But interviews with Mr Chang and others among the 300,000 Taiwanese professionals who have come to live in China as a result of thawing relations, suggest the gap between the two sides is substantial, going beyond China's one-party rule and Taiwan's democracy.
``Taiwanese people think differently from people on the mainland,'' Mr Chang says. ``In China it's been a real struggle to survive. So people are a lot tougher here. If you put a Taiwanese child down in China, he'll be eaten up alive.''
Opinion polls in Taiwan say only about 10% of its 23 million people want immediate reunification with the mainland. About 15% support formal independence, while the remainder favour maintaining the island's self-governing status quo.
Talks with Taiwanese here suggest that 56 years of separation have taken a toll on whatever once existed of a common identity.
Hey, no kidding. Nobody here except a few unreconstructed mainlanders supports annexing the island to China.
[Taiwan] [China]
Do those unreconstuted mainlanders support annexing Taiwan to China or annexing China to the ROC-on-Taiwan? Do they even know any more? I never met any of them, but I've met a handful of radical pro-TIers. Maybe it's just where I hang out.
ReplyDeleteIt must be where you hang out. I've met lots of unreconstructed mainlanders who one way or another want to see Taiwan become part of China.
ReplyDelete