So you believe that Kim Jong Un rules all of Korea?
I generally find that Chinese people are devoted to the Party. The only people from mainland China that I've ever heard criticize the Party are those who left China and now live either in Hong Kong or abroad. Frankly, I'm not surprised that the citizenry says they're happy with the government.
More and more Chinese are returning to China to work, too. In the past, the Chinese students educated abroad would stay there. They're moving back to the country in greater numbers now.
China's not going to let Hong Kong break away. There isn't broad popular support for Hong Kong as a free city-state, either, although they have made a nice new flag supporting that position. =)
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Mrswdk, the KMT wants a unified China with themselves at the head. The opposition Democratic party wants a free and independent Taiwan. Either way, they're operating separate from the CCP, and in China, the CCP = the central government.
Forbes calls them a country:
Why Does The U.S. Fund Countries, Like Taiwan, That Attack American Businesses And Intellectual Property?Here, perhaps you could learn more about Taiwan by reading about it? This book, Taiwan in Perspective, edited by Wei Chin Lee, might provide you with more understanding. (Spoiler alert: Taiwan's a country, according to the book).
[url=https://books.google.com.hk/books?id=MneIergR2d4C&lpg=PA135&ots=eSWZnJw50H[/url]
Here's an excerpt from John Fuh-Sheng Hsieh's essay in the book "East Asian Culture and Democratic Transition, With Special Reference to the Case of Taiwan."
1. Introduction
It has often been claimed that East Asian culture is antithetical to democracy. In a typical argument, Lucian W. Pye (1985) asserted that:
[T]here do seem to be some features of Asian civilizations that have set them apart from Western civilization. Probably the most significant of these is the Asian tendency to place more value on the collectivity and to be less sensitive than the West to the values of individualism. (P. 26)
Given that democracy is closely associated with individualism, group consciousness featuring East Asian culture is clearly detrimental to democratic development in the region. However, in the past few years, we do find a number of East Asian countries, including Taiwan, moving toward democratic rule, and even for those countries that remain totalitarian or authoritarian, a trend toward greater liberalization is also obvious.
Hsieh is a professor in the department of political science at the University of South Carolina. Here's his bio:
John Fuh-sheng Hsieh received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Rochester in 1982. Currently, he is Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of South Carolina.
He has been active in scholarly activities, serving as secretary-general of the Chinese Association of Political Science ( Taipei), chairman of the Comparative Representation and Electoral Systems Research Committee in the International Political Science Association, and coordinator of the Conference Group on Taiwan Studies, a related group in the American Political Science Association.
His teaching and research interests include rational choice theory, constitutional choice, electoral systems, electoral behavior, political parties, democratization, foreign policy, and East Asian politics. He is the author or co-author of A Comparative Study of Referendums [in Chinese], Party-List Proportional Representation [in Chinese], Popular Will, Checks and Balances, and Efficiency: On the Values of Democracy [in Chinese], On the Participation of Interest Groups in the Political Process [in Chinese]. He is also the co-editor of The Scope and Methods of Political Science [in Chinese] and How Asia Votes ( Chatham House, 2002). His English works appeared as chapters in many books and in such journals as International Political Science Review, Electoral Studies, Party Politics, Public Choice, Representation, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, China Quarterly, Journal of Contemporary China, Journal of Asian and African Studies, American Asian Review, Issues & Studies, and Chinese Political Science Review.
This man has forgotten more about Taiwan than you or I will ever know. I know, I know, I'm making an appeal to authority, the weakest form of argumentation there is, but I think it's safe to say Tsieh is an expert in this field.
The editor of the book, Professor Wei-chin Lee, teaches at Wake Forest University. He's also from Taiwan. Here's his bio:
Professor Wei-chin Lee has published several books, including the forthcoming edited volume on Taiwan’s Politics in the 21st Century (2010). His articles have appeared in various scholarly journals, such as Asian Affairs, Asian Security, Asian Survey, Journal of Asian and African Studies, Journal of Chinese Political Science, Journal of Contemporary China, Journal of Comparative Communism, Journal of Economics and International Relations, Journal of Northeast Asian Studies, Nonproliferation Review, Pacific Focus, and World Affairs. His teaching and research interests are foreign policy and domestic politics of China and Taiwan, US policy toward East Asia, international security, and international institutions.
Again, another expert who understands vastly more about Taiwan than you and I put together.
Let's see. They proclaim themselves as the Republic of China. They have their own military. The conduct diplomacy with more than a hundred countries globally. 22 countries recognize their sovereignty. Experts and scholarly works recognize their sovereignty. Yeah, sounds like a country to me.