Friday, January 14, 2011

breaking up is good if it's someone else's country....

jan 14th, 2011

but the us fought tooth and nail against the secession of the south.

china will keep its COX and COT come what may (chinese occupied xinjiang and tibet).

weak countries will be balkanized and fragmented.

india is on the list of target countries for this: there will be pressure to do the following:

1. northeast-christiststan

2. greater bangladeshistan in assam and west bengal

3. tribal-christiststan in jharkand and chattisgarh

4. moplahstan in malabar

5. christist-godman-and-nun-supply-stan in cochin

6. nizamistan in hyderabad/telengana

and so on.

but what if, gulp, there's also pressure on america to yield chicanostan in southern california and texas?

then these parag khanna types will not be so blase, i imagine.

7 comments:

KapiDhwaja said...

While we are at it, lets not forget COP -- Chinese Occupied Kashmir, aka Aksai Chin which is like 1/4th the size of Jammu & Kashmir.

We have to get it back in the next war with the Chinis, without losing any territory elsewhere ofcourse.

KapiDhwaja said...

I meant COK - Chinese Occupied Kashmir...

non-carborundum said...

Then there's Amerikhastan

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0Fwd8FZNJ4

Pagan said...

OT: India's big banias feeding the enemy:
R-Power gives China firm $10 bn order

Pagan said...

OT: Testing the Worm

Perhaps the most secretive part of the Stuxnet story centers on how the theory of cyberdestruction was tested on enrichment machines to make sure the malicious software did its intended job.

The account starts in the Netherlands. In the 1970s, the Dutch designed a tall, thin machine for enriching uranium. As is well known, A. Q. Khan, a Pakistani metallurgist working for the Dutch, stole the design and in 1976 fled to Pakistan.

The resulting machine, known as the P-1, for Pakistan’s first-generation centrifuge, helped the country get the bomb. And when Dr. Khan later founded an atomic black market, he illegally sold P-1’s to Iran, Libya, and North Korea.

The P-1 is more than six feet tall. Inside, a rotor of aluminum spins uranium gas to blinding speeds, slowly concentrating the rare part of the uranium that can fuel reactors and bombs.

The United States obtained a cache of P-1’s after Libya gave up its nuclear program in late 2003, and the machines were sent to the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, another arm of the Energy Department.

By early 2004, a variety of federal and private nuclear experts assembled by the CIA were calling for the US to build a secret plant where scientists could set up the P-1’s and study their vulnerabilities. “The notion of a test bed was really pushed,” a participant at the C.I.A. meeting recalled.

non-carborundum said...

@Inferno

If it interests you, Central Electricity Authority was casting doubts on Chinese equipment in 2008, but changed it's stance to "praise" of Chinese equipment in 2010.

So now our red imperial masters are welcome to f*** up our power system. GUBO.

http://www.cea.nic.in/Thermal/TE&TD/Chinese%20Boiler%20Report.pdf

http://www.livemint.com/2008/10/15233608/CEA-questions-quality-of-Chine.html

http://www.livemint.com/2009/07/22234517/CEA-warning-may-hurt-Chinese-f.html

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/chinese-power-equipment-are-not-energy-efficient/470794/0

http://in2.mofcom.gov.cn/aarticle/chinanews/201001/20100106752609.html

http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/cea-panel-praises-chinese-power-equipment-makers/382436/

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/news-by-industry/energy/power/bhel-seeks-govt-action-to-counter-chinese-threat/articleshow/7195999.cms

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/foreign-trade/govt-not-to-impose-duty-on-power-equipment-import/articleshow/7204624.cms

Pagan said...

Thank you, NC. Looks like some powerful arm-twisting/lobbying went into preventing any govt duties on Chinese power equipment. Informative links. You seem to be passionate about this issue.