CTi News presented an adapted version of Li Jia-wei's song 'Suffering' (original lyrics by Xu Shi-zhen, original composition by Rao Shan-qiang) at their New Year singing competition as a voice of resistance against the importation of American ractopamine pork. We have recorded the lyrics adapted by Chen Wen-yue below so that everyone can sing along.
Since securing her re-election, President Tsai Ing-wen of the DPP has deployed various political tactics that offer little praise for the long-term vision of the Republic of China (R.O.C.). Her actions can essentially be summarized by three major failures.
This article strongly questions and criticizes several policies and events during President Tsai Ing-wen's five years in office, including energy policy, the New Southbound Policy, returning Taiwanese businesses and real estate, Forward-looking Infrastructure, international status, ractopamine pork imports, lowering the voting age, and concerns about press freedom and judicial neutrality.
This article comments on the series of troubles faced by 'Royal Heritage Beef Noodles' after winning the beef noodle championship. Following public accusations by Executive Yuan spokesperson Ding Yi-ming that the shop used US beef containing ractopamine, the author satirically describes the shop as experiencing 'mercury retrograde' and 'unforeseen disasters.' It notes that after the shop proved zero detection, Premier Su Tseng-chang pulled the owner's father into a staged show, followed by a sudden inspection of their factory. The piece compares this to fighting a 'giant evil,' warning that the outcome could be like CTI News, and ends with a satirical call to 'recharge Taiwan value.'
The article criticizes the 2019 'Anti-Red Media, Anti-Nikkei' (Anti-Want Want China) protest movement, deeming its logic absurd and its nature a matter of political manipulation. The author points out that 'Green Elderships' have virtually devoured almost all news channels, yet Green-camp supporters (Green-brains) only see CTI (Chung T'ien). The author questions the irony of protesters holding banners for 'seeking freedom of the press and opposing lies and fabrication' while only targeting CTI and ignoring the bias of other news stations, calling it 'the biggest joke under Taiwan's sky.' The author believes the essence of this activity is to aid Tsai Ing-wen's campaign by attacking Han Kuo-yu and questions the danger of the government defining 'fake news.' The article expresses concern that if CTI is shut down, there will be no media left to reveal the truth about the government, likening this political behavior to the essence of 'religious money-grubbing.'
The article points out that the essence of 'blue-green bitter conflict' is political parties' struggles for their own interests rather than genuine ideological differences, and argues this represents 'cognitive warfare' against people's thoughts. The author criticizes malicious political labels saturating society (such as 'blue worms,' 'Chinese people') and specifically names SET News political discussion programs as full of fallacies and selective arguments. The author uses DPP attorney Guo Zheng-liang's double-standard remarks across different media as an example, expressing concerns about Taiwan's political future being controlled by such hypocritical figures.