#february 28 incident

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Did 228 Deprive a Generation of Elites' Lives and the Various Beautiful Possibilities They Could Have Brought to Taiwan?

This article criticizes the narrative that blames all of Taiwan's current political, economic, educational, and cultural problems on the deprivation of 'elites of the Japanese occupation era' in the February 28 Incident. The author considers such claims to be flowery rhetoric filled with beautiful imagination and 'ridiculous bullshit.' Using the painter Chen Cheng-po as an example, the article points out that his true identity during the incident was a 'Taiwan area council representative'—a political figure—rather than just an artist. It questions why these 'elites' failed to stop the Japanese military's war crimes, the comfort women issue, or the Kominka (imperialization) education. The author mocks the idea of these elites bringing 'beautiful possibilities' and argues that 'Chinese culture' is deeply rooted in Taiwanese people's hearts and shouldn't be blamed on 'Republic of China aesthetics' after the 228 incident.

The 'Peace' of 228 Peace Memorial Day is as Ridiculous as the Japanese Praying for Peace

This article strongly criticizes the 'February 28 Incident' in Taiwan and the 'Peace Memorial Day' and 'Peace Memorial Monument' established for it. We believe the 228 incident was an 'internal rebellion,' and it's a 'fake Peace Memorial Day' with 'CCP spies' and 'Japanese Kōmin' causing trouble behind the scenes. We point out the absurdity of its definition of peace and draw an analogy with Japan's post-war attitude towards war.