Archive for Racist Industrial Complex

Taiwan Province on Break

I am proud to say Chen Shui-Bian will get justice and Taiwan has wised up to reality.  This blog will be on hiatus until the day they return to provide me with a gag reel of commentary.  Thank you Taiwanese for making me laugh since 1949.

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Taiwan man kills girlfriend, wishes her parents Happy New Year

Taiwan man kills girlfriend, wishes her parents Happy New Year
Posted on : 2008-02-10 | Author : DPA
News Category : Asia

Taipei – A Taiwanese man killed his girlfriend at her home and wished her parents a Happy New Year before fleeing, press reports said on Sunday. Yuan Hong-tzung, 33, began dating Wang, a 33-year-old divorcee with a son, half a year ago, cable TV channel TVBS said.

Well I am back to talk about all the wacky, crazy and ugly in a small island called Taiwan.  So this week I learned that a Taiwanese man has just killed his girlfriend before giving Lunar New Year wishes to the girlfriend’s parents.  It’s so nice of him to kill someone and then wish the deceased’s parents a happy new year because it is just an incredibly Taiwanese thing to do.

Recently Wang, an accountant, wanted to end her relationship with Yuang, a clerk at a communications products store, but Yuan refused to part ways, TVBS said.

On Saturday afternoon, Yuan went to Wang’s Taipei home to negotiate. Wang refused to talk to him and retired to her room.

Yuan strangled Wang with his hands and then went to the sitting room where Wang’s parents and relatives were celebrating the Chinese New Year.

It looks like there is much more than meets the eye.  I have always heard stories of Taiwanese who refuse to accept reality.  This is most true for those Taiwanese who always act as if Taiwan is the world’s second or third largest economy or believe their so-called army is on par with the Americans, Russians, and Europeans.  This holds even more weight when they often rant about “UN for Taiwan” or “Taiwan independence” while at the same time talking about how their island is too good for the United Nations or promoting greater dependence to the United States for their island’s existence.

It’s really sad that Taiwanese are adverse to living in reality and will become extremely petty, bitter, spiteful and unethical just to maintain their deluded views of their own lives and the world.  Taiwanese are rabidly hostile towards anything remotely associated with China or Chinese despite being proven to be largely of ethnic Chinese extraction.  People like this Wang fellow represent this Taiwanese cultural attitude who are adverse to both reality and to all things Chinese.  It would not surprise me if he decided to kill his girlfriend because he refused to accept the end of their relationship and the fact it happened around the Chinese New Year period.

He sat down and chatted with Wang’s parents and relatives, wished them Happy New Year, and left, the report said.

Wang hailed a taxi to take him to a police station where he turned himself in. When police went to Wang’s home, her parents were shocked to learn that their daughter was not sleeping as they had thought.

“Yuan does not talk much. But today he chatted with us and wished us Happy New Year. When he was leaving, I told him it was cold and he should wear more clothes. There was no indication he had killed my daughter,” Wang’s mother told reporters.

So this guy kills his girlfriend, wishes her parents a happy new year, turns himself in to the cops yet does not have the courage or courtesy to inform the late girl’s parents that he killed her.  Sounds like a typical Taiwanese guy to me.

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Taiwan screws itself out of an Olympic Torch Relay

Olympic torch will bypass Taiwan
The Olympic torch will not pass through Taiwan because negotiators could not resolve differences with the Beijing authorities, officials have confirmed.

The two sides disagreed over the route the torch should take on its way to the Beijing Games in 2008.

Taiwanese officials also objected to Chinese insistence that the use of Taiwan’s flag and national anthem be limited at torch-related events.

China described the outcome as a “vile precedent”.

It is truly sad that Taiwan would have the nerve to turn a simple Olympic torch relay into a political issue just for a handful of votes in their upcoming election.  Taiwan has already celebrated their 15th rejection to the United Nation and now they can celebrate their loss of a key Olympic relay route.  Taiwan has in the past never complained about flying their “Chinese Taipei” flag or  “Flag Song” in any Olympic event except this one.

I was surprised China was kind enough to let them fly their own local flags in their much-anticipated torch relay, but now they will have neither because Taiwan thought it could win brownie points for adding a bad taste to the Olympics just for petty votes.  This is just despicable and proves to the wrong people that Taiwan really does have a provincial mentality.

Beijing views Taiwan as part of its territory. They have, however, been separately governed since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949.

‘Deeply regret’

Beijing has planned a lengthy route for the Olympic torch. It will pass through more than 20 cities and ascend Mount Everest on its way to the Chinese capital.

In the original schedule, the torch was to arrive in Taiwan from Vietnam and then go on to Hong Kong.

But Taiwanese officials had argued that this implied that Taiwan was part of China and had asked for the route to be changed.

Chinese officials had also asked that only songs and flags approved by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) be used at events related to the Olympic torch in Taiwan – ruling out use of the Taiwanese national anthem and national flag.

