Although they agreed that the pre-approval system has its defects and should be replaced with a pre-notice system, many KMT lawmakers were still worried the change could bring social chaos.With "social opinions" like this, you can imagine the results, reported by the Wild Strawberries in their press release of Nov 18:
“The pre-approval system could be changed to the pre-notice system, but there should still be some kind of application and check process,” KMT Legislator Wu Ching-chih (吳清池) told the public hearing. “For the sake of social stability, adequate restrictions should still be implemented, otherwise [demonstrations] may lead to anarchic situations. It’s very dangerous.”
The chairwoman of the Taipei International Cultural Exchange Association for Professional Women, Ling Yu-ying (凌瑜英), expressed strong opposition to amending the Assembly and Parade Law.
The Executive Yuan has raised the issue of revisions to the Assembly and Parade Law recently. However, the new version adopts a “compulsory notification system” whose content preserves restrictions including “assembling without notification is illegal”, “establishing forbidden areas”, “police have the right to alter the time, place, and form of the parade”, “the police can command dissolution of the parade without explicit standards”, and “the criminal and administrative sanctions relating to assembly”. Namely, the revision contains no practical improvements, only the change of name from “permission” to “notification”.I am reminded of the period right after martial law was lifted, when the KMT passed a new national security law that was martial law in all but name. Hopefully the DPP and concerned KMT lawmakers can move to make meaningful revisions to the law.
Meanwhile the Strawberries, numbers dwindling, are planning to build a "strawberry tower." I stopped by the NCKU protests on Monday and was told that parents are putting lots of pressure on the students in the university not to participate. "Concerned parents" are also bombarding the counseling center with demands that the counselors do something about the "mentally ill "students demonstrating. I do know a few students whose parents encouraged them to get out and do something. Public support has been overwhelming, with many stopping by to leave donations of food and equipment. The students have become a cause of "chaos" and like any cause of distortion in the social order, the pressure gradient to conform becomes steeper as time passes. One of the many bizarre bits of fallout from the definition of order in Chinese society is that peaceful student demonstrators are a cause of "social disorder", but mad drivers and construction vehicles blocking streets are of no concern...
[Taiwan]
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It is so depressing to hear the parents calling these brave and principled students "mentally ill".
So depressing.
Especially at a time when creativity and "being different" are one of the few things that will get them noticed internationally.
And what's more angering is that of these parents voted the KMT back into power, too.
So depressing.
Please keep up the fight, students! You seem to be the few rational individuals out there in Taiwanese society.
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By the way, that's classic "crazy-making" what the older generation are doing.
First they call them the "strawberry" generation (not tough). And then they when they do stand up valiantly -- they call them mentally ill.
It disgusts me.
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Indeed, I found myself at odds with my parents etc...although a lot of times I am able to convince them about my point of view after long discussions...so it's not hopeless.
But name calling like "Strawberry", "mentally ill" etc are just wrong I think. It's sort of like racism. Or shall we say generationism. Those people's opinion do worth our considerations in my opinion. Man...they are the greedy ones that wear tight jeans and dance like John Travolta or Michael Jackson...the so called "Generation X"? haha...tell me who is more like strawberries or mentally ill?
I think there is a real problem with teachers, parents and university staff often discouraging students from being socially activists at all. This is probably why there is such weak representation of political party groups, political publications, political statements by student councils and social activism on campuses.
But the parents and teachers aren't going to change their attitude -- residual martial law thinking and apathy are the order of the day for them. The students need to make this happen themselves, and hopefully more parents and teachers can be brought around.
By the way Michael, do you have the name of the security law that was passed after martial law? Is it still around in some form?
(Just marking myself to get follow ups on this thread)
Has anyone else noticed the absence of Wu'er Kaixi from the Strawberry's events? Isn't he usually the first one on the scene at anti-government protests, attempting to get back in the limelight?
Maybe he's just too lazy to drag himself off his barstool these days. Or just maybe he only does anti-DPP gigs now?
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