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  • On this episode of China Uncensored,

  • Trump’s inauguration means change!

  • And not just for that Chinese Obama impersonator

  • who's about to be out of a job.

  • Hi, welcome to China Uncensored,

  • I’m your host Chris Chappell.

  • This Friday,

  • Donald Trump will be inaugurated as the 45th president

  • of the United States.

  • Now Trump has repeatedly said hell be hard on China

  • when he enters office.

  • Exact details are a bit sparse,

  • but hey,

  • how could you not trust this guy?

  • You know,

  • it used to be politicians just needed to wear a flag pin

  • to prove they loved America.

  • Anyway,

  • it's clear that the relationship between China and the US

  • will never be the same.

  • But what’s gonna change?

  • I mean,

  • China already built a wall and paid for it

  • but that was ages ago.

  • So let’s take a look at 5 YUUUGE ways Trump’s inauguration

  • is going to change US-China relations.

  • Number 5

  • Currency Manipulation

  • Donald Trump has promised to label China

  • a “currency manipulator.”

  • I’m going to instruct my Treasury Secretary

  • to label China a currency manipulator,

  • which should have been done years ago.

  • Yes, it should have been done years ago.

  • For much of the last 20 years,

  • the Chinese regime manipulated its currency

  • to keep it weak,

  • so that China could become the world leader in cheap labor,

  • cheap goods,

  • and confused childhoods.

  • That made China’s economy grow.

  • But it’s also one of many reasons

  • why the US lost millions of manufacturing jobs.

  • It also helped create a huge trade imbalance

  • with China.

  • But more recently,

  • the Chinese regime has the opposite problem.

  • China’s economy is slowing down.

  • And wealthy Chinese are moving their money out of the country.

  • These are two reasons why the Chinese currency

  • is weak to the point of being unhealthy.

  • So now the regime has been manipulating their currency

  • the other way,

  • trying to keep it strong.

  • In other words,

  • the Chinese regime is now manipulating their currency

  • in a way that helps the US.

  • So even if Trump could force China

  • to stop manipulating its currency now...

  • it wouldn’t really benefit the US.

  • Of course, labeling China a “currency manipulator

  • doesn't actually force them to do anything.

  • So Trump has another idea:

  • Slap tariffs on China.

  • But that could lead to...

  • Number 4

  • Trade War

  • Ah, the kind of war whose greatest weapon

  • is how boring it is to talk about.

  • This really deserves its own episode.

  • But Trump has been criticizing trade with China

  • since the Republican primaries.

  • China is ripping us on trade,

  • devaluing their currency

  • and killing our companies.

  • Of course it’s always important to remember

  • what presidents say on the campaign trail

  • and what they actually do

  • are two very different things.

  • When Bill Clinton first ran,

  • he criticized George Bush Senior

  • for being soft on thebutchers of Beijing.”

  • And then

  • well, that’s sort of the reason why were where we are now.

  • Trump has threatened to slap tariffs on Chinese imports.

  • That’s going to be challenging,

  • because legally, you can only put tariffs on specific goods,

  • not on an entire country.

  • And I mean you can’t.

  • Trump will probably decide he can do anything he wants.

  • Even it it means flying in the face of international trade laws.

  • And starting a trade war.

  • And the loser in that...

  • would be the Chinese regime.

  • China’s economy is slowing,

  • and the regime has maintained its grip on power

  • by promising economic stability.

  • Anything that poses a risk to that poses a risk

  • to the Communist Party’s leadership.

  • As for the US,

  • a trade war would hurt,

  • but not as much as it would hurt China.

  • China could lose millions of jobs,

  • while the US could always buy its cheap nightmare toys

  • from Malaysia, Vietnam, and so on.

  • So what does Xi Jinping think about this?

  • It's hard to tell.

  • Ok, actually, I guess it's pretty clear.

  • Speaking of unwinnable wars...

  • Number 3

  • North Korea

  • Remember this fun little prediction

  • back in September last year?

  • Probably by the end of the first term

  • of the person were electing this November,

  • they are going to have the ability

  • to put nuclear warheads on missiles

  • that can reach the West Coast of the United States.

  • Well, we now know that person is Trump.

  • The Hermit Kingdom is,

  • well, kind of in everyone’s face right now.

  • North Korea now has enough plutonium

  • to make 10 nuclear bombs.

