Op-ed by Kolas Yotaka, a Taiwan-based adviser and former senior government official. A former spokesperson for Taiwan’s Presidential Office and, before that, Cabinet spokesperson under Premier (now President) Lai Ching-te, she currently holds an affiliated research position at Keio University’s Global Research Institute in Tokyo.
[…]
[Mainland China’s] ethnic unity law treats Taiwanese people as citizens of the PRC. Article 21 mandates that the Chinese Communist Party work to “strengthen the sense of belonging, identification, and honor of Taiwan compatriots toward the Chinese nation,” to “promote the joint inheritance and promotion of Chinese culture by compatriots on both sides of the strait,” and to deepen the recognition that both sides “belong to Chinese culture” and are both “Chinese people.”
The law includes a reporting mechanism: any individual can be reported and prosecuted. Any Taiwanese person who does not identify as Chinese is, under its terms, committing a crime subject to criminal liability.
[…]
In Taiwan, what was once a matter of personal national identity will become the target of public prosecution. And the vast majority of Taiwanese are guilty of this “thought crime.” According to polling conducted across multiple firms, roughly two-thirds of Taiwan’s population identify primarily as Taiwanese. Fewer than 3 percent primarily see themselves as Chinese. Among younger Taiwanese, those aged 18-34, the gap is even wider: over 80 percent identify as primarily Taiwanese; just one percent as primarily Chinese.
This is not a surprise. Among Taiwan’s 23 million people, roughly 600,000 are indigenous, Polynesian peoples entirely distinct from China’s Han majority in language, culture, society, and belief. More than a million are new residents, originally from Vietnam, Indonesia, Japan, Hong Kong, Macau, and parts of mainland China; they and their descendants constitute what many regard as a new cultural wave in Taiwan. There are those who came to Taiwan with Chiang Kai-shek after 1949, some of whom retain deep feelings for China.
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Taiwan’s largest population group consists of people whose ancestors migrated from coastal southeastern China roughly 400 years ago, who have long since developed distinct cultures, and identities. Their ancestors came from China. That does not mean they still identify as Chinese, any more than Americans whose ancestors came from England, Germany, or the Netherlands still call themselves British, German, or Dutch.
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This diversity is what makes Taiwan distinct from China, and it is the strongest argument for Taiwan’s right to self-determination. It is precisely what blocks the CCP’s [Chinese Communist Party’s] goal of unification, and precisely what the CCP fears most.
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Years of CCP intimidation, combined with the spread of AI and algorithmic amplification, have pushed Taiwanese public opinion toward the extreme ends of the spectrum. The specter of populism hangs over the country […] The CCP is using law to formalize its political objectives, exploiting existing distrust to spread both hatred and Chinese identity narratives from within. Taiwan’s freedom of expression is being used as a weapon against itself.
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This is not hyperbole; it is a serious matter. If Beijing gets it wish, Taiwan will become the next Hong Kong, or Tibet, or Xinjiang. That would not bring stability to the Indo-Pacific, nor would it help a global economy that depends on advanced semiconductors.
[…]
On July 1, Taiwanese will start fighting a new battle. We face this challenge increasingly alone, with our democracy on the line.



Oy fucking vey
I’m sure that’s a comfort to the parents of the tens of thousands of dead children buried in the rubble
🤮
But I wouldn’t expect someone living on the other side of the planet to have a solid grasp of… the nuances of what’s really going on with many of the conflicts in western culture. After all, there’s a whole lot of shit going on in eastern culture that westerners don’t really understand… The things I’ve heard my sister-in-law say sometimes… I know she’s a highly intelligent extremely loving, kind, empathetic, and sympathetic person. But she grew up a product of the Chinese propaganda system, and I have to forgive her a lot of things.
I started teaching in Hong Kong on September 11th, 2001. When the WTC attacks came up. The response was generally, “why should we care, that’s a bad day in a coal mine here.” Or, “we care about the economic fall out.” To some degree that made sense. Especially in the aftermath of disproportionate response.
Yeah
That’s okay, because we have someone to explain it.
A KGB spy and a CIA agent meet up in a bar for a friendly drink
“I have to admit, I’m always so impressed by Soviet propaganda. You really know how to get people worked up,” the CIA agent says.
“Thank you,” the KGB says. “We do our best but truly, it’s nothing compared to American propaganda. Your people believe everything your state media tells them.”
The CIA agent drops his drink in shock and disgust. “Thank you friend, but you must be confused… There’s no propaganda in America.”
lol, I haven’t heard that one in a while.