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09-06-2025, 03:30 AM
This post was last modified: 09-06-2025, 03:32 AM by Kwaka. 
An Australian perspective on China, strong grounds that China did sent a few boats to Australia before the British arrived. Not enough to establish a colony, but some of the survivors gotten taken up by the Aboriginal population, more so in the Queensland region.
Once a British colony was setup and gold was found, then a lot more boats from China arrived. They worked hard and cheep. Now all the cities here have a Chinatown section. While China could nuke me, its financial front is more of an realistic threat here. Living on the boarder of China has a more direct offensive threat.
Is a $10B USD debt deal really a bit deal if all done in the Yuan? I know questions of foreign ownership have been ongoing for a while. Last I heard about a decade ago, America was the largest foreign landowner in Australia. I don't know how things are these days. Some of the reputation at the China owned mines are still a bit rough at times. When it cost v$17 AUD for a new toaster, has some benefits.
Then there are also a few police stations in Victoria also flying the China flag. Big cities do have their multicultural aspects. How China generally stick to Chinese problems, IDK? Good they sort out their problems, how some of this does conflict with more western values does raise questions at times.
With how the current PM Albo has been to China twice while communications are strained with Trump, feels like we are getting our Biden treatment. He is not as incapacitated, but still dropping the ball on foreign influence. His job is to look after Australia.