart. :D

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 Před rokem +5

      @@karel-de-Grote Japan's fate was only a warning to the world, "DO NOT fuck with us"! China knows that well; they are not suicidal! You have a much longer history; "Peking man" is at least a million years old. He had no markets! LOL ;D

    • @karel-de-Grote
      @karel-de-Grote Před rokem

      @@ronschlorff7089 It is interesting to confirm that the planet is doomed to extinction due to a criminal population.

  • @finalcranefall6201
    @finalcranefall6201 Před rokem +2

    3:00 Mr. No ball doesnt dare to put US on

  • @Waldemarvonanhalt
    @Waldemarvonanhalt Před rokem +1

    Dissing conscript-heavy militaries is pretty short-sighted. It's basically impossible to field large armies or sustain attrition without conscription, because conscription allows you to build up generations of reservists in waiting.

    • @infoprod7731
      @infoprod7731 Před rokem

      With motivation I think conscripted forces can be pretty formidable in a defensive war

  • @DennisBLee
    @DennisBLee Před 2 lety +279

    What people often neglect is that the Allies managed to land 160,000 troops on D-Day on a coastline which is much more suitable than Taiwan's. Taiwan won't be fighting a 2 million man army, they'll be fighting as many as China are able to successfully land. This is a fundamental math problem that is not easily solved by technology or military spending.

    • @roadbone1941
      @roadbone1941 Před rokem +7

      War region Nanjing has about 200,000 troops, I assume at least half are support/construction.
      So the landing forces are maybe 100,000 men.

    • @DennisBLee
      @DennisBLee Před rokem +20

      @@roadbone1941 They would have to bring 10 times that in order to account for losses, resupply and logistics. It's a very difficult task.

    • @deebil8099
      @deebil8099 Před rokem +17

      I think it's a huge gamble for China. If the U.S. decides to step in, they might not have a chance to land anything. The U.S. has like 6 less nuclear submarines than it considers adequate to completely stop a maritime invasion. That's only 69 subs compared to 75 which it considers enough. If the U.S. doesn't step in, then they have to worry about landing enough troops. Also, China doesn't have enough of the purpose built military landing craft that the U.S. had on D-Day. If they did try to take Taiwan, I don't think it will be like D-Day.

    • @elmohead
      @elmohead Před rokem +10

      Yes, because China will definitely use D-day strategy to invade Taiwan...
      Also, by that logic, imperial Japan would also be repelled in invading Taiwan.

    • @hallo84
      @hallo84 Před rokem

      China will probably just bomb taiwan back to the stone ages and force people to leave the cities. The whole video assumes China wants to take Taiwan and hold it. It really does not. China just need to depopulate the island.

  • @TheLosrodri
    @TheLosrodri Před 2 lety +44

    Looking at the timeline of American presidents at 11:31, does anyone else find it odd that the name Donald Trump was conspicuously left out? What gives, polymatter?

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    • @deepstar3796
      @deepstar3796 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, why was President Trump's name left out?

    • @ATlayle
      @ATlayle Před 2 lety

      @@deepstar3796 we all know why Trump was omitted, Trump is evil. I have seen enough of this video to know their political bias to Trump.

    • @joesterling4299
      @joesterling4299 Před 2 lety +6

      Cowardice? Political ideology?

    • @SecondLifeTravels1
      @SecondLifeTravels1 Před 2 lety

      LOL

  • @dumbvideosinc.9689
    @dumbvideosinc.9689 Před rokem +1

    Oh boy, im very glad i now know the difference between ukraine and taiwan. I had no idea at all before, thanks for explaining it to me

  • @sarveshyadav6902
    @sarveshyadav6902 Před rokem +2

    Seeing someone who is not a defence expert commenting on defence is also a fun.

  • @keepower
    @keepower Před 2 lety +306

    The elephant in the room is either Taiwan or "the Republic of China" is recognised as a sovereign state by countries leaning on her, not like Ukraine. Don't underestimate this difference. It means many International laws do not apply to Taiwan by default. And it also means Taiwan will have to declare itself as a sovereign state if China attacks. It will put the whole world in an either-Taiwan-or-China situation, which is completely different from the Ukriane scenario. It will be much more dangerous.

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Před 2 lety +23

      A very Bing Chilling moment.

