Skip to main content

Home/ Memedia/ Group items tagged taiwan

Rss Feed Group items tagged

arden dzx

A Reflection of Power | Newsweek International | Newsweek.com - 0 views

shared by arden dzx on 03 Jul 08 - Cached
  • When you moved into Taiwan's media market, some people saw it as a vote of no confidence against Hong Kong.You're suggesting it was an insurance policy? That was the intention. I couldn't go to the United States and say: "Can you protect me?" Nobody would care. But I knew Beijing was thinking very much about Taiwan, and that they don't want bad press there. So we built the Taiwan business as leverage. If they do anything to us, our Taiwanese readers will know what happened. And Beijing knows that [should they move against us] we will do everything we can to make them pay on Taiwan.
  • Some experts argue that China does not intend to Westernize or liberalize, but only to modernize. Do you think people in China understand what democracy is and want it?Not at this moment. But anyone who would differentiate between Westernization and modernization is just talking rubbish. Take out the western culture and what else is modern? Nothing. The technology is Western, the trendy culture is Western, all this modernization is Westernization. China is prosperous today because it deals and interacts with the West. No, democracy isn't on normal people's radars yet. China will be open to it only when the economic cycle turns down. And when that happens, China will be in chaos. How so? In other countries, when there is a recession, you have churches, temples, charities, NGOs, civic organizations, unions and other institutions reaching out to help each other. They are shock absorbers. In China, you don't have any of this. Organizations that are not governmental are not allowed. In China, you have two pillars: the market and the government. If the market fails, the government will be dragged down because there is nothing in the middle.
  • How so? In other countries, when there is a recession, you have churches, temples, charities, NGOs, civic organizations, unions and other institutions reaching out to help each other. They are shock absorbers. In China, you don't have any of this. Organizations that are not governmental are not allowed. In China, you have two pillars: the market and the government. If the market fails, the government will be dragged down because there is nothing in the middle.
isaac Mao

untitled - 0 views

  • 我们的民主走过了一段颠簸的道路,现在终于有机会迈向成熟的坦途。在过去这一段波折的岁月里,人民对政府的信赖跌到谷底,政治操作扭曲了社会的核心价值,人民失去了经济安全感,台湾的国际支持也受到空前的折损。值得庆幸的是,跟很多年轻的民主国家相比,我们民主成长的阵痛期并不算长,台湾人民却能展现日趋成熟的民主风范,在关键时刻,作出明确的抉择:人民选择政治清廉、经济开放、族群和谐、两岸和平与迎向未来。
  • 英九坚信,两岸问题最终解决的关键不在主权争议,而在生活方式与核心价值。我们真诚关心大陆十三亿同胞的福祉,由衷盼望中国大陆能继续走向自由、民主与均富的大道,为两岸关系的长远和平发展,创造双赢的历史条件。
isaac Mao

Internet Helps Liberate, Create Music in China : NPR Music - 0 views

shared by isaac Mao on 26 Jun 08 - Cached
  • When America was rocking to the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, the airwaves in China were dominated by songs with lyrics from Chairman Mao's Little Red Book.
  •  
    Internet Helps Liberate, Create Music in China By Laura Sydell Listen Now [7 min 48 sec] add to playlist Chinese electronic musician B6 B6, a Shanghai-based electronic musician, explored Western music first on pirated CDs and then at music-sharing sites on the Web. Now he collaborates online with other performers. B6's studio equipment -- a jumble of keyboards, etc. Enlarge B6 works out of a home studio in a Shanghai high-rise. Above, some of his musical arsenal. Discover China's Indie Music Neocha Web site image Neocha.com With Sean Leow, B6 co-founded the music-sharing site Neocha.com, an ad-supported service that lets listeners discover music and pays musicians a share of advertising revenue. * Neocha.com * Neocha's "Next" Player Morning Edition, June 25, 2008 - Second in a three-part series. When America was rocking to the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, the airwaves in China were dominated by songs with lyrics from Chairman Mao's Little Red Book. It's more open today, but the Communist government still bans anything that mentions sex or violence, or that has "low class humor" - which bans an awful lot of American music. So the music most likely to come pouring out of the radio in China is syrupy ballads usually produced in Hong Kong or Taiwan. But Chinese musicians and fans are finding a whole new universe of sound on the Internet. And it's helping to create and nourish a new generation of independent artists in China. From Black-Market Discs to Napster and Beyond One of them is B6, a 27-year-old electronic musician. He lives and works on the first floor of a high-rise on the outskirts of Shanghai. He's part of China's burgeoning electronic-music scene. Growing up, the CDs B6 listened to were mostly sold on the black market. "When I was in high school, I used to listen to rock 'n' roll music," he says. "At that time, it was very difficult to get foreign or Western music." And then, in 1999, the Internet came to China - and B6 and his fr
isaac Mao