Taiwan’s Sports Minister Yang Jong-her said the two sides “were not able to reach consensus over the arrangement of the relay after more than one month of discussions”.

“We deeply regret the result,” the minister said.

The Beijing organising committee said Taipei had “violated the Olympic Charter and manipulated the arrangements for the Taiwan leg of the relay for political purposes”.

This created a “vile precedent of an International Olympic Committee member refusing the torch relay within its jurisdiction,” the committee said on its website.

Taiwan getting the torch from Vietnam and then handing it off to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region isn’t so bad when one thinks about it.  Getting the torch from one country and then handing it off to a separate political entity in China is exactly what it is: a hand-off among separate International Olympic Committee entities.  I don’t understand why the Taiwanese always read for things that just aren’t there as they are the ones who created this ruckus with China in the very first place.

I am sure the “Democratic Progressive Party” will score big in their island’s elections, but they are going to lose out on the world since they have a hard time seeing the bigger picture for some odd reason.  Taiwan needs to realize that we live in 2007 and it isn’t 1980 or even 1984; especially when the United States does not support their lust for war with China.

The IOC had set 20 September as a deadline for resolving the dispute, Taiwanese officials said.

Now I wonder if Taiwan is going to boycott the 2008 Olympics, much to the disservice to their hard-working athletes.

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Taiwan: “Death to America!”

Demonstrators burn United States flag in Kaohsiung

Tuesday, September 4, 2007
TAIPEI, AFP

Dozens of protesters in Taiwan yesterday burned and trampled the Stars and Stripes outside the island’s U.S. mission, reports said, after a senior White House official said Taiwan was not a state.

A crowd chanting slogans set fire to the U.S. flag outside the mission in Kaohsiung, southern Taiwan and unfurled protest banners, including one that read, “Oppose U.S. bullying of Taiwan,” television pictures showed.

Police then moved in to douse the flames but there were no reports of arrests or injuries from the incident.

Taiwan should not do anything rash like burning flags in front of American trade offices. Luckily no Americans were harmed by Taiwanese fanaticism as they were all home for Labor Day as these locals continue to fan anti-Americanism.

Just look at these pictures

I don’t think the United States appreciates the Taiwanese fanning anti-Americanism in that island. They have enough troubles in Iraq. Why can’t the Taiwanese support the troops like the Americans do? Why are they burning American flags like Al-Qaeda? Are they trying to imply something?

“We have our president and territory and we pay taxes to the government. Without doubt, Taiwan is a country, not what the United States said — that Taiwan is not a country,” an unnamed protester told reporters.

The protest came after White House official Dennis Wilder said last week that Taiwan was not a state and so could not become a member of the United Nations.

O. J. Simpson also says he is a loving father who is innocent of the double murder of Nicole Brown and Ronald Goldman. O. J. Simpson can say all he wants about his so-called innocence but at the end of the day he is guilty just like Taiwan is still not a country. Burning American flags isn’t going to help the radical Taiwanese’s cause.

On a related note, the radical Taiwanese protesters did the following while burning American flags:

The protesters chanted: “Taiwan nation! Taiwan nation! Taiwan nation!” In total, there were 12 demonstrators who were called to action by the local underground radio stations. The underground radio stations called out: “Surround the American Institute in Taiwan office! Come, come, come! See how the American flag gets stomped upon. Come, come come!” They were faced with more than 200 police officers armed with batons and handguns. Nevertheless, the protesters chanted: “Yes! Yes! Burn! Burn!”

Why are these Taiwanese acting like Al-Qaeda terrorists? Maybe they should consider having Al-Qaeda in Taiwan to maybe get the United States to recognize them if they want them to believe their lies so badly.

The island’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party wants to hold a referendum on U.N. membership next year. The party leans towards independence for the island from China, which claims Taiwan.

Wilder said the proposed referendum had unnecessarily increased regional tension.

“Membership in the United Nations requires statehood. Taiwan, or the Republic of China, is not at this point a state in the international community,” Wilder said.

I agree with Wilder because Taiwan has nothing to offer by trying to make another failed bid for a United Nations seat and because Taiwan is again not a country as explained by the world time and time again.

The U.N. General Assembly will discuss Taiwan’s membership application later this month. Its past efforts to rejoin have been repeatedly blocked by Beijing.

The island, under its official name the Republic of China, lost its U.N. seat to China in 1971.

That’s right: Taiwan trying for the UN is like a retard running into a brick wall. No matter how hard the retard and Taiwan try, they will only hurt themselves in the end.

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Taiwan Exploits Cambodian Women

“Taiwan is very arrogant and very devious” – King-Father Norodom Sihanouk

His Royal Highness King-Father Norodom Sihanouk’s comments in his own handwriting on the above article speaks for itself. Taiwanese men’s “love them and leave them” attitude for many impressionable Cambodian women have forced them to prostitute themselves or take low-paying jobs just to survive in Taiwan.

