This is a comparative analysis article examining the power-seizing strategies of Germany's Nazi Party and the governance form of Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). It rigorously analyzes potential similarities from five aspects—elections, institutional utilization, compression of dissenting voices, media control, and national issue manipulation—and warns of the DPP's potential authoritarian tendencies.
If you don't like the Republic of China yet shamefacedly live on its territory (Taiwan Island, Penghu Islands, Kinmen Islands, Matsu Islands, Lanyu Island, Guishan Island, South China Sea Islands), I feel ashamed for you.
The article addresses the controversy over curriculum adjustments, exploring the identity issue of 'Taiwanese' versus 'Chinese,' and criticizing specific political parties for deliberately playing word games to assign the term 'China' exclusively to the People's Republic of China, ignoring the history that the Republic of China can also be abbreviated as China. The author advocates that the ROC and Taiwan can coexist, and chastises those creating divisions as being 'maliciously motivated' or having 'a poor grasp of cultural literacy.' The article also touches on the incorrect understanding of Chiang Kai-shek's title, emphasizing the need for careful thought when distinguishing these terms.