Circuit
Writing Letters
So who's turn is it to write the rebuttal to Jehoshua? I've already taken my turn and I think I did a fair job at it. 


Guangxi's identity has been pretty clear to me...
Brazil will gladly take over for the British should they grow tired.

Many of the issues you've noted have in fact been addressed; with the recognition of Cantonese and Mandarin as official languages of government one of the biggest barriers separating the common Guangxiren from their rulers and officials has been removed.
The comparison to South Africa is far from accurate now, and even when compared with Guangxi before the recent reforms OTL South Africa's barriers to social mobility for native commoners were far harder to penetrate; a black South African could not change his skin color, but a Guangxiren of some means could learn English in order to have a shot at a position in government or the civil service.
And though traditional Chinese may have no love for the Dominion government, it is from my biased perspective the least of the evils of the three Chinas. The Unified Realm is ruled by a military clique and occupies the least prosperous and fertile areas of China. Its government is surely far more repressive than the Dominion, as in Guangxi there is in fact no "machine-gunning potential dissidents" or "brutal" repression of the opposition. The government of Guangxi has to the best of its ability responded to the will of the Guangxiren.
Also, I doubt that there are more than a few people alive anymore who remember an independent China at this point.

People not liking you is one of the costs of imperialism, so I can't say I'm looking to be loved, but rather to be respected and at least be tolerated as not the worst possible thing and not worth the effort to remove. But should the Chinese forget who's the boss, I won't hesitate to remind them.
Britain is a democracy. The love of your population, which is dying for no particular reason in a colonial war, is rather more important in this case...
...dude, seriously, check a map. Nanjing is right there, on the south bank of the Yangtze. Hangzhou, slightly more defensible and the Song dynasty's southern capital, is right there.
The fact that both of those are currently in the hands of the Red Army is immaterial.
Irrelevant.
I am explaining how political legitimacy is derived in traditional Chinese thought, based on Confucian norms, and how Guangxi has departed from it.
Irrelevant. My argument revolves around Guangxi's domestic political legitimacy. Foreign acceptance has nothing to do with this.
Finally, responding to your point about 'confusing' the Red Army with Guangxi's citizenry -- did Poles in Austrian-occupied Poland ever stop considering themselves Polish? Might it, perhaps, be in the interest of the Red Army to have built consensus with Guangxi's citizenry?
Circuit said:This is one reason why I get a kick out of Jehoshua's essays citing the United Kingdom as kowtowing to liberalism, given that British foreign policy has had no liberal delusions about human potential and generally operates in a realist framework, no matter which party is in charge.

Those are not traditional capitals of china
Than why did you mention it? and your ignoring that my point was a rebuttal to your argument that Guangxi could only be legitimate if it restored the tributary state system, and a commonensical acknowledgement of the fact no power in China could ever do such a thing.
What foolishness, One is a Pole on the basis of ethnicity and culture, the red army is a political movement, not an ethnic group.
You want to know why I'm dismissing your arguments? It's because of this steady emission of falsehoods that it is, frankly, not worth my time to rebut. I was not aware it was possible for a poli sci major to be this ignorant.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanjing
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_capitals_of_China
Besides Ming and Tang, it was also the historical capital of Wu state; the four hundred years of the Southern Dynasties; plus the Taiping and Republic periods, in OTL. It is accepted as one of the traditional capitals. I could cite Zhuge Liang, but since you clearly have no idea who he is or why he's significant, why bother?
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Please proceed, Jehoshua! It sounds like you're saying that "Pole" is an ethnicity and culture, whereas "Chinese" is not! Also, it sounds like you're saying that the Red Army isn't motivated by ethnic nationalism! I would love to hear your uninformed thoughts on the matter!
Yes, but given the difference in script and orthography between the alphabetic script of Guangxi and the ideographic script that is Classical Chinese, those are still half measures.
Guangxi Orders 1937 said:all acts and decrees will be published in both written English and Chinese and announced in all three dialects.
That's interesting. Are you saying that Guangxi is aiming towards universal suffrage, regardless of language proficiency?
Right, but as above, "Guangxiren" is ten million anglophones in Xinjing, not the broad base of sinophones in the rest of the country.
Doesn't matter, not when the entirety of Chinese literature celebrates the unity and independence of China
Seriously, go read Romance of the Three Kingdoms sometime...
The argument Jehoshua should've made is that Nanjing, while an ancient capital, is too vulnerable to be a center of government given the batshit craziness that is Japanese China
Beijing, unlike Nanjing, is not completely indefensible. Nanjing is just across the Yangtze from the Japanese (come the red army), whereas Beijing was much further away from the nomadic hordes (and wasn't face to face with an industrial and imperial competitor). Twas also one could note the capital of a united Chinese Empire rather than a state relegated to the south.
Oh and you neglect the Qing did such things as force the ethnic Chinese to wear Queue's which conflicted with traditional Chinese customs regarding cutting hair and maintained the Manchu as an elite class. The "Southern Qing" in Guangxi presumably no longer require queues, or exalt Manchu (the language) or the Manchu people above the Chinese masses (noting of course that southern China has many languages and ethnic groups, unlike the north where the Han are overwhelmingly dominant)
...the Qing could fairly easily cut the tether of formal association, even if Circuit says Britain would intervene (I would call his bluff if it was me on the basis of institutional British weakness and war weariness).
... Let me phrase it in an analogy you can understand. What would it have meant, symbolically, to the Federal government during the American civil war, had it moved its capital from Washington DC to Portland, Oregon?
Thank you for making my argument for me!
Qing:
* exalted the Manchu language
* set the Manchu minority above the Chinese population, denying them access to political power
* was obsessed with preserving Manchu culture
Guangxi:
* exalts the English language
* sets the anglophone minority above the Chinese population, denying them access to political power
* is obsessed with preserving English culture
Furthermore, south China is not nearly as ethnically diverse as you claim, certainly not in the parts that Guangxi is concerned with.