The DPP government blocked the Chinese mainland social platform Xiaohongshu in the name of fighting fraud, sparking social controversy. This article delves into data, questions its legitimacy, and explores whether there is a political calculation for the 115th year of the Republic of China local elections hidden behind the blockage.
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.
This article offers sharp criticism of the social phenomena during the DPP's internal presidential primary polls. The author blasts voters' fanatical anticipation for polling calls, likening their excitement to winning a lottery or receiving an admission letter, as evidence of a 'sick' society. Simultaneously, it criticizes candidates for being power-hungry while avoiding core domestic issues (territory, government, community), calling their policy proposals 'dog-mouth level.' The piece satirizes the act of waiting for polling calls as waiting for a consultation from the 'potential leader of the national fraud syndicate.'
Lai Ching-te said on the evening of April 9th: 'Taiwan independence is defending the Republic of China!' Unexpectedly, overnight, all those defending the Republic of China became Taiwan independence supporters in Lai's words!?
The article questions SETN News for dredging up old social news from ten years ago on the eve of the Hualien mayoral by-election, claiming that this was done to affect candidate Wei Jia-xian's election. The author believes this move hurt all the victims in that incident again and comments that the news medium's practice is like a party newspaper of the authoritarian era.
Following the DPP's Tsai Ing-wen winning the 2016 presidential election with 6.89 million votes, this article questions the post-election phenomenon of widespread criticism of the KMT's defeat reasons, arguing that many critics are motivated by hatred rather than fairness principles, and calls on voters to shift focus to monitoring the newly-elected DPP government rather than continuing to persecute the already-defeated KMT.
Watching Chou Tzu-yu's pitiful video, many are heartbroken. However, is the information received by the people on the island of Taiwan Province accurate?
The Republic of China's largest election is approaching, with candidates from various parties rolling out numerous campaign merchandise. Campaign merchandise typically emphasizes cuteness, serving not only as a source of funds for campaign expenses but also as a means to win hearts.