    • @ThisNoName
      @ThisNoName Před 2 lety +82

      Technically and legally, the two sides are still in a ongoing civil war

    • @user-cr3zu8pl1s
      @user-cr3zu8pl1s Před rokem +5

      @@ThisNoName No we are not

    • @xianyi9151
      @xianyi9151 Před rokem +19

      @@user-cr3zu8pl1s 只是休战,不是停战

    • @sotuya7799
      @sotuya7799 Před rokem

      China haters don't care about facts as long as things are anti-china.

  • @starsoffyre
    @starsoffyre Před rokem +173

    This might explain why I had a hard time finding train tickets to Poland while I was in Taiwan

    • @Evrastrim
      @Evrastrim Před rokem +1

      15:10 lol what? Russia was put on level of North Korea because of the sanctions and pays an enormous price? Not a propaganda at all. For a half of year Russian economy shrinked by 0.5% while the US and especially Europe experiencing huge decrease of industrial output and inflation. The 2008 crisis was much more devastating for Russia when economy lost about 8%.

    • @gary743
      @gary743 Před rokem

      @@Evrastrim I mean, Russians can't afford basic things. And they lost a lot of products from import. So you are delusional

    • @user-hf8zv7qw4l
      @user-hf8zv7qw4l Před rokem

      😂😂😂

  • @Anne-rm3xu
    @Anne-rm3xu Před rokem +3

    Why no one consider India? There are some positional boundary dispute between China and his nearby countries include India. Their Amy just had a fight in 2020. When China starts war, it is the time for them to take the land. And it will let China hard to start any action.

  • @nonan1974
    @nonan1974 Před rokem +4

    oh boy, are you insane?
    you're risking to summon both russian and chinese bots here lol

  • @hi117117
    @hi117117 Před 2 lety +291

    I just wanted to point out two minor corrections in your video. The first that you kind of also addressed was basically that because the Taiwanese people aren't worried, the West shouldn't get worried either. we saw a similar thing happen in Ukraine because Russia was threatening an invasion several times in the past and it never happened. Even as troops were amassing the Ukrainian people denied that they thought Russia would actually invade.
    The second point is that China is simply beating a drum of war constantly with no real threat to Taiwan. on the contrary, China has been making slow steady progress towards an army that is capable of doing an amphibious landing. this comes in the form of a lot of spending, completely revamping their main small arms, the development of specialized marine divisions as part of the army that as far as I know no other military has an equivalent for, etc. these are all long-term investments that are very well measured and don't fall into the model of beating the drum of war, this is more of a stealth buildup behind a facade of simply beating a drum of war.

    • @sarojparajuli1132
      @sarojparajuli1132 Před 2 lety

      2nd one is not true, chinese military isn't good, they have poor quality equipments, their fighter jet is knock of version of American jets, and taiwan has purchased billions of dollars worth of military equipment from USA and other nations too, besides taiwan's geography is just too hard to attack, they can easily defend the only costs where the attack comes from

    • @Squidward_Tikiland
      @Squidward_Tikiland Před 2 lety +21

      This is how we should understand these gestures, we need a global effort to burn down these tyrants and their entire cabinets

    • @DatAsuna
      @DatAsuna Před 2 lety +30

      Yeah, one frustratingly lax thing I've encountered with some people is that when I try to highlight the sharp turn in hostility and nationalism that coincides with the term of jinping, a lot of people are fast to handwave it away with platitudes like "china has always been crazy, they never changed"

    • @Racko.
      @Racko. Před 2 lety

      Thank Western media for fear mongering ppl in the West about this situation

    • @Ildskalli
      @Ildskalli Před 2 lety +5

      Very good points, both. China has invested a lot into amphibious technologies, and does yearly amphibious exercises, so it's not all just empty threats.

  • @edc1569
    @edc1569 Před 2 lety +700

    The Ukrainian conflict has made me look at these 'intimidating' military parades very differently, considering the hardware is so easily defeated by modern anti-armour weapons.

    • @richyhu2042
      @richyhu2042 Před 2 lety +141

      Looking back, all of those Russia vs America videos about gow much more badass and cool Russia is hits very different.

    • @Elendrian
      @Elendrian Před 2 lety +163

      @@richyhu2042 There's been lots of milk ageing on CZcams in the past few weeks.

    • @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle
      @HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle Před 2 lety +42

      If Chinese claims about their hypersonic weapons are true, do not underestimate their capabilities. You know, T-72 tanks are not the same as a Dongfeng 17 glide vehicle traveling at 7,000 mph.