ZDNet Taiwan - 新聞 - Web應用 - 封鎖YouTube只會傷害中國形象 - 0 views

  • 這佐證YouTube的影響力無遠弗屆,現在,凡是攔阻人民存取該網站的政府,形同自已烙印上扼殺言論自由的汙名。YouTube讓每個人自由與大眾溝通,已成為許多人心目中的自由言論象徵,凡是禁止該網站的政府,立刻被國際社會視為高壓政權。
  • 中國對使用者自行上傳的內容顯然不陌生。今年元月,中國政府設法推行一項規定,只准國有企業在網路上貼影片,但在民眾紛紛質疑此舉妨礙言論自由後,政府才迅速修改規定。 
  • 中國禁止YouTube的消息獲全球各大報報導,傳遍俄羅斯、土耳其、加拿大、愛爾蘭等國。
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • 在最新的爭議中,中國政府或許對去年緬甸的經驗引以為鑑。當時,顯示軍隊與示威抗議者衝突的影片紛紛傳上YouTube,促使緬甸當局封鎖YouTube,但為時已晚,消息已傳向全世界。禁絕YouTube,反而更升高全球齊聲譴責緬甸鎮壓民眾的聲浪。
isaac Mao

在境外体会中国功夫网 GFW - 0 views

shared by isaac Mao on 27 Oct 08 - Cached
  • The Internet is not the same for everybody. Despite it's reputation as a borderless, global, connected, democratic network, access and content filtering based on national boarders has become the norm. The BBC, for example, filters content for copyright reasons to visitors accessing their website from outside of Great Britain. Much more serious, however, is the heavy political censorship happening in countries like China, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. China, being the most extreme example, strictly censors political content on the web through the blocking of IP addresses and dynamic content filtering. With the support of western technology companies such as Cisco, Yahoo, and Google, The Golden Shield Project (sometimes referred to as the the Great Fire Wall of China) censors the web for China's 1.3 billion inhabitants. The Internet police in China is estimated to contain over 30,000 workers, and is responsible for blocking content such as Tibetan independence, Taiwan independence, police brutality, the Tienanmen Square protests of 1989, freedom of speech, democracy, religion, and some international news.
evawoo

Quake shakes Beijing's grip on media « Peace and Freedom '08 - 0 views

  • The government now faces a tricky predicament: Having loosened its restraints on information flow this time, a return to its old ways at the next sign of difficulty could backfire. “The government should learn a positive lesson: When it allows freer information flow it is better for its image and legitimacy,” Mr. Xiao said. “But this will not always be a case, especially if the next crisis is man-made
  • China’s online censors can be merciless in their deletion of blog postings or forum comments that are deemed “too sensitive,” particularly involving anything to do with the so-called “Three T’s”: Tiananmen, Tibet and Taiwan. Post-earthquake negativity, though, has been tolerated. “Nine billion yuan [$1.3 billion] has been raised but how much will actually get to the disaster zone?” one skeptical commenter asked on a forum on Baidu, China’s leading search engine. Discussions focusing on discrepancies between the amount of donations declared by the Chinese Red Cross and the corresponding numbers issued by the Ministry of Civil Affairs also have met with minimal interference, Mr. Kennedy said. However, the government has not turned a blind eye. More than a dozen people have been arrested for “spreading rumors” online, and political blogger Guo Quan was detained for questioning the risks posed by cracked dams and damaged nuclear facilities.
arden dzx

