Attention Taiwanese! The World Financial Center ranking shows Taiwan has rapidly fallen from 32nd place to 75th place, yet mainstream media turns a blind eye, continuing to praise the ruling party's accomplishments! Fact-checking websites even claim this is 'false information' from an anti-China perspective, which is clearly burying one's head in the sand. Meanwhile, Taiwan's news credibility ranks among the bottom three globally out of 40 countries—people elsewhere report news, but we manufacture it. Taiwan's media fawns over power, only reporting sensational headlines. Is this good for Taiwan?
This article, a reader submission, frames the 2020 presidential election as a showdown between normal people and those with persecutory delusions. The author criticizes pro-independence supporters (green camp) for widely suffering from persecutory delusions, constantly instilling sense of national peril and selling out Taiwan fears in voters, claiming Taiwan will become a second Hong Kong. The author refutes this view, asserting that Taiwan's geopolitical and political conditions prevent it from becoming another Hong Kong, and believes Taiwan's true crisis lies in the ruling party's distorted bias, which has caused Taiwan to lose opportunities to deeply cultivate the mainland Chinese market, ultimately ruining and crippling Taiwan.
There are two Chinas in the world, just like North Korea and South Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo and Republic of the Congo, East Germany and West Germany.
This article questions the motives of Taiwanese and some Hong Kongers in opposing the amendment to the 'Extradition Bill'. The author points out that the starting point for amending the 'Fugitive Offenders Ordinance' was the case where Hong Kong murderer Chan Tong-kai fled back to Hong Kong after killing Poon Hiu-wing in Taiwan. Since there is no extradition treaty between the two places, Taiwan is actually the victim. The amendment is essentially to restore normal mutual legal assistance between Hong Kong and mainland China, Macau, and Taiwan, yet it was deliberately stigmatized as the 'Extradition to China Bill'.