How colonialism was fundamentally extractive rather than developmental. Britain didn’t want to develop India; it wanted to extract from India. Britain chose extraction because it was more immediately profitable. You might think: “India has cheap labour, so factories should have been built there.” But colonialism isn’t about rational economic efficiency—it’s about power and control. ReducedContinue reading “Economic Logic of Colonialism”
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Historical Cost of India’s Independence and British’s Extraction
India’s independence from British rule (1947) involved significant human and material costs across multiple dimensions. Human Cost The struggle for independence resulted in thousands of deaths throughout the independence movement. The most devastating period was around Partition in 1947, when communal violence between Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs erupted. An estimated 200,000 to 2 million peopleContinue reading “Historical Cost of India’s Independence and British’s Extraction”
Why Taiwan Dominates Global Semiconductor Manufacturing
Taiwan became the world’s semiconductor hub through a combination of government investment, strategic timing, skilled workforce development, and first-mover advantages that created a competitive advantage that’s now almost impossible to replicate. The 1970s-1980s: Taiwan’s Strategic Choice In the 1970s, Taiwan’s government made a deliberate decision to build a semiconductor industry. Here’s why: Factor Details LimitedContinue reading “Why Taiwan Dominates Global Semiconductor Manufacturing”
Taiwan Strait- Taiwan is strategically vital
Taiwan sits in the middle of one of the world’s most important shipping routes. If China controls Taiwan, it would control these shipping lanes and could potentially block or restrict U.S. and allied trade. This makes Taiwan’s independence strategically vital for U.S. economic and military interests. $5 trillion worth of goods pass through the TaiwanContinue reading “Taiwan Strait- Taiwan is strategically vital”
U.S. Military Aid to Israel and Israel’s Arms Producers
The vast majority of U.S. weapons sent to Israel are provided as free grants. The Israeli government does not pay for most of these weapons—American taxpayers do. How U.S. Aid Works Aspect Details Annual commitment $3.8 billion per year through 2028 (including $500 million for missile defense) Total since Oct 2023 $16.3 billion in directContinue reading “U.S. Military Aid to Israel and Israel’s Arms Producers”
The U.S. Allies
Factor Israel Taiwan U.S. diplomatic recognition Fully recognized as a state; U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv Not officially recognized; no U.S. embassy; unofficial relations only Formal alliance Official ally; mutual defense treaty since 1952 De facto ally; no formal treaty; “One China” policy complicates status Aid category Foreign Military Financing (FMF) grants (free weapons) ForeignContinue reading “The U.S. Allies”
Taiwan and the U.S. Diplomatic Complication Updates
“Red lines” are unofficial rules or boundaries that define what is and isn’t allowed. In this context, the State Department created internal guidelines that limit how much contact U.S. officials can have with Taiwan officials, to avoid appearing to recognize Taiwan as an independent country. What a “Red Line” Is A red line is aContinue reading “Taiwan and the U.S. Diplomatic Complication Updates”
the US Congress Structure
Leadership House vs. Senate: Key Differences Aspect House Senate Members 435 100 Term length 2 years 6 years Election cycle All seats every 2 years 1/3 of seats every 2 years Representation By state population 2 per state (equal) Power Can initiate tax/budget bills Can reject or modify House bills Why Both Chambers Exist TheContinue reading “the US Congress Structure”
South Africa Demographic History of Settlers
A Demographic History of Settler South Africa By Jeanne Alexandra Cilliers
Taiwan Defense Spending
Why the U.S. Controls the Timeline Taiwan must pay for its U.S. arms purchases from its own defense budget Factor Why It Works This Way U.S. production schedules The U.S. defense contractors have fixed production lines and can only make so many weapons per year; they allocate slots to different countries Congressional approval U.S. CongressContinue reading “Taiwan Defense Spending”