Editorials
Taiwan is often in the international news … [and] will continue to be a topic that foreign media and scholars write about.
Unfortunately, many of these materials will have errors, or even fake news. Who benefits from this?
Preparedness isn’t paperwork. It’s muscle memory. At least one full-scale drill each year — plus smaller department exercises — keeps teams sharp. Studies show companies that train regularly recover 30% faster after crises. Skipping drills to “save costs” is false economy. Every dollar not spent on preparedness turns into losses later. Training isn’t an expense; it’s insurance — and a competitive edge.
Reviews of new book on “Singapore at 60” mostly agree that this small nation serves as a living example of how discipline, foresight, and unity can turn vulnerability into vision.
Beijing’s growing power has made it impossible for any Taiwanese politician to ignore cross-strait relations. Whether they like it or not, every party, every candidate, must factor China into their strategy. In this sense, Beijing’s mere presence — not its actions — already shapes Taiwan’s political landscape.
History has always judged America not by how it avoided struggle, but by how it stood for freedom. Taiwan’s survival is part of that story.
Saying both sides are to blame here is like insisting that Poland provoked pre-1941 buddies Hitler and Stalin by existing. AI Generated…
The cultural differences between the East and the West creates a barrier in the communication process for investor relations. Understanding and overcoming this barrier is a critical success factor of excellence in IR communications.