In Taiwan, these people are called 民主二代 (second generation of democracy), oftentimes in a derogatory way, referring to a generation that came of age after Taiwan’s democratization, sometimes seen as taking democracy for granted.
I kinda half don’t blame them, they suffer from the same issues that most liberal democracies face now:
- horribly low pay and worker protections, in your first year working, expect to barely have 3 holiday days offered to you
- never being able to buy property in Taiwan (Taiwanese property market is insane and I could talk at lengths about it)
In this context, Taiwanese politics is a hugely partisan-tribal affair with a lot of drama. A lot of people become apathetic and just go “you can’t eat democracy” (a dig at parties that keep pushing this as their campaign slogan rather than talking about kitchen-table political issues (housing, affordability, high cost of raising kids).
… politics is a hugely partisan-tribal affair with a lot of drama
This is a problem everywhere. In fact it may well be the definition of politics.
I know this isn’t particularly helpful in terms of this specific discussion (China, Taiwan, etc.), but that phrase leapt out at me and I had to call attention to it.
They should spend some time there! See how they’re treated. Certainly was an eye opener for a Taiwanese friend of mine. One China doesn’t mean one people, only under one emperor.
That’s cause the ML are good at propaganda. They will hate it when they can’t speak openly or be gay
I think the housing crisis, crushing capitalism and rising cost of living are having more impact than ML propaganda here. Not that a Chinese takeover would necessarily fix these things, but there’s plenty of reason to be disillusioned with liberal democracy other than propaganda.
Well I agree, but the answer is not making it worse
Amelia近幾年去過香港嗎?