  • Thanks, Obama.

  • Sorry, I know that doesn’t make any sense here,

  • but it's basically the last time I can use that.

  • Really, we have this guy to thank,

  • walking hemorrhoid and former Chinese leader,

  • Jiang Zemin.

  • According to this Radio Free Asia report,

  • he started giving nuclear material to North Korea

  • after he took office in 1989.

  • Anyway, Trump holds China partly responsible

  • for the North Korean nuclear problem.

  • So China should get involved,

  • and China should solve that problem,

  • and we should put pressure on China

  • to solve the problem.

  • But Trump doesn’t want to just rely on China.

  • Maybe it’s a lot better for us,

  • if Japan pays its own way,

  • they arm and they take care of North Korea

  • instead of us taking care of it.

  • And he’s said similar things about South Korea.

  • But South Korea should pay us,

  • and pay us very substantially,

  • for protecting them.

  • Or else they can just protect themselves.

  • So Trump’s solution to a nuclear North Korea

  • is a nuclear South Korea

  • and a nuclear Japan.

  • Which will go down so well with nuclear China.

  • One big nuclear family.

  • Let’s just hope they don’t go hugging each other

  • with nuclear arms.

  • But what happens to the children of divorce?

  • Well, that brings us to...

  • Number 2

  • Taiwan

  • Trump was changing US-Taiwan relations

  • even before becoming president.

  • China considers Taiwan a breakaway province

  • and is committed to reunification.

  • And by reunification they mean conquest.

  • But the Chinese regime has been kind enough

  • to hold off invasion plans

  • as long as everyone agrees

  • to the One China policy

  • where everyone collectively pretends that Taiwan

  • is not a country.

  • So they weren’t happy when Trump

  • became the first president in over 40 years

  • to accept a phone call

  • from the president of Taiwan

  • and then say the entire One China Policy is negotiable.

  • Now, state-run media China Daily is saying

  • China will take off the gloves,”

  • if Trump continues.

  • What does that mean?

  • Well according to hardcore state-run media,

  • the Global Times,

  • that means merciless reunification.

  • And they really mean it.

  • No, seriously.

  • Seriously.

  • And speaking of disputed territories

  • that I have personally been to...

  • Number 1

  • The South China Sea

  • Well, if Taiwan is the region

  • that China doesn’t really want to go to war over,

  • the South China Sea is the US’s war bluff.

  • The Chinese military has been aggressively expanding

  • in disputed territorial waters there.

  • China may or may not have historical claims to that region,

  • but mandoes the Communist Party

  • have to be such jerks about it?

  • Attacking fishermen?

  • Building military bases?

  • I mean, what ever happened tosharing is caring,” people?

  • Sharing is something you can do

  • whenever you want to.

  • Do they even have Care Bears in China?

  • Ok, sort of.

  • Back to the South China Sea.

  • In the last few years under President Obama,

  • US naval presence flooded the region,

  • intimidating China so much that...

  • they would steal a research drone right in front of them.

  • But according to Trump’s new Secretary of State,

  • that’s going to change.

  • Were going to have to send China a clear signal

  • that first the island-building stops

  • and second your access to those islands

  • is also not going to be allowed.”

  • Using the US military to blockade China from the region

  • would be a big change.

  • It would also put Chinese leader Xi Jinping at risk.

  • He’s locked in a massive battle for power

  • over the Communist Party.

  • Xi can’t afford to look weak,

  • especially against the US

  • on issues like Taiwan and the South China Sea.

  • If Trump has an aggressive China policy,

  • Xi may be forced to take a more aggressive stance

  • against the US to maintain his position.

  • Trump has been...unpredictable.

  • At first,

  • many thought Trump’s isolationist policies

  • would pull the US out of Asia

  • and let China sweep the South China Sea.

  • But it’s looking like that’s not going to happen.

  • So as we move forward

  • into the beginning of the Trump Presidency,

  • may it be huge and everlasting,

  • what do you think is in store for the US?

  • And China?

  • Leave your comments below.

  • Once again I’m Chris Chappell,

  • and you know what,

  • why the heck not,

  • one last time!

  • Thanks, Obama.

On this episode of China Uncensored,

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トランプ大統領就任で米中関係が変わる5つの方法|中国無修正版 (5 Ways Trump's Inauguration Could Change US-China Relations | China Uncensored)

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