#political commentary

共 11 篇文章

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DPP's Claim About Renouncing Reparations in the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty: Misunderstanding the Green Government's Inability to Advocate for Comfort Women

This article harshly criticizes statements made by DPP Taipei Councilor Wang Shih-chien on a political talk show, refuting his claim that 'Chiang Kai-shek renounced demands for reparations from Japan in the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty, preventing the government from seeking compensation for Taiwanese comfort women.' The author argues this is an 'erroneous misunderstanding,' rebutting from two angles: first, Japan unilaterally breached the treaty; second, the treaty content didn't actually renounce comfort women compensation rights.

My View on Taiwan's Proposed Time Zone Change to Align with Japan and Korea (GMT+9)

This brief, forthright article offers extreme and negative commentary on the intelligence of 'Taiwan independence' advocates and 'Japanese emperor loyalists' regarding the proposed change of Taiwan's time zone to GMT+9.

A Question for Ko Wen-je: What If Smoke Bombs Were Grenades?

This article criticizes Taipei Mayor Ko Wen-je for his handling of the smoke bomb incident during the Universiade opening ceremony. The author questions Ko's public relations strategy and his labeling of protesters as 'bastards,' arguing that it distracts from the failure of security measures.

Just 31 Characters: Instantly Understand the Republic of China's Historical Fiscal Situation

This article uses just 31 characters—a simple bank account analogy—to summarize the financial impact of each ROC president: Chiang Kai-shek opened the account, Chiang Ching-kuo made deposits, Lee Teng-hui made withdrawals, Chen Shui-bian made thefts, Ma Ying-jeou made supplementary deposits, and Tsai Ing-wen closed the account. Through this extremely concise method, the article expresses commentary on the fiscal situations across different periods.

Debunking the PTT Rumor: 'The Great Thief Who Stole Taiwan's Agricultural Technology'

This article fact-checks and refutes a widely-circulated PTT post titled 'The Great Thief Who Stole Taiwan's Agricultural Technology,' focusing specifically on orchids, bananas, and grouper aquaculture. It clarifies the historical truth about former Agriculture Minister Sun Ming-hsien and the causes of Taiwan's agricultural technology transfer, exposing the original post's bias and confusion.

Through Ko Wen-je and Tai Chi's Special Relationship, I See Ma Ying-jeou's Virtue

Starting from Ko Wen-je's dispute with Tai Chi and Councilor Hsu Hung-ting's remarks, this article criticizes the political culture of using vague language like 'special romantic relationship' for personal attacks and sophistry, seeing it as reflecting speakers' inferior character. The author contrasts Ma Ying-jeou's response to Feng Guang-yuan's vulgar derision regarding his relationship with Kim Bou-kong, and comments on the court's absurd verdict. Finally, the author praises Ma Ying-jeou for maintaining an unmoved stance during these disputes, considering it the honorable bearing a president should display.

Reflections on Tsai Ing-wen After Reading 'How Can Hung Hsiu-chu Win?' (Agricultural Policy)

The author comments on Tsai Ing-wen's agricultural policy speech in Chiayi, arguing that while the content is eloquently written with emotional appeal, it amounts to empty 'nonsense' in substance, and summarizes five policy points. The article criticizes these points, including enhancing techniques, reducing international dependence, solving demographic decline, promoting production traceback records, and switching to economic crops, contending they lack practical execution details and overlook existing grassroots efforts. The author particularly notes Su Jia-chuan's presence, sarcastically commenting on Tsai's claim about 'returning farmland to farming'.

This Is Politics: Hung Hsiu-chu vs. Tsai Ing-wen—The Media Vanguard War Has Already Begun

This article examines the divergent media strategies of the pro-Blue and pro-Green camps following Hung Hsiu-chu's clear victory in the KMT presidential primary polls. While both candidates themselves may not be directly clashing, the media war from their surrounding camps has fully erupted. Pro-Blue media focuses on positive coverage of Hung's career and fresh image, while pro-Green media uses netizen rhetoric and specific interest groups to subtly tarnish her image, reflecting the author's concern about malicious competition in this election.

If Wang Jin-ping Runs for President, the KMT Will Perish!

This article comments on Wang Jin-ping's consideration of running for president and its effects on the KMT, citing an article from United Daily News questioning Wang's parliamentary style and party loyalty during his tenure as Legislative Yuan President. The author believes Ma Ying-jeou's harsh distancing might be protecting the KMT from total collapse, and explores Wang's subtle role between the blue and green camps. The author expresses confusion and concern about Hung Hsiu-chu versus Tsai Ing-wen comparison and Wang Jin-ping's sudden emergence, believing this election may determine the KMT's final fate in Taiwan, sarcastically noting voters choosing sensation over truth.

Blue-Green Bitter Conflict is a Lie - The Truth of Peoples Having Their Minds Controlled Through Cognitive Warfare

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.

♟️ Understanding Ma Ying-jeou's Political Crisis Through One Chess Game (Zhenma Chess Position Analysis)

This article uses a famous Chinese chess endgame puzzle called 'Zhenma Chess Position' to metaphorically interpret and analyze President Ma Ying-jeou's political crisis and complex situation at that time (2014). The author assigns political roles and positions to the red and black pieces on the board, analyzing the stalemate points and potential breakthrough keys. The red 'pawn' has crossed the river boundary, the red 'general' is trapped in the rear, the black 'king' and 'horse' are surrounded, and hope for victory lies with a peripheral 'bishop' waiting for opportunity—emphasizing how in what appears to be a passive situation, key peripheral pieces can determine victory.