I can only laugh at Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Chairman Ma Ying-jeou's (馬英九) comments about teaching our children not to be corrupt.
It was 50 years of KMT rule that taught people how to cheat and be corrupt in the first place. It will be a long time before people manage to get the party's corrupt ways out of their system.
This is maybe why the president's son in-law learned his bad ways from his father, who belonged to the KMT.
On Ma's remarks that the president does not have love for his country: The president has the utmost love and respect for Taiwan, unlike the KMT which has used and abused Taiwan for 50 years and whose members have never considered it their home. As for the alleged corruption of the first family: You are innocent until proven guilty.
Harvard-educated Ma should know better than that. If anyone does not know how to spell the word "shame," it is you, Ma. Shame on you as you are no better than People First Party Chairman James Soong (
Anna Chang
Taipei
Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) caucus whip Fu Kun-chi (傅?萁) has caused havoc with his attempts to overturn the democratic and constitutional order in the legislature. If we look at this devolution from the context of a transition to democracy from authoritarianism in a culturally Chinese sense — that of zhonghua (中華) — then we are playing witness to a servile spirit from a millennia-old form of totalitarianism that is intent on damaging the nation’s hard-won democracy. This servile spirit is ingrained in Chinese culture. About a century ago, Chinese satirist and author Lu Xun (魯迅) saw through the servile nature of
In their New York Times bestseller How Democracies Die, Harvard political scientists Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt said that democracies today “may die at the hands not of generals but of elected leaders. Many government efforts to subvert democracy are ‘legal,’ in the sense that they are approved by the legislature or accepted by the courts. They may even be portrayed as efforts to improve democracy — making the judiciary more efficient, combating corruption, or cleaning up the electoral process.” Moreover, the two authors observe that those who denounce such legal threats to democracy are often “dismissed as exaggerating or
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