"Ma has been telling Taiwanese that Beijing accepts his claim that Taiwan and China can agree to differ on whether the two sides belong to the same country, but the Chinese delegation's no-show has contradicted that," said Lo, who generally supports the pro-independence opposition. "This will lead people to question the legitimacy of Ma's statements."Such clear identifications of commentators' political allegiances are not always to be found in media presentations on Taiwan. Just consider all the pieces from the 2008 Presidential election that sourced Philip Yang as "a political scientist at NTU" or similar without mentioning where his political allegiances lay: Bloomberg, NYTimes, WaPo, LATimes, Straits Times....
But fellow political scientist George Tsai of Taipei's Chinese Culture University – usually a supporter of the government – said that China had shown goodwill by allowing Ma to preside over the opening ceremony.
...until the NY Times finally noted near the end of the campaign that Yang advised the Ma campaign. Yang later took a position with Ma's National Security Council.
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Daily Links:
- US wins gold at World Games in fastest growing sport in the US. Nope, it ain't el futbol.
- Kerim F has made a big PDF containing every chapter of Tonio Andrade's wonderful history book How Taiwan became Chinese.
- Here's a great post about blogging from a couple of months back that uses me as an example... although I must disgree with the dictum to write short, pithy posts. Glenn Greenwald writes long involved analytical posts, and so do many other popular bloggers. For me the whole point of blogging is to provide an alternative to the lack of context that is the unavoidable problem with pithiness in the media.
- Interactive Dictator Games at the Hall With Two Names.
[Taiwan] Don't miss the comments below! And check out my blog and its sidebars for events, links to previous posts and picture posts, and scores of links to other Taiwan blogs and forums!
7 comments:
Ultimate (frisbee) has been growing in the states for quite some years. I started it in high school, and played in college & after graduation until I started traveling. That's when it became difficult (though I did find a group in Santiago).
Perhaps I should re-start trying to find a group up here, though my skills will be below piss-poor by now.
Thanks, AP. Thanks, Michael.
Without the continuous efforts of yours and many other English bloggers in the past couple of years, journalists of major global media would have still been dreaming.
FYI, WaPo also ran this AP article last week.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/16/AR2009071601036.html
I think it's ridiculous for Taiwan Flavors to compare your blog to BlondeInTaiwan. It's like making a list of rules for "shop" and comparing Sogo department store with Family Mart. Or making a list of ideal animal traits and then comparing turtles with emus! What a pointless exercise.
And so what if the BlondeInTaiwan blog writes mostly about herself (9.) or doesn't do interviews (16.), or anything else on that list? Has it occurred to him that it's not that kind of blog? I really think Taiwan Flavors has a very limited view of what blogging is all about.
Looks like there's a new Taiwan Feed-- taiwanvine.com
Not sure how useful the news sections are, but the blog stuff looks okay.
Debating Chinese Assimilation
http://chineseculture.about.com/b/2009/07/23/debating-chinese-assimilation.htm
hey can i at LEAST be 7-11? their sushi triangles are way better than family mart.
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