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by notahacker
3855 days ago
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The Free Tibet movement in the West has always had more to do with counterculture than the US government. I suspect most Tibetans were rather worse off during the Cultural Revolution than in the quasi-feudal system that existed before. I'm not entirely convinced they're necessarily worse off today, but the Tibetan refugees risking their lives walking across the Himalayas into an exile where they get to "meet the Lama" couldn't really be any less focused on geopolitics... I'm not aware of any parallel Cherokee diaspora. I don't think the Uighurs' preferences for their own cultural practices is anything to do with them paying any attention to the US either. |
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Throughout history nationalism, religion and ethnicity has always been used to destabilise countries, this is nothing new.
I don't put any extraordinary blame on the US for this, it's what most powerful nations are doing in their quest for even more power.
About the Cherokees: Don't know if it is due to their low numbers, or simply because the US is powerful enough to prevent this from happening. Maybe the Cherokees are happy as it is or the right people are payed off by the government.
In general this can be exploited best when a country is in severe economic trouble. For example Chechnya after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The US is not even remotely in a comparable state.