Unrecognized
• 2008 FriUTC2009-02-20T18:02:22+00:00. 15 • Leave a CommentPosted in Journalism, News, Discovery
Tags: 1895 Treaty of Shimonoseki, 228, aboriginal land rights, Admiral Shi Lang, After the arrival of Zheng Cheng-Gong, Although there were some proclamations made in 1945, belligerent occupation, Chapter II, Cheng Yi, Chiang Kai-Shek, China, China's Glory, Chinese and Taiwanese relations, Chinese Civil War, Chinese Nationalist Party, Chinese Revolution, Chinese Revolution of 1949, civil-taiwan.org, CKS, Conclusion, Democratic Progressive Party, dictatorship, DPP, For native Taiwanese persons to be bona fide ROC citizens, Formosa, Fujian, General MacArthur, General Order No. 1, Han Chinese, hyperinflation, Independent Sovereign State, Interesting Fact, Japan, Japan-China, Japan-China peace treaty, Japan-PRC Joint Communique, Japan-Taiwan relations, Japanese Courts, Japanese surrender, Kingdom of Tung-Ning, KMT, Koxinga, Lee Teng-Hui, Legislative Yuan, Ma Ying-Jeou, Ming Dynasty, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, missiles, MOFA, Nanjing Constitution, Occupation and Citizenship, One China Policy, Paracel Islands, party-state, Penghu, People's Republic of China, permanent population, Pescadores, province of China, Qing Dynasty, Question of Legal Basis, Reference tot he pronouncements of the US government, Republic of China, Republic of Formosa, return to China, ROC Constitution, ROC Constitution does not clearly define its own teritory, ROC Nationality Law, ROC was not the recipient of this sovereignty, San Francisco Conference, San Francisco Peace Treaty, San Francisco Treaty, SFPT, Shigemitsu, Significance of the 228 Revolution of 1947, Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty, Spratly, Sun Yat-Sen, Taihoku, Taiwan, Taiwan Aboriginal Rights, Taiwan Republic flag, Taiwan Retrocession Day, Taiwan Solidarity Union, Taiwan Think Tank, Tanaka Kakuei, temporary allegiance, Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion, territory, The Betrayal of the Kingdom, The military government of the principal occupying power, the PRC never controlled Taiwan or any of the current ROC territory commonly referred to as Taiwan, the principal occupying power, The Republic of China Constitution currently in use, The ROC Constitution currently in use, The United States is the conqueror, The US is the conqueror, Thinking Japanese, Three Kingdoms, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Treaty of Peace, Treaty of Taipei, TSU, U.N., United Nations, United States Military Government, US government, USMG, Where We Are, White Terror, With no clear legal basis, Yauo Fukuda, Yoshida Shigeru, Zheng Cheng-Gong, Zheng Jian, Zhou Enlai
“The Whites of Their Eyes”
• 2008 SunUTC2009-02-08T17:15:59+00:00. 15 • Leave a CommentPosted in Journalism, News, Discovery
Tags: 228, 228 Incident, 908, 908 Taiwan Republic Campaign, a reign of terror, Andrew Nien-Dzu Yang, Approval ratings between CKS and Chen Shui-Bian, Beijing, Blood Sweat and Tears, Chen Shui-Bian, Chiag Ching-Kuo, Chiang Chung-Cheng, Chiang Kai-Shek, Chiang Kai-Shek Culture Park at Tashi, Chiang Kai-Shek Memorial Hall, Chiang Kai-Shek's diary, Chiang Kai-Shek's tomb, China, Chinese Civil War, Chinese Communist Party, Cihhu, Cihu, CKS Memorial Hall, CKS tomb, CKS' diary, Costa Rica, Cultural Heritage Protection Law, democracy, Democratic Progressive Party, DPP, Executive Yuan, February 1947, February 28 1947, Formosa, fourth tier, Hau Lung-Bin, honour gards, human rights, imposition of martial law, Ketagalan Institute, KMT, Kuomintang, Lee Jye, Lee Teng-Hui, Lee Yong-Ping, Legislative Yuan, Liberty Square, Lin Chia-Lung, Lin Shu-Fen, Ma Ying-Jeou, martial law, Ministry of Education, Ministry of National Defense, national defense, People's Republic of China, Republic of China, ROC, Secretary-General, Sun Teh-Hsin, Sun Yat-Sen, Taipei mayor, TAIPEI TIMES, Taiwan, Taiwan National Democracy Memorial Hall, Talungtung, Taoyuan International Airport, Tashi, Ten Minutes Today, the Confucius Temple, the Tibetan people after 1949, third tier, Two Hours in the Time of Two Years, U.N., What Brought the Fear, Why the Taiwanese reject reunification
A Single Heartbeat
• 2008 SatUTC2009-01-31T15:22:04+00:00. 15 • Leave a CommentPosted in Journalism, News, Discovery
Tags: Taiwan, DPP, U.S., Executive Yuan, Taiwan independence, KMT, Chen Shui-Bian, Sun Yat-Sen, CCP, United States, Barack Obama, Democratic Progressive Party, Taiwan's Cross, Ma Ying-Jeou, Wu Shu-Jen, Frank Hsieh, U.N., United Nations, Chen Chih-Chung, Huang Jui-Ching, Taipei District Court, Chiang Kai-Shek, ROC, PRC, A Single Heartbeat, The Fall of the Plan for Democracy, Chinese Nationalist Party, Liu Chao-Shiuan, the Organic Act of the CKS Memorial Hall, the Organic Regulations of the National Taiwan Democracy Hall, CKS Memorial Hall, National Taiwan Democracy Hall, Ministry of Education, Lu Mu-Lin, Cheng Jei-Cheng, China Times, Yun-Lin County, Lee Ying-Yuan, Wang Yu-Chi, Controversial Innocence At Play, Office of the President, efficiency of implementation of government policies, public infrastructure projects, bureaucratic paralysis, Taiwan's legal system, Tainted Red, money-laundering charges, Beyond Political Censorship His Words, favouritism, secret diplomacy, checkbook diplomacy, Yu Shyi-Kun, a divided DPP, a united KMT, authoritarian dictatorship, human rights and democracy, olive branch, four noes, 23 million Taiwanese, democratic movement's integration of grassroots political forces, Chinese Communist Party
The “Level” of Freedom
• 2008 WedUTC2009-01-14T12:59:25+00:00. 15 • 5 CommentsPosted in Journalism, News, Discovery
Tags: Ma Yin Jeou, DPP, China, Taiwan independence, democracy, political freedom, civil liberty, Freedom House, Jennifer Windsor, Democratic Progressive Part, KMT, Kuo Ming Tang, Chen Shui-Bian, Su Tseng-Chang, Sun Yat-Sen, CCP, Chinese Culture University, Yu Hsiao-Yun, ISA, 49th Annual Convention, BRIDGING MULTIPLE DIVIDES, United States, US AID, Marxism, Communism, Desmond TuTu, Taiwan foundation for Democracy, Christopher Walker, John Hopkins University, Bridget Welsh, freedom of assembly, judiciary independence, Chinese envoy, Assembly and Parade Law, Sarah Cook, Level of Freedom, Taiwan Freedom, freedom in Taiwan