    • @lip124
      @lip124 Před 2 lety +81

      I never saw those military parade anything special, if you are powerful why do you need to show off your military's with parades makes no sense. US don't even waste time doing that expect to appreciate the men and women in service which is Veteran's day, we don't show weapons cause its the men and women that makes a difference.

    • @lip124
      @lip124 Před 2 lety +22

      @@HTV-2_Hypersonic_Glide_Vehicle Well it never seen combat to know what works and what doesn't therefore compare to the notable MBTs Abrams, Challenger, Leopard, Lereyic, and Merkava so I'm treating it them same as a T72. US overestimated Russia cause they thought they was still Soviet Union powerful.

  • @alexanderkraieski7661
    @alexanderkraieski7661 Před rokem +2

    16:17 woah, Taiwan has escalators for mopeds? Badass AF

  • @zoetje9817
    @zoetje9817 Před rokem +2

    I’m still waiting on the video “Why the USA is not Trinidad & Tobago”, these two are still confusing.

  • @k98killer
    @k98killer Před 2 lety +483

    China would likely first annex some of Taiwan's smaller islands that lie closer to the Chinese mainland. We likely would not see a full-on amphibious assault of the main island until after they secure all the outlying islands.

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Před 2 lety +66

      You really can’t mount an invasion from those tiny islands. They would be sitting ducks for drones

    • @morewi
      @morewi Před 2 lety +7

      They would also have to take the Pescadore islands that are closer to Taiwan as well

    • @robwon8378
      @robwon8378 Před 2 lety +69

      If China breaks the status quo and invade smaller islands Kinmen and Matsu, Taiwan can then break the status quo , updates its constitution to change its official name to Taiwan and establish official relations with other democratic countries.

    • @sw36jl
      @sw36jl Před 2 lety +79

      They would never, this is the most foolish analysis. Firstly, Kinmen and the Matsu islands are already the most "Pro-China" subdivisions of Taiwan, and always vote blue, and can be considered "deep blue". China would never throw forces at them.
      Secondly, if China had to launch an invasion, it would mean the status quo has been broken, either by Taiwan's declaration of formal independence, or their own doing. Wasting time on those islands whose weaponry has little shelter (not very mountainous islands) and can be easily avoided and suppressed by air would only give Taiwan time to mobilize an effective response making any main-island Taiwan invasion magnitudes more difficult. I suggest you read up more on the nuances of the situation.

    • @morewi
      @morewi Před 2 lety +4

      @@sw36jl they need too because it's within spitting distance of the Chinese mainland and they've been embarrassed there twice now. China would have to do something about them with their current propaganda

  • @davideey2607
    @davideey2607 Před 2 lety +61

    6:38 thats not how ratios work... 24 : 8 is literally the same as 3 : 1. if you want to express how the number of troops china would need to invade multiplies, you only need to multiply their side of the ratio: 24:1.

    • @FlameRat_YehLon
      @FlameRat_YehLon Před 2 lety +1

      Doesn't matter. When dealing with Taiwan I got the feeling the true ratio would be 1:0. Taiwan has no reliable force of any kind, and more specifically no reliable soldiers, which is an even bigger issue than their decade old equipments.

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Před 2 lety +3

      It is, in fact, how ratios work. He just didn't simplify it. To say that 24:8 isn't a valid ratio tells me that you don't actually understand ratios.

    • @azzor4134
      @azzor4134 Před 2 lety +10

      @@B3Band he didn`t say 24/8 is not "valid". That tells me you're bad at reading comprehesion
      PolyMatter even acknowledged the mistake in an earlier thread.

    • @davideey2607
      @davideey2607 Před 2 lety +5

      @@B3Band fun project for you… lets simplify 24:8. and when you have done that tell me how much that differs from 3:1. i never said 24 : 8 is not a ratio. i said multiplying both sides of the ratio is not how you express the ratio getting heavier in favor of one side. in this example 24 : 8 is the exact same as 3 : 1. but i regret pointing this mistake out since according to @A\zzor polymatter already communicated this mistake

    • @glass-yuzu
      @glass-yuzu Před 2 lety

      even if there was any basis to you claims, literally every military analyst and even the chinese military themselves disagree with you , but, go off i guess

  • @Gdsm9
    @Gdsm9 Před rokem +1

    Love how you kept his name out at 2018. :)

    • @szinyk
      @szinyk Před 10 měsíci

      lol i noticed that too 🤣

  • @zhaozhisun4089
    @zhaozhisun4089 Před rokem

    Would be nice if you can give an update after the 2 military exercises of the pla surroudning the island

  • @Wustenfuchs109
    @Wustenfuchs109 Před 2 lety +360

    To be fair, Russia and Ukraine parted ways. China (PRC) and Taiwan (RoC) have not parted ways, the division is a result of a civil war and they both claim each other's territory and consider themselves the sole legitimate government of China.

