@Nihonjin1051
An excellent video, thanks for posting. Dr. Tsai is most impressive. Some highlights that seemed salient to me:
- Her discussion of Taiwan's struggle to transition from its status as "factory of the world" and efficiency-driven growth to an innovation-based economy that would encourage employment, distribution of wealth, and enable a strong social safety net was quite interesting, especially because Taiwan's present struggle with this issue is China's future. Taiwan is not the only manufacturing-based economy looking to transition to an innovation-based economy, so it bears watching how Taiwan deals with this issue. It was nice that Dr. Tsai provided examples of how this might be done, including changing the business culture to embrace the virtue of failure and changing the outdated legal structure that has been manufacturing-centric.
- It was interesting to me to hear Dr. Tsai talk about the need for Taiwan to make legislative changes in an attempt to join TPP. I wasn't aware that Taiwan's participation was on the table, or that Taiwan was looking to join.
- It was interesting to hear her talk about deepening security and political ties with the US and Japan, and try to expand relations with ASEAN--although I suppose this is to be expected from the leader of the DPP.
- Her repeated emphasis on how deeply entrenched democracy is in Taiwan, her emphasis on the need to strengthen civil society through NGOs, and her call for greater openness, transparency, and civil participating was fascinating. I know that Taiwan is still a young democracy, but I wondered if there was an underlying message there for China, or if I'm reading too much into this.
- I realize that her comments on Xi should not necessarily be taken at face value given the sensitivity of the subject, but I was still surprised at her optimism that Xi would have a better understanding of Taiwan than previous CCP leaders.
- The paranoia from the Shenzhen News plants over the 1992 Consensus and the One-China policy was amusing. At least they were self-aware enough to treat the situation with good humor.
Listening to this, it's difficult not to conclude that the HK model can never be applied to Taiwan. HK aspires to democracy, but Taiwan has already had it for a generation, and it's well-entrenched.
Furthermore, the Taiwan question is an interesting demonstration of how brittle the CCP is. In making Taiwan, the SCS, the ECS, the HK political system, etc. its red lines, the CCP has boxed itself into an unsustainable corner. If the CCP backs down after publicly staking its reputation on these matters, it will face humiliation and possible collapse. Alternatively, if it finds it necessary to carry out its threats against Taiwan/Japan/the US/ASEAN, it will be plunging a dagger into its own heart, economically (these are among China's most important trading partners). Even if the CCP just maintains the status quo (threaten, but stop short of military recourse), it will simply alienate Taiwan and ASEAN, forcing them further away from the Sinosphere and into the arms of benevolent and distant America.
Dr. Tsai mentioned that Angela Merkel is one of her role models. Why hasn't China learned the lessons of history from Germany, and followed its model? War never accomplished what Germany desired, but Germany's founding of the European Union create the attractive soft power that enabled it to dominate the European continent. Shouldn't China be pursuing its own Asian Union, and use soft power to attract its neighbors into its orbit, instead of trying to force them in through threats?
Human nature will always revolt against force, so it's unclear what China is trying to accomplish. The AIIB and RCEP simply aren't enough. China should be aiming higher, but it's increasingly hard to believe that Xi has the vision necessary to make it happen. Xi's emergence as a strongman instead of a statesman has proven to be one of the greatest disappointments of this decade. We'll have to wait for the next generation of CCP leadership to see if China can once again assume the mantle of cultural superpower that made it the foundational civilization of Asia to begin with.
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On a side note, I probably won't respond in depth on PDF anymore. Nothing personal, but whatever I saw in PDF that caused me to join last year is no longer present, and after taking a break in December and January, it's just gotten worse. If you find another site or forum that's more conducive to critical analysis, I'll be happy to take a look, but at this point, I give up on PDF. The hysteria, racism, lack of self-awareness, and downright trolling from the newest members to the highest site staff is just too much to waste time on.