Quote from: VaruLV on April 08, 2022, 17:14:09
Not surprised by Lenovo doing it, but Asus and Acer, AFAIK, are Taiwanese companies, so they should know thing or two about aggressive and blood thirsty neighbors in the looks of China, so a bit surprising seeing them continuing doing business in nazi murderous ruSSia.
Wouldn't say China's on the same level as Russia here. China's not exactly known for committing mass murder / mass rape, bombing schools/hospitals, shooting innocent people dead right outside their homes, etc. They're much more civilised than that!
Russia, on the other hand, used those horrifying tactics long before Ukraine - look at Syria, for example.
To be totally fair, China's position on Taiwan has at least been both consistent and honest about their intentions - not to mention they've been trying for peaceful reunification for a good many years.
Also, the Nationalist party that currently runs Taiwan originally ruled all of China, before being unseated in the Chinese Civil War by the Communist Party. It's not unreasonable to say the PRC is justified in not liking them - they fought a bloody war against the ROC regime, and the ROC regime continues to exist in Taiwan.
Anyway, my point is that I wouldn't call the PRC particularly aggressive or bloodthirsty - all their actions make sense in proper historical context. In fact, I would go so far as to say they've been rather restrained in their actions so far. I don't believe for a second that China would do something so horrific as what Russia is doing in Ukraine. China actually has competent leadership - Russia does not.
I believe the primary reason China's playing both sides a bit here is because they want access to Russia's resources... in the long run, I think they want Russia to become essentially a vassal or client state. Which might actually be good for Russia, because I can see the Chinese pushing for better domestic policy and better leadership there once Putin's out of the picture.