    • @AL-xo7ye
      @AL-xo7ye Před 2 lety +115

      exactly, but those CZcamsr for propaganda doesn't care about facts. In their constitution, both Mainland China (PRC) and Taiwan China (ROC) write "the country(China) must achieve reunification". Also, most countries in the world do recognise Taiwan as a part of China.

    • @schadiel-ghorayeb479
      @schadiel-ghorayeb479 Před 2 lety

      Guess China would be better with the Taiwan Gov.
      But we rly want a China that strong?
      Modern armed 2 the teeth and western unfriendly?
      Naaaaa thats why we keep the Red guys in Power cause they stupid

    • @raro344
      @raro344 Před 2 lety +7

      Ukraine part ways, it seen russia never truly did and we are see the problem with that.

    • @stuartwray6175
      @stuartwray6175 Před 2 lety

      @@raro344 Ukraine broke with Russia by way of a Russo-phobic coup that led to civil war. Something Russia secretly warned might happen back in 2008 (wikileaks ukraine).

    • @zszs100
      @zszs100 Před 2 lety +87

      Sorry but this video doesn't capture the PRIMARY points very well at all. Allow me to point them out:
      1) For the past decades, China was poor and its military was simply not strong enough. A single US carrier group could take on the entire Chinese air force. Its only in recent years their military has become much stronger along with their economy. That is one of the reasons why they haven't attacked.
      2) They also haven't attacked because its written in their law that they MUST use force ONLY if there is zero possibility of a peaceful resolution.
      3) Finally, and most importantly, this has nothing to do with CCP or not. No matter which party controls China, Taiwan has always been a part of China as a whole. In Taiwan's law, they also consider Taiwan as part of the whole China. If the military power of Taiwan and mainland China switched places, Taiwan would also seek to reunify with the rest of China. End of the day, its a civil war that never ended, plain and simple. Those are the core points and the rest of the points mentioned in the video simply isn't that relevant in the grand scheme of things.

  • @johnpatricklim4509
    @johnpatricklim4509 Před 2 lety +79

    if that invasion happens, this is going to really affect the semiconductor industry for a very long time as taiwan holds at least 80 to 90 percent of that industry...as well as it home to several big companies like asus, gigabyte and msi.

    • @watema3381
      @watema3381 Před 2 lety +11

      Not just. Taiwan also supplies China and the United States with chips intended for Military use (drones, planes, missile control & guidance systems, etc.), thus crippling armed forces. Plus, replacing such specialized infrastructure would take decades due to how darn specialized such equipment really is. Big multi-trillion dollar companies rely solely on Taiwan's TSMC for production, a company (i.e. TSMC) that dwarves others in terms of efficiency like Samsung and Intel.
      From a logical standpoint, invading Taiwan is a terrible, terrible idea. But as history has made it painfully clear time and time again, Wars _aren't_ logical.
      Let's just hope that Xi Jin Ping, is.

    • @ElonKarp420
      @ElonKarp420 Před 2 lety +1

      That’s why I invest in Intel INTC

    • @johnpatricklim4509
      @johnpatricklim4509 Před 2 lety

      @MajorRenegade if china decides to attack taiwan now....everything goes down to drain...so they better hope the finish it and go full operation by then....

    • @tritium1998
      @tritium1998 Před 2 lety +1

      @@watema3381 Your imagination about TSMC isn't logical to begin with, and you're still crying despite it.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Před 2 lety

      Of the high value semiconductors it is the US economy that creates the most. Medium to lower level is dominated by China.
      If such a shutdown of the Taiwanese economy was to occur US desktop and micro scale processors would make laptops very popular again and other variations of that.

  • @jonahkey9313
    @jonahkey9313 Před rokem +2

    11:35 One of them is mysteriously missing, Hmmmmm...