China 2008: Changes in the Chinese leadership and Beijing's new policieson reform Tibet... - 0 views

  • Dr. Yu started his remarks by underlining how Hu Jintao, only a year after he was made vice-president, made his national debut in 1999 following the Belgrade bombing—at the height of anti-American protests—and urged for calm and reason from the angry mobs when then-President Jiang Zemin was at the height of his power. Hu’s show of grace, which stood in strong contrast to the often crass measures descriptive of Jiang’s leadership, has led some notable China watchers to predict that Hu is a visionary leader. However, Dr. Yu argues that Hu is not visionary, and the hysteria against the Dalai Lama is an example of Hu’s pedantry of the traditional Chinese political psyche.
  •  
    美国海军官校历史学教授余茂春认为太子党比中庸的团派更有胆略,譬如蒋彦永戴晴刘亚洲等人更能发表独立看法,也能在体制内撑大空间,相比因循守旧的胡,他更看好习近平会给中国政坛带来积极变化。他这一观点,随着时日推移,或许会更有市场的。
evawoo

Chinese Dismayed by Tales of Tibet Violence - WSJ.com - 0 views

  • SEARCH
    QUOTES & RESEARCH
    Symbol(s) Name
    MORE FROM TODAY'S JOURNAL
    $ Subscription may be required | Subscribe Now
    PEOPLE WHO READ THIS...
    Andre Li Pan

    马英九胜选是两岸关系的机遇 - 0 views

    • 指望新一届台湾政府独力重修与北京的关系是不现实的。在前一段时间,民进党的一些政治伎俩,例如举行具有象征意义的入联公投(表决是否以台湾名义申请加入联合国),使两岸关系进一步恶化。如今,只有中国大陆做出必要的让步,才能重启两岸政治对话,并维持台海稳定。
    • 对于胡锦涛及中国大陆而言,收获将是巨大的,甚至是具有历史意义的。在中期,两岸可能迎来长达8年的和平、稳定与繁荣期。这段时期建立的善意及互相的经济依赖,应该会加大台湾问题获得最终解决的可能性。简而言之,马英九的胜利,是中国不容错过的一个机遇。
    • 首先,可以开通直接航班,并允许大批大陆观光客组团赴台。
      • Andre Li Pan
         
        海峡两岸的 blogosphere 终于有更多直面交流的机会!
    • ...1 more annotation...
    • 在国际舞台上,中国可以放弃反对台湾以观察员名义加入世界卫生大会(WHA),以此向马英九政府表达善意及灵活性——这将给予台湾宝贵的国际空间,而又不在根本上危及中国大陆对台湾的主权主张。(作为中国的一部分,香港现为WHA的正式成员。)
    isaac Mao

    夢裡不知身是客 - 《重新思考藍綠》色盲的總統 :: PIXNET BLOG :: - 0 views

    • 也許這就是答案吧。謝長廷先生,請你閉上眼睛,想像對著全台灣的人民說話:如果顏色是衝突的來源,讓顏色就在你的眼中消失;如果族群是衝突的來源,讓族群就在你的眼中消失;如果省籍是仇恨的來源,讓省籍在你的眼中消失。請用普世價值陳述你的理念,用藍綠共同的語言描繪你的理想。如果希望人民選你當總統,請先給我們看,你可以有總統的樣子,有總統的格局。因為,如果當選,你是「人民的總統」,而不是「民進黨的總統」。 一個人民的總統會用什麼樣的角度來看綠卡呢?是否以寬容的態度對待綠卡的歷史背景,唯一堅持的是人民利益,唯一重要的是確保總統候選人已經放棄,而不是無限上綱至人格的攻擊?
    1 - 13 of 13
    Showing 20 items per page