Pages

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Pic of the Day: ....and kiss your ass good bye


A map for nuclear evacuation from southern Pingtung and Kenting, in Hengchun, Pingtung.

_______________________  
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! Delenda est, baby.

1 comment:

  1. Dear Bleditor,

    Several non-Taiwanese media outlets insert weekly English-language
    supplements in some newspapers published
    in Taiwan. One of them in a Chinese-langauge newspaper, the United
    Daily News, which every Tuesday inserts
    a 12-page weekly edition of a selection of English-language New York
    Times news articles, complete with reporter bylines
    and a front page that tells readers the insert is from the New York
    Times. One English-language newspaper in Taiwan, the China Post,
    publishes an 8 page insert every Friday in its daily edition, called
    "China Reports." However, this insert in the Post does not tell
    readers who is sponsoring or writing the stories in the insert, nor
    are there any bylines at all. The stories are all about China, and
    never
    discuss Taiwan or cross-strait issues.

    But while the New York Times and the United Daily News are upfront
    about their relationship and tell readers so, the China Post hides
    the fact that it is getting the "China Reports" insert directly from
    the China Daily in Beijing, China. And yet the Post does not tell
    readers
    that every story in the insert was written by Chinese reporters
    working for the Chinese government. Nor does the Post tell its readers
    that
    the insert is sponsored by the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing as
    part of its overseas outreach.

    Just as the New York Times should be allowed to print an insert in the
    United Daily News, so too should the China Daily be allowed
    to run an insert in the China Post. In Taiwan, there is freedom of
    speech. However, the China Post, by hiding the name of the
    organization
    and country inserting the "China Reports: in its Friday edition, is
    not following the law. Or is it legal now to publish soft propaganda
    from
    a foreign nation without telling readers who is behind the media operation?

    Sincerely,

    NAME WITHELD
    Taipei, Taiwan

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.