  • @joenichols3901
    @joenichols3901 Před rokem

    Bro 24:8 odds is the same thing as saying 3:1 odds lmao. I agree with the point you're making but it would be "instead of 3:1 odds it would be closer to 5:1 or 6:1"

  • @Djiehh
    @Djiehh Před 2 lety +45

    As you point out, China has been saber-rattling for seven decades. But that means Taiwan had seven decades to come up with a plan to defend themselves. And we can see what a difference eight years of preparation have made for Ukraine

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 Před rokem

      have not done to well. Taiwan should have nuclear war heads by now

    • @elit408
      @elit408 Před rokem

      China’s military has no combat experience in comparison to Russia who is always at war somewhere, I say this to say the first sign of china engaging in a military pursuit may not go well for it

    • @dongren8620
      @dongren8620 Před rokem

      70year? Taiwan used to infiltrate and bomb the mainland with the support of the United States.

    • @elit408
      @elit408 Před rokem +1

      @@dongren8620 we’re just saying things now

    • @dddddh1
      @dddddh1 Před rokem

      🥹

  • @infiniteen
    @infiniteen Před 2 lety +16

    @11:32 why is Donald Trump missing in the list?

    • @Feever1999
      @Feever1999 Před rokem

      to prevent demonetization, I guess

  • @samh3355
    @samh3355 Před rokem +1

    11:30 Why is the 2018 block blank? lol

  • @istoppedlaughing5225
    @istoppedlaughing5225 Před rokem +3

    China flying aircrafts on Taiwan
    Taiwanese: That's normal, nothing to worry about
    American: O my my God, they attacked Taiwan

  • @captainbroady
    @captainbroady Před rokem +441

    Most people also forget that Ukraine is mostly landlocked (except for her Southern portion in the Black Sea) but Taiwan is surrounded by a big ocean - the Pacific Ocean. The reason why Ukraine is able to keep fighting and NATO & the US don't have to fight Russia directly is because of the land routes - they can easily send supplies and military equipment directly into Ukraine to support their fight with Russia.
    But, when it comes to Taiwan, things get pretty tough. Supplying Taiwan in a middle of a hypothetical war with China would be nearly impossible. China has the largest navy in the world (in terms of the number of ships) and has a formidable air force - one that is enough to subdue entire airforces in East Asia. With only an air and sea route into Taiwan, the US and the Allies (namely Japan and most possibly Australia) would have to fight their way to get to Taiwan. They can't sit back and supply Taiwan with lots of military and humanitarian aid without the Chinese attacking or blocking the passage of neutral ships and aircraft attempting to enter Taiwan during a hypothetical war scenario.
    I think this is one area that is often overlooked - the geographical differences of both countries: Taiwan and Ukraine. So I will leave my comment here! :D

    • @gicacoca
      @gicacoca Před rokem +8

      Good analysis

    • @jamescawl6904
      @jamescawl6904 Před rokem +46

      Luckily the US navy is the strongest in the world. While its air force is also the steongest in the world not to mention that the second strongest airforce in the world is the US navy's.
      Also Japan also has a significant navy while japanese, korean and filipino naval bases can be used as springboards by the US warmachine.

    • @captainbroady
      @captainbroady Před rokem +48

      @@jamescawl6904 The US military is the strongest in the world, yes, but they are quite spread thin all around the globe. The US does have significant forces in Japan and Korea but those aren't sufficient to counter China. China, however, is able to concentrate most of its military in Asia, which makes it much more difficult for the US to defend Taiwan if China decides to invade. As for Japan, yes they have a pretty formidable navy which will add on to the headaches for the Chinese.
      So military wise, it will be a very big gamble for the Chinese to invade. But the US cannot afford to underestimate China. Whenever China sees the opportunity, they'll seize it quickly and sometimes, maybe too quickly.

    • @jamescawl6904
      @jamescawl6904 Před rokem

      @@captainbroady True. But if china ever tries to invade taiwan their economy built on export manufacturing will come crumbling down while all imports will be blocked.
      china is at a food deficit while not having the natural resources to sustain their manufacturing capacity.
      The result will be that china most likely will overwhelm the taiwanese with naval invasions and airborne assaults within a short amount of time but then china will not only starve they will also be unable to sustain their warmachine after the embargoes.

    • @peacebewu
      @peacebewu Před rokem +10

      Video said that there could be atleast a month to predict the invasion, so in my uneducated guess, they could be supplied within that period for as much as needed.
      Would that be enough, idk......

