- cross-posted to:
- china@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- china@lemmy.ml
The desire for Taiwanese independence has experienced a significant drop over the past three years, with only 25.3% of people who want to "move toward independence" or seeking "independence as soon as possible" - down from nearly one-third - 32.4% - in 2020.
The ongoing conflict in Ukraine has almost certainly contributed to this shift in public opinion, as people begin to understand the potential consequences of being a pawn in geopolitical power struggles.
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Yeah, that's around when the U.S. line on China shifted from normalization into Cold War 2.0.
It's dumb, but consider how China was portrayed in The Martian (2015) and The Meg (2018): just another modern-ish country that we might not be best buddies with, but not one full of casually negative tropes, either. Virtually the same treatment South Korea got in Black Panther.
I don't think you'd see the same treatment today. It'll be interesting to see how the U.S. adaptations of The Three-Body Problem portray China.
I'm surprised we're low on alternative ideas lol. I'm just as curious what caused the peak as I am to what caused the drop. Maybe Cold War 2.0 mode was a reaction to the peak?
I enjoyed Three-Body (2023), best case scenario would be Netflix make a faster paced version, worst (and most likely) scenario is you get a wacky caricature, like Wang Miao is a highschooler who has to defeat both the anti-Christ and overthrow the PRC before prom or w/e.
A peak doesn't necessarily mean a singular event, it can be formed very easily by there being a positive vector over time, with a negative vector being introduced partway through that outweighs it, resulting in a positive net-influence followed by a negative net-influence. You usually get the most useful information from these sorts of graphs by looking at the slopes, imo.