With many soft words from Western “friends” for them, which will be the East, but without the most petty official diplomatic act, and with many agile words from the “enemy” left to the West, but without the simplest act of rejection, discover the tandema Lai Ching-te/Hsiao Bi-khim of Taiwan’s supreme power.
The government has been elected after winning the presidential election on 13 January, but its DPP party has lost Legislator Yuan. This situation heralds a mandate that is not going to be very peaceful inside the house and signs are already emerging.
But the new command has a special attraction, which is difficult to perceive at a distance, but which does not understand it either, inherited from the mandate of the newly completed Mrs. Tsai Ing-wen (and Lai himself). We could call the knot of the bronze story. The present Taiwan has many swings with history, and one of them is sandstone.
It has become an urgent obligation for those responsible for the Taiwan PPD to put an immediate end to the states and others of Chiange
“Islands that are democratically emancipated governed”, “which have never been ruled by the Communist Party of China”, and which, by the way, seem to be equated with any other independent country in the world, has in its territory dozens of statues, plates and legends. Lost the civil war, in 1949 he took refuge in Taiwan under the shadow of the United States of America, which ruled during harsh dictatorships until his death in 1975, since the Generalissimo was not just anyone in terms of self-care. Considering that his successor, his son Chiang Ching-kuo, also sent to die in 1988, it is easier to understand the abundance and duration of the dictator’s images throughout the island.
Interrelating Chiang and democracy in the same sentence without negative clauses, or proposing that China and Taiwan would be different political entities, obviously not having the most basic knowledge of their political ideas. And so, surely, with your own impulses or your suggestions coming from the United States, it has become an urgent obligation for those responsible for the Taiwan PPD to end the states of Chiang and the rest as soon as possible.
However, the elimination of the “written” history in bronze, as usual, has encountered difficulties. One, what one would expect, is opposition from your party, Kuomintang. The other, which is perhaps more unexpected and dangerous: to deny the resignation of the army to the memory of what would be its main reference.
If we remember that one of the components of Beijing’s strategy on Taiwan is resignation within the island’s humble army, in order to facilitate reconciliation peacefully, it is easy to understand how twisted a bronze story can be.