In 2020, the Chinese Wild Bird Federation (CWBF) was expelled by BirdLife International. In response, it immediately and quietly changed its English name to 'Taiwan Wild Bird Federation' (TWBF).
This article expresses a firm stance against the legislative proposal to relax the rights of Indigenous peoples to hunt protected animals. The author argues that hunting is not an exclusive right of Indigenous groups; if expanded, it should be opened to all citizens, though Taiwan's environment can no longer sustain it. The piece questions the legitimacy of hunting based on 'ancestral wisdom' and emphasizes that any culture must evolve with the times rather than clinging to antiquated practices for personal gain or wild game consumption.
This article criticizes Taiwan's documentary 'Eagles Want to Fly' and the film propaganda environment behind it. The author questions the commercialism of moving 'TV-grade' ecological documentaries to big screen, arguing audiences mostly participate due to 'supporting domestic films' or 'loving Taiwan' groupthink rather than substantive engagement with content. The author believes the film—aside from Wu Nian-zhen's narration and Lin Qiang's score—lacks substance, suggesting audiences instead directly donate money to bird societies for conservation, transforming sentiment into daily ecological reflection rather than consuming ecological issues through commercial cinema.