The King-Father is concerned about the plight of his subjects and only asked for the government to send these women back to his country so they can continue a clean life instead of wasting away in Taiwan.

It’s quite sad that Taiwan would have the nerve to ignore the King-Father’s request and then pretend that there are no problems stemming from these foreign marriages.

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Taiwan hates Yao Ming (for real)

Yao Ming Rejected for Taiwan Charity Visit, China Times Reports

By George Hsu

Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) — Yao Ming, center for the NBA’s Houston Rockets, was denied permission to visit Taiwan next month for a charity fund-raising luncheon, the China Times reported, citing Taiwan Basketball Association Deputy Secretary- General Wang Jen-sheng.

Yao Ming of the Houston Rockets has been rejected by Taiwan to attend a charity fundraiser for the island’s local charity. Now I am sure the island’s authorities have a perfectly good reason to reject such a healthy and respectable athlete who is associated with wholesome sportsmanship and good humor.

The Mainland Affairs Council on Aug. 23 verbally informed the association, which had submitted the application, of the Taiwanese government’s decision, the Taipei-based Chinese-language newspaper reported. Yao, who is from China, was scheduled to arrive on Sept. 7, and planned to raise $200,000 for the island’s charity groups, the newspaper reported.

No reason for the decision was given in the newspaper report.

Well, so it looks like the island authorities are the ones who made the official decision to deny him entry into Taiwan. There is no explanation given but I won’t be surprised if it was because Yao Ming is ethnic Chinese and a Chinese passport holder. It’s even more ironic that the local authorities are dumb enough to deny him the opportunity to raise money for local charities that would help the island.

I have never heard of any news reports of the Chinese authorities rejecting Taiwan-based celebrities, athletes or government officials from entering the country or rejecting them without any valid explanation like what has just happened with Yao Ming in Taiwan.

I really am under the impression that the Taiwan government will turn anything into a political issue without any reason or accountability. So far these government officials in Taiwan are proving me right.

Taiwan and China have been ruled separately since 1949, when communist troops took control of the mainland. China has threatened to invade Taiwan if the island declares independence.

To contact the reporter for this story: George Hsu in Taipei at georgehsu@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: August 24, 2007 21:55 EDT

It’s official: Taiwan hates Yao Ming.

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April 17, 1895: Taiwan Province’s Independence Day (NOT!)

April 17, 1895: Our Independence Day
Today, my parents, my grandparents, and myself marked the 110-year anniversary of Taiwan’s independence, when China ceded Taiwan’s sovereignty in perpetuity in the Treaty of Shimonoseki of 1895.

At that time, the Koreans were involved in battles over unjust treatment by the Chinese, which started the Sino-Japanese war. As the war continued, Koreans realized that they were fighting not just for better treatment; they were fighting for freedom from Chinese rule. At the same time, we Taiwanese were fighting against our corrupt rulers for better rights and looked to Koreans for inspiration.

Shimonoseki Treaty hall
The Shunpanrou hall where the Treaty of Shimonoseki was signed.

The Treaty of Shimonoseki, signed by leaders from China and Japan on April 17, 1895, stated this clearly, and for the first time in an official document Taiwan and Korea became independent from China in perpetuity. One thing I want to point out is that all claims of China regarding the ownership of Taiwan, ranging from history, culture, language, race, geography, geology, became null and void with the signing of the treaty.

The Shimonoseki treaty is most important because it refutes all claims from the Chinese that Taiwan is a part of China. Ever since the treaty was signed, the Chinese have made attempts to unilaterally cancel the Treaty, which is illegal in international law and the Treaty itself has no such provisions. Most of all, the Chinese cancellation of the Treaty of Shimonoseki was not recognized by Japan, other countries, or by any other international bodies. What this means if no matter what tricks the Chinese pull, like keeping us from the UN, pointing 8000 missiles at our nation, and using their parties to get power, Taiwan is forever independent from China.

On April 17, 1895, we claimed our independence from China and the Taiwanese nation was born. Each year, we Taiwanese celebrate that freedom and independence with Taiwanese food, peace rallies, and with good fun. In a nutshell, it is a day of Taiwanese banquets and parades, a night of concerts and fireworks. The flying of the Taiwanese flag and family gatherings are also part of the festivities.


The Taiwanese Flag.

Through the Internet, our people can communicate with people of different nations, with different languages and different races throughout the world to give them understanding and knowledge of our independent nation. I encourage all nations to celebrate with Taiwanese online this April 17th. Happy Birthday, Taiwan!

Haha! What a load of shit! Taiwan isn’t a fucking country; it’s just a stupid Chinese province with a shitload of misanthropic Japanophiles pretending to be a fake non-Chinese race!

Taiwan independence…give me a fucking break! Taiwan is just a stupid Chinese island that is just a cheap tourist spot for Japanese tourists and known for having many senile pensioners with an unhealthy obsession with all things Japanese!

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