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choosing_goals_for_a_new_nation [2021/10/05 21:18] – az | choosing_goals_for_a_new_nation [2022/09/13 20:35] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 |
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In a tweet, Jiang Rui said: | In a tweet, Rui said: |
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**The Afghans need to raise their awareness and recognization of the idea of 'Statehood' - the basics to establish any modern country. The 'Every person is a tribal person, or an ethnic person' approach has denied Afghanistan of modernity once. It will again.** | **The Afghans need to raise their awareness and recognization of the idea of 'Statehood' - the basics to establish any modern country. The 'Every person is a tribal person, or an ethnic person' approach has denied Afghanistan of modernity once. It will again.** |
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In a tweet, Jiang Rui said: | In a tweet, Rui said: |
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**Afghans were known for being open-up and inclusive when they were busy brokering trade on the Silk Road. Now Afghanistan is the hotbed for religious zealots and extremists, both before and after the US intervention. So why?** | **Afghans were known for being open-up and inclusive when they were busy brokering trade on the Silk Road. Now Afghanistan is the hotbed for religious zealots and extremists, both before and after the US intervention. So why?** |
Was this change associated in time with the end of the Kingdom in 1973, the military coup in 1978, the Soviet incursion during the 1980s, the dominance of the Taliban from around 1996, or with the US occupation starting in 2001? | Was this change associated in time with the end of the Kingdom in 1973, the military coup in 1978, the Soviet incursion during the 1980s, the dominance of the Taliban from around 1996, or with the US occupation starting in 2001? |
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In a tweet, Jiang Rui said: | In a tweet, Rui said: |
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Is the majority of people under Taliban control really bound to them by the Taliban's brand of Islam? Or is it that the Taliban members are bound by the ideology and therefore follow directions from the Taliban leadership to oppress and subdue the ordinary people? When and where did the militarization of "fundamentalist" Islam begin? How was it carried to Afghanistan? How well was it accepted by existing religious authorities? | Is the majority of people under Taliban control really bound to them by the Taliban's brand of Islam? Or is it that the Taliban members are bound by the ideology and therefore follow directions from the Taliban leadership to oppress and subdue the ordinary people? When and where did the militarization of "fundamentalist" Islam begin? How was it carried to Afghanistan? How well was it accepted by existing religious authorities? |
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In a tweet, Jiang Rui asked: | In a tweet, Rui asked: |
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**With the advent of the new Afghanistan, some questions need to be answered. For example, how can a tribal society be transformed into a modern society? How can a patriarchal government be replaced by a political system that emphasizes the protection of human rights and gender equality?What would be the best form of government that serves ethnic unity instead of deepening the ethnic divide?** | **With the advent of the new Afghanistan, some questions need to be answered. For example, how can a tribal society be transformed into a modern society? How can a patriarchal government be replaced by a political system that emphasizes the protection of human rights and gender equality?What would be the best form of government that serves ethnic unity instead of deepening the ethnic divide?** |
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| **What would be the best form of government that serves ethnic unity instead of deepening the ethnic divide |
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Also: | Also: |
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| [[[start#What benefits could flow from a united Afghanistan?|Return to What benefits could flow from a united Afghanistan?]] |
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==RUI== | |
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Moved this part to [[RUI's response]] | |
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<del>If the question is changed to 'Why should Afghanistan be united?" or "Who benefits from a united Afghanistan", the answer might be easier to find. Take the example of the unification of Germany or Italy in the 19th century. Unification meant the single tarrif nationwide and a unified market that operated on one set of policies instead of miscellaneous and arbitrary ones. The other example worthy referring to might be the case of China run by CCP, as what CCP did after seizing the power was to muster all the resources possible by force or by scheme and invest them all in the process of industrialization, and turned China from an agricultural country into an industrial state. And if one looks at all the issues raised about Afghanistan by far, one might find little of an agenda or whatsoever about the industrialization of the country. Yet it might be the key, because, as the case of Germany or Italy suggests, the industrial entrepreneurs and the businesspeople care the most about the unified economic polices as well as the market, which can only happen under a unified government, hence the drive for a unified country.</del> | |
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