  • @MaxRovensky
    @MaxRovensky Před 2 lety +29

    11:29 lmaoooo, bruh, did you seriously left Trump as a blank box :D
    I thought these educational channels were better than this petty political BS

    • @Jesplux
      @Jesplux Před 2 lety +6

      That box was probably left blank since an invasion while Trump was in office wasn’t a choice China would be willing to make😂

    • @evoboy67
      @evoboy67 Před rokem

      @@Jesplux 😂

    • @evoboy67
      @evoboy67 Před rokem +5

      This channel lost all credibility for being this petty

  • @britcat7780
    @britcat7780 Před rokem +1

    One other important factor - China does not have a normal amphibious force delivery system and would be forced to hire or hijack unarmored business ships. Were Taiwan to have a few hundred Harpoon missiles in silos as the first wave came in, the delivery vehicles would be thinned considerably with heavy troop casualties. By the time a few waves came in, there would be nothing left. Think of the Russian Fleet's leading ship, sunk by a single missile. Then think of civilian transport ships hit by the same missile.

  • @grantchen8156
    @grantchen8156 Před rokem +2

    my 4 year of useless college education tells me that 24:8 and 3:1 might be equivalent

  • @robgrey6183
    @robgrey6183 Před 2 lety +10

    Your graphic at 11:35 of American Presidents and their party affiliation omitted Donald Trump.
    Why is that?

  • @overlord9476
    @overlord9476 Před 2 lety +191

    Here's another perspective : The reason why China wants Taiwan is exactly the reason that it establishes the legitimacy of the CCP, instead of using Taiwan to bolster its waning popular support. Historically if you look in the past, China had always depended on a "mandate of heaven" to claim legitimacy of ruling the Chinese mainland, that is if someone can reunite all Chinese lands, they can claim themselves to be the emperor and ruler. There is also a name for time between the mid 1800s to the early 1900s in Chinese when China fought the opium wars : "百年耻辱" (A hundred years of disgrace). China had been fractured and split up between western colonial powers, Japanese imperialism, warlordism, and banditry during the 19th century, and even during the civil war both the nationalist and the communist knew that they would never repeat something like this ever again. Which can also explain why China intervened in the Korean War when the US closed in on its borders not knowing whether they would stop there. It a social and historical problem, the only reason Taiwan had not declared independence is not because of the CCP threatening it, but rather they both have agreed to play the legitimacy game, which independence would destroy this game altogether.
    Strategically Taiwan is part of the 1st Island chain, blockading China from ever reaching the Pacific ocean, and even if they do, they would be closely monitored by US and US allied navies. 70% of China's economically productive areas are located on the Eastern coastline, where the US has hundred of air force bases, naval bases, and open to attack from the US or even Taiwan. This poses a strategic problem to China, just as Ukraine to Russia. That being said, Taiwan is not a made up issue by the CCP to claim the island, and in strategic terms, even if it would cost millions of men taking the island, if it would improve Chinese strategic standing in the Pacific, an invasion would be likely.

    • @Homer-OJ-Simpson
      @Homer-OJ-Simpson Před 2 lety +16

      China had a much bigger piece of land in what is now eastern Russia - but they focused on invading Taiwan and not eastern Russia because it’s manufactured for nationalism support. Also, China had Mongolia but they aren’t threatening to invade Mongolia.

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe Před 2 lety

      There is an old Ilocan proverb. When your ass itches, they are fighting in China. The Chinese are always fighting each other, even before the Spanish. 😃😃😃😃😃

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip Před 2 lety +13

      That's assuming China survives intact once the Taiwanese insurrection gets quelled, which could take years if not generations. The Mainland depends on imports for food and fuel, and sanctions or not civilian ships will be scared off and China's global customers are going to more aggressively seek permanent alternatives. More likely unrest at home over food prices and quality (think Shanghai except everywhere and more defiant) will flare up and only grow as rations get taken from periphery security forces to keep more core functions fed -- the PLA is not nearly big enough to do battle with the rest of China.

    • @awwee34
      @awwee34 Před 2 lety +38

      In the end though, the PRC prefers peaceful reunification. War would take a heavy toll on both the PRC and the island of Taiwan, drastically lowering the cost-reward ratio. China isn't lying when it says it prefers peaceful reunification.

    • @Marvin-dg8vj
      @Marvin-dg8vj Před 2 lety

      @@awwee34 war would wreck the Chinese economy and the West as well .
      It would start the Third World War.

  • @JohnDoethe3rd
    @JohnDoethe3rd Před rokem +4

    @PolyMatter 11:35 Can you explain why Donald Trump's name is not in the 2018 slot? Look forward to hearing your explanation!

  • @xxu6678
    @xxu6678 Před rokem

    Please try to analyze the Korea war before it started in the same way.

