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‘Only Taiwan’ holds any reins on China

beijingwalker

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‘Only Taiwan’ holds any reins on China
Confucianist leaders use soft power
By Shaun Waterman
The Washington Times

Wednesday, December 26, 2012
taiwan_china_trade_pa_s640x434.jpg


A small island in the shadow of a giant neighbor that claims its territory, Taiwan nonetheless holds a key to shaping China’s meteoric rise, Taiwanese officials say.

Taiwan is “the only force on Earth that may have an impact on the future political development of China,” said Steven S.F. Chen, formerly the island’s envoy to the United States and now an adviser to its president. “Not, I’m afraid to say, the United States, not Japan, not any another country. Only Taiwan.”

Mr. Chen and others argue that Taiwan can play such a role through the strategic use of soft power – the cultural leverage that comes with a shared history, language and geography.

Taiwan, which broke away from the mainland in 1949 after the Communist Party took power in Beijing, is a modern Western-style democracy, with a bicameral legislature and a directly elected president, like the United States.

But its culture and people are steeped in the 2-millennia-old traditions of Confucianism – the guiding philosophy of China’s governing classes through centuries of imperial rule.

The principles of Confucianism “are the center of Taiwan’s education system from the third grade,” said Lung Yingtai, Taiwan’s minister of culture and a respected author and intellectual.

“The Germans quote Goethe a lot. We quote Confucius even more,” Ms. Lung said. “You breathe it in every day. There is no place in the world as Confucian as Taiwan.”

Although the philosophy was developed as a guide for the administrators of China’s vast empire, Ms. Lung said, Confucianism and liberal democracy are compatible.

“They merge perfectly,” though with imperfect results, she said in a speech during a visit to Washington in September.

According to Confucius, every official from the lowliest clerk to the emperor should be “kind, upright, courteous, temperate and magnanimous,” Ms. Lung said.

Building a democracy in Taiwan is “an ongoing process with trial and error,” she said.

Because it has continued to foster Confucian principles, Taiwan is a center of gravity for the Chinese diaspora, especially on the cultural level, where Taipei’s vigorous book and movie industries often publish works banned on the mainland.

“It is no accident that [the Chinese minority in] Malaysia produces large numbers of the best Chinese-language novelists and poets who find Taiwan their incubator,” Ms. Lung said. “It is no accident that Taiwanese filmmakers, songwriters and composers enjoy a very prominent position in the Chinese-speaking world.”

She said the overrepresentation of artists from the relatively small Taiwanese and diaspora populations is a result of their freedoms.

“A democratic system with guaranteed freedom of expression has given rise to a creative and culturally vibrant society in Taiwan,” she said.

Increasing numbers of visitors from the mainland cross the strait to visit Taiwan every year, said Frank Yee Wang of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States, the breakaway island’s de facto embassy in Washington.

“What they are always amazed by are the political talk shows,” he said of visitors from the mainland.

Although China has a vigorous and competitive tabloid press, there is little coverage of politics and none at all of the open arguments that are the meat and drink of such political talk shows, Mr. Wang said.

Such personal and cultural exchanges, and growing trade between the two uneasy neighbors, are underpinned by the Economic and Cultural Framework Agreement signed by Beijing and Taipei two years ago, which provides for gradually reducing tariffs and other bilateral trade barriers.

The Economic and Cultural Framework Agreement “is one of the keys to unlock the potential of soft power,” Ms. Lung told The Washington Times after her speech in Washington, noting that there is long way to go in terms of free trade in cultural materials such as movies and books.
 
taiwanese society and political system can be a pretty good model for mainland's transition.
however I wont go as far as Ma's proclamation
 
It's either mainland China merges Taiwan or Taiwan merges mainland China,either way is ok with me.
 
Singapore is the model,Taiwan is not!

Taiwanese talk shows are complete boll0cks!

Have been to Taiwan twice,1st time in early 2000,2nd time in 2010.

Have to say that I don't even like Taiwanese snacks which are supposedly one of the major attractions for visitors from the Mainland。
 
taiwanese society and political system can be a pretty good model for mainland's transition.
however I wont go as far as Ma's proclamation

Taiwan is not, Taiwan is the typical negative example for mainland how DEMOCRACY abuse national resources and waste voters' energy on politician scandals.
Whole of state continue to be entertainment,FAIL ! Mainland of China will be the SUPERPOWER in the future, Taiwan not.

2010 trival to Taipei, more like walking in my hometown, beyond GuangZhou, ShenZhen, HangZhou, ShangHai, NanJing, as normal as NanChang city. 15 years ago Taiwan richer than Mainland, but now behind many cities here.
 
From Jurisprudence, Republic of China(Taiwan)contains:
1712013i3qaqzwy7a3kq63.jpg
 
Good to see Taiwan leader stay with China. It does not matter which China it is.

China is China. :tup: The rest is politics.

Interesting thing about Ma Ying-jeou: His ancestors came from Hunan in the mainland, he was born here in Hong Kong, and now he is the President of Taiwan.
 
Regarding to the article above......

In term of cultural, Taiwan is a Confucian society......well, may be half of it. But democracy is not compatible with Confucianism. Democracy is based on populism, not meritocracy.

In term of government, mainland China is far more compatible to Confucianism. As somehow we can see mainland China government structure and the way it run, resemble the past imperial era.

But too bad, mainland China is not a Confucianism society anymore. Confucianism is the main enemy of Mao's Communism. Mainland Chinese had a very low moral and culture, Confucius feel shame and disappoint seeing the Chinese today. Mao's Red Guards destroyed everything.
 
Regarding to the article above......

In term of cultural, Taiwan is a Confucian society......well, may be half of it. But democracy is not compatible with Confucianism. Democracy is based on populism, not meritocracy.

In term of government, mainland China is far more compatible to Confucianism. As somehow we can see mainland China government structure and the way it run, resemble the past imperial era.

But too bad, mainland China is not a Confucianism society anymore. Confucianism is the main enemy of Mao's Communism. Mainland Chinese had a very low moral and culture, Confucius feel shame and disappoint seeing the Chinese today. Mao's Red Guards destroyed everything.

dih hoh boh? huy sin dih , mieh di tsu dao O-pei kong wei!!! gan siah.

LOLOL...
 
Regarding to the article above......

In term of cultural, Taiwan is a Confucian society......well, may be half of it. But democracy is not compatible with Confucianism. Democracy is based on populism, not meritocracy.

In term of government, mainland China is far more compatible to Confucianism. As somehow we can see mainland China government structure and the way it run, resemble the past imperial era.

But too bad, mainland China is not a Confucianism society anymore. Confucianism is the main enemy of Mao's Communism. Mainland Chinese had a very low moral and culture, Confucius feel shame and disappoint seeing the Chinese today. Mao's Red Guards destroyed everything.


doesn't Confucianism support bureaucracy?
 

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