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Friday, October 08, 2010

Chinese Basketball Team Panics, Flees, at sight of ROC flags

Liu Xiabo wins the Nobel. Ma made the usual good-for-all-Chinese-people speech. Aimed at local domestic consumption? Interesting how he positioned himself.

But that's for tomorrow. Meanwhile, enjoy this heartwarming story....
A visiting Chinese university basketball team withdrew Friday from a tournament being playing in Taoyuan County after seeing hundreds of Taiwanese national flags displayed outside the arena.

After arriving Friday afternoon at Kainan University Arena, where the 2010 Asian University Basketball Championship was being held, the bus carrying the Tianjin Polytechnic University basketball team turned around and left.

The team missed its game against a Mongolian All-Star team, and was officially credited with a 20-0 loss.

Though nobody from the Chinese delegation commented on its pull-out, the team may have been angered by the hundreds of Taiwan national flags displayed in and around the parking lot and along the road leading to the arena that greeted their bus.

They were put there by a "national flag rally" organized by two local university students in protest of a move the night before by an official from the tournament's organizer, the Chinese Taipei University Sports Federation (CTUSF) , to stop a fan from displaying the country's national flag in the stands.

The students were incensed by reports that the CTUSF official, Lee Hung-chi, clamped down on the fan at China's insistence, though subsequent reports indicated Lee acted of his own volition.

"This is a silent protest to the Chinese team that made the flag issue a big deal, " said one of the two student protest organizers identified only by his surname Hsieh.

The other organizer, surnamed Hsu, said the protest was "non-political" and was held to express "freedom of speech."

Lee described the Chinese team's withdrawal as "silly, " but he himself was criticized by the Sports Affairs Council (SAC), Taiwan's top sports administrator, for going after the fan.
Students. Silent protest. "Non-political." Awesome. Strawberries? Don't underestimate these kids....
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9 comments:

  1. So silly. I mean, it is 10-10, there are flags on bridges, highways, overpasses, etc. Coming from the airport, why didn't they turn around when they saw all the flags along the road?

    ReplyDelete
  2. .
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    .
    AWESOME! Just awesome!!!

    Well done, students. Now you're thinking! I hope this story has some legs -- it may inspire more to do similar "outrageous" things that flies in the face of KMT / Chinese authoritarianism.
    .
    .
    .

    ReplyDelete
  3. Very cool.

    Their loss...literally.

    ReplyDelete
  4. uh, this just in: may i share?

    ''The Taisiderata''

    - purportedly a message found in a PET bottle wafting down the elevator shaft of Taipei 101 and currently going viral via email chat lists worldwide. Pass it around if you dare. -



    written by ''userid: expatnonymous''



    Go placidly amid the night markets and the cram schools and remember

    what peace there may be in pearl milk tea.



    As far as possible, be on

    good terms with your neighbors, even if they threaten to take you to

    court for cussing them out in the lobby that day.



    Surround yourself

    with that which is pleasant on Isla Formosa, and don't let the dengue

    fever mosquitoes bite you.



    Always plan on good sunny weather, but don't

    forget to carry a fold-up umbrella in your backpack, just in case.



    Be

    pure and clean 24/7, take a shower in the morning or night, whichever

    time frame pleases you, and drink only that which comes in a bottle.

    In other words: don't drink the tap water!




    Taste of the cho dofu, the frog legs and the slimy snails, and learn

    to use your chopsticks with aplomb.



    Watch your New Taiwan Dollars

    appreciate or fall flat on their faces, and think of the all the money

    you have earned (and hopefully, saved) during your time here. When

    it's time to return home, you will know it. Until then, enjoy, enjoy,

    enjoy!




    Beef noodles? Go for it? Oyster omletters? Do it. The Mazu Pilgrimmage

    from Taichung to Hsinkang? Go on it.




    As for Kenting, make a beeline for that southern mecca whenever you

    can, because as you know, you only live once and Taiwan is your chance

    of a lifetime. Sure, there's Lukang and Guifen and Green Island and Peitou's famous hot springs

    (with ''special services'' provided), but you've got to make your own

    itinerary for the island and then stick to it.



    MORE

    ReplyDelete
  5. cont'd


    As for Kenting, make a beeline for that southern mecca whenever you

    can, because as you know, you only live once and Taiwan is your chance

    of a lifetime. Sure, there's Lukang and Guifen and Green Island and Peitou's famous hot springs

    (with ''special services'' provided), but you've got to make your own

    itinerary for the island and then stick to it.



    Are you counting the days till you go home? Then you're in the wrong place.




    Take the ferry from Keeling, fly out to Orchid Island or a book a seat

    on the narrow-guage train to Alishan (when it re-opens!) and never say

    there's nothing

    to write home about on this never-out-of-surprises subtropical island.



    Betel nut beauties got you excited? Snap some photos surreptitiously with your

    cellphone camera, but watch

    out for gangster interference in case you get too close. You've been warned.




    Find work as a buxiban teacher, an expat businessman or a Ph.D.

    professor, and don't forget to file your income taxes on the

    appointed day.




    Even if you are a dunce, do your best to learn some Chinese while

    you're here, and it wouldn't hurt to pick up some Hakka and Hoklo, too.



    As for the Aborigines who were here first, get to know them as the wonderful people they are

    and treat them as your brothers and sisters. They are the real

    Formosans, from 10,000 years ago and more.

    And they have stories to tell, stories to tell. Beheadings? Believe it.




    As for the Japanese Colonial Period (1895 to 1945), for better or

    worse, they came, they went, they conquered. Can you say "chotto

    matte"? Or "kukei" or massaji"?



    Just don't ask the ''comfort women'' what they know. It wasn't all fun and games

    in those days.




    Far away, but too close, there are the Chicoms, as you know, and they

    got 1200 missiles aimed right at Taipei and Taichung. Ignore the

    bastards, if you can, for surely they are on the wrong side of history and someday they will

    see their empire collapse.



    Remember this always, all ye who toil here:

    Taiwan is a free, democratic, soverign nation, and that's why the

    politicians can stage knock-em-down fights on TV and get away with it.




    This is Taiwan. You lived it. [Congratulations?]



    ----------------------------------------------




    Purportedly a message found in a PET bottle wafting down the elevator shaft
    of Taipei 101



    COPYRIGHT (c) 2008 - by ''expatnonymous'' [now safely back in San Diego from when he came]



    Says his name is Steve Garvey..... anybody know him?

    ReplyDelete
  6. So basically to stop a Chinese invasion, all we need are a fence of ROC flags? ;-)

    ReplyDelete
  7. That poem wasn't worth the keystrokes.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Steve Garvey, former baseball player (Los Angeles Dodgers/San Diego Padres) and bass player for the Buzzcocks, now a poet in Taiwan.

    ReplyDelete

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