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Culture War Roundup for the week of July 21, 2025

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To call Taiwan a "rogue province" is to accept that the People's Republic of China has a claim on it which is being violated by the Republic of China. Obviously the ROC does not accept that.

This is a wonderfully pedantic stance you're taking. The PRC is viewed by everyone, except the ROC, as the One True Chinese Government. The ROC has not tried to formally define itself as a separate country (though some want to). Or give up it's claims to the mainland.

"Get back the full territory" refers to the government of China regaining control of all of Chinese territory following external invasions and civil war. I could choose a slightly different phrasing if the word "back" offends you, but it's a distinction without a difference. It's either a rogue province, or an independent country. Take your pick.

So unless you accept that the ROC is still the legitimate sovereign power of all of China, temporarily embarrassed by only controlling Taiwan, then this is all academic.

This is a wonderfully pedantic stance you're taking. The PRC is viewed by everyone, except the ROC, as the One True Chinese Government.

The One China policy is a diplomatic fiction. Despite it, the US maintains, and always has since recognizing the PRC, "unofficial" relations with ROC. In as much as relations can be "unofficial" when they're backed by official statute. The US does not recognize the PRCs claims over the territory controlled by the ROC.

The ROC has not tried to formally define itself as a separate country (though some want to). Or give up it's claims to the mainland.

Indeed, the ROC claims all the territory held by the PRC in its constitution. This doesn't mean there's 22 rogue provinces of China any more than the PRCs claim over Taiwan means there's one. It just means both governments are officially deluded.

I think the ROC is a bit more deluded than the PRC at this point, lol. The PRC clearly won the civil war, just didn't quite get the chance to invade Taiwan like they did Hainan and establish 100% control over the map.

But yes, the "unresolved status of Taiwan" is a pleasantly functional fiction.