  • @nickyd9361
    @nickyd9361 Před 2 lety +89

    "Why Taiwan is NOT Ukraine" - Me: Well, that's pretty obvious, just like Japan isn't France....

  • @sunj8346
    @sunj8346 Před 2 lety +97

    I don't think Taiwanese people would search for "Taiwan War" or "Taiwan unification" but instead search for "will China begin the war"

    • @user-xs5zc2ry6c
      @user-xs5zc2ry6c Před rokem +10

      That's true

    • @Hellowp
      @Hellowp Před rokem

      Taiwanese people aren’t the only ones interested in war

    • @br00klynweirdo
      @br00klynweirdo Před rokem +6

      True

    • @wl82
      @wl82 Před rokem

      这还用搜,台独分子没几日了。

    • @ooXChrissieXoo
      @ooXChrissieXoo Před rokem +4

      resume* The civil war was put on hold when ROC moved to Taiwan, at the time it was impossible for PRC to invade. It's literally just going to be part 2.

  • @petermorse5442
    @petermorse5442 Před rokem

    Great analysis. Thank you.

  • @bemay2822
    @bemay2822 Před rokem +1

    I believe the views of your channel will growth dramatically if you set up “ Chinese mandarin subtitles ” for particular viewers.

  • @reginaldpasao8390
    @reginaldpasao8390 Před 2 lety +10

    Odd. Why is Donald Trump missing in 11:33

    • @denisdemarcus1
      @denisdemarcus1 Před 2 lety +7

      Political views. Thought that this guy is decent, turns out I was wrong.

  • @Moonbird1218
    @Moonbird1218 Před rokem +7

    Actually, in 9:11 there isn't called Linkou beach in Taiwan, we usually say there is ''Taipei Port'' or ''Bali'' in the leftside of river, and the other side there is ''Tamsui''

  • @pharoXIV
    @pharoXIV Před rokem

    Why does the assaults' need to be by water? Granted it would be really hard but they could build a hidden under the ocean tunnel stretching from mainland China to Taiwan and then attack from there. Something similar to the Channel Tunnel between UK and France.

  • @IsotonicSundae
    @IsotonicSundae Před rokem +2

    24:8 is the same as 3:1, what was the point of this?

  • @SteveLouzon
    @SteveLouzon Před 2 lety +16

    Why did you not include Trump in your presidents list @11:35?

    • @SteveLouzon
      @SteveLouzon Před 2 lety +4

      I guess someones bias is showing and maybe you're not neutral in your videos?

    • @BBarNavi
      @BBarNavi Před 2 lety

      for the lulz. cry harder

  • @8_aj
    @8_aj Před rokem +2

    historical proximity is definitely not the only nor sole reason

  • @TankTiger-zr4gk
    @TankTiger-zr4gk Před rokem +1

    You can't really compare WW2 amphibious operation with modern day's one, there aren't any supersonic anti-ship missiles and SAM systems back in WW2.

  • @leoscheibelhut940
    @leoscheibelhut940 Před 2 lety +5

    Excellent points and presentation. You succeeded in easing my worry. Nothing is certain but the situation makes it unlikely.

  • @JudgeVandelay
    @JudgeVandelay Před 2 lety +73

    At 11:30, why did you not list Trump in your 100 year list of US presidents?

    • @breastmilkgaming
      @breastmilkgaming Před 2 lety +1

      the same reason he calls China's debt trap fake, he's a paid shill

    • @tyffen123
      @tyffen123 Před 2 lety +11

      exactly what I asked

    • @RhodiumMoviesMC
      @RhodiumMoviesMC Před 2 lety +17

      Just pathetic whether you like him or not.

    • @tyffen123
      @tyffen123 Před 2 lety +9

      @@RhodiumMoviesMC 100%

    • @George_Davies
      @George_Davies Před 2 lety

      @@RhodiumMoviesMC I would assume it's an editing mistake - otherwise why leave a conspicuous blank space? Just put Obama and Biden next to each other and don't draw attention to it. Ockham's razor says it's a mistake and not a revisionist conspiracy lol
      Plus tbh it's a bit of a crap graphic - with mistakes on Carter's lack of party symbol, inconsistency with naming schemes, weird gradient layering between JFK and Nixon, etc

  • @nimbusshadow-wings
    @nimbusshadow-wings Před rokem +3

    Panic is a double edged sword for China, in the short term it makes them seem tougher and get more influence, but in the long term it makes other countries over prepare for the perceived Chinese giant, despite it being mostly hot air

  • @adrianrivera8425
    @adrianrivera8425 Před rokem

    Good info 💪🏽

  • @dj_gon
    @dj_gon Před 2 lety +6

    Thanks for this informative video! I have been following the China-Taiwan situation for awhile now. Through your video, I've learnt some new perspectives in this matter. Either this war will happen or not, it will be a great tragedy to the people in both sides.

  • @cho4d
    @cho4d Před 2 lety +14

    can't help but laugh at that 3:1 ratio transitioning to 24:8. i think you goofed on that one bud :D

  • @davidwong8870
    @davidwong8870 Před rokem

    PolyMatter, able to do a series on KMT vs DPP. KMT - Pro-Unification and DPP - Pro-Independent and Pro-Status quo. In KMT, there are many Wu Shan Gui - was a notorious Ming Dynasty military officer who played a key role in the fall of the Ming dynasty and the founding of the Qing dynasty in China.

  • @michaelthebishop5290
    @michaelthebishop5290 Před rokem +2

    Nobody wants to talk about 11:33 where all the Presidents' names are on screen except... ya know.. that guy...?

  • @alexanderphilip1809
    @alexanderphilip1809 Před 2 lety +21

    11:34 I know Trump wasnt anybody's favourite but this is either an honest mistake or just straight up petty

    • @guptabhishek
      @guptabhishek Před 2 lety +13

      This guy has lost a lot of credibility

    • @jlynnho5788
      @jlynnho5788 Před 2 lety +5

      Yep. I was a subscriber for roughly 12 minutes. Even if you don't like Trump, its completely childish. GWB was waaaaay worse ha

    • @croftmanor2k23
      @croftmanor2k23 Před 2 lety +7

      I am not a fan of Trump but it throws his video into disrepute by omitting him so.

    • @evoboy67
      @evoboy67 Před rokem +2

      @@guptabhishek yeah, so petty and unprofessional. Lost my subscription

  • @0rpheus
    @0rpheus Před 2 lety +105

    “No matter your political affiliations, you can’t say China hasn’t had the full range of American administrations to choose from”
    Polymatter list all the presidents and associated party from the 1900’s until present day. Meanwhile 2018 = blank space 😂

    • @mursefaneca
      @mursefaneca Před 2 lety +49

      Still scratching my head on why he did that. Seems very out of character even if he hates the orange man. Maybe YT algorithm related or something? If he is being petty that will just make people lose respect towards him.

    • @jackclaudio1240
      @jackclaudio1240 Před 2 lety +45

      I too noticed this and was enjoying the piece up to this point. Any information after the fact became suspect by such a glaring omission. History is history whether you like it or not.

    • @elektrotehnik94
      @elektrotehnik94 Před 2 lety +15

      I find it funny 2 commenters get offended by the Orange Man missing :D
      So serious & stern ^^
      News flash: Trump acted like a joke (often) & you are surprised the world treats his presidency as a joke? :D
      Some people...

    • @alphonsemaina8293
      @alphonsemaina8293 Před 2 lety +43

      @@elektrotehnik94 He was still the president so get over it.

    • @cuicui4418
      @cuicui4418 Před 2 lety +36

      @@elektrotehnik94 this is not about offended or not. If you can censor such a well-known objective fact. How can your opinion worth considering to sane people with common sense.
      Like other comments said China is building an army specifically capable of conquering Taiwan, and most of Chinese won’t consider the “might be” military action an invasion. They consider it “taking back” Taiwan. You can easily ask any Chinese from mainland “Is Taiwan part of China” 99% you will get an answer “yes, Taiwan is part of China.” What if Chinese won’t invade Taiwan? Well, all the skyrocketing spending on aircraft carriers,planes, submarines will become sink capital that served for no purpose waiting for becoming depreciation. Who want a propaganda that Chinese government is harmless? I guess that would definitely not be Donald Trump, the well known orange man. How can you put up a biased glass to omit apparent fact and still believe you conclusions are solid?Btw the land comparison argument made by the video is nonsense, in WW2 Japan invaded China, Germany invaded the entire Europe and the Soviet, why put a pseudo scientific argument to misguide people?
      Overall this video is of low effort and low quality, I guess even you submit it as an essay to your high school project it would get a C.

  • @Ogre_Ram
    @Ogre_Ram Před rokem +3

    I see what you did there at 11:29

  • @It.s_My_Duty
    @It.s_My_Duty Před rokem +2

    我覺得登島作戰的成本太大了,要打起來估計會像德國的海獅計畫一樣