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hareluya6510
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加入日期: Jan 2007
文章: 248
這個帳號可能也不保了
來PCDVD也很久了,至於有多久~
如果有人還記得超頻者天堂還是賴國洲的年代(XD 是賴怡州的啦),大概就可以知道了.

看到很多人呼喊著兩國相爭不斬來使的口號就覺得很諷刺
歷來,對敵國來使卑躬屈膝的不是降國就是敗將
現在面對敵國來使,我們自己的國旗不能拿,還要被當成犯人壓解
這跟主動遞上降書有何區別?

他國特使來台當然不用特別拿著國旗出現
因為大陸從不承認台灣是個主權獨立的國家
對他宣示台灣的主權有何不可?

對一個來到這塊台灣人的土地還可以講出"不獨立就沒有戰爭"的屁話的特屎
還要大規模的維安,並以高壓手段強制控制人民的自由
卻還有人認為這是正常,可以接受的?!
請認清,人民身上綁著的是國旗不是炸彈

當美國的NASA說 Taiwan, Province of China (台灣,中國的一省)
是經過了多少人向NASA抗議才得以改回 Taiwan
但是我們的政府卻一再的用行動宣示 'Taiwan, Province of China' !!
想來還真是可悲

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/tai...0/20/2003426424

NASA pulls ‘province of China’ Web site reference
HOME AGAIN: A blogger who took NASA to task returned to Taiwan from the US in July last year, quitting a well-paid job because of his patriotism
By Tseng Wei-cheng
STAFF REPORTER
Monday, Oct 20, 2008, Page 3
A NASA Web site that offers researchers downloadable satellite data no longer lists Taiwan as “Taiwan, Province of China” on the page. After a Taiwanese blogger who goes by the pseudonym “Shortcake” wrote about it in his blog, a large group of Internet users sent protest e-mails to NASA, which changed the name to “Taiwan” on Thursday.

Shortcake said the Web site used to refer to Taiwan as “Taiwan,” but speculated that the government’s talk of a “diplomatic truce” with China led to the change on the NASA Web site.

The blogger said this violated the 1996 Memorandum of Understanding signed by the US Department of State, which stated that the US government and its officials should refer to Taiwan as “Taiwan.”

Shortcake wrote a protest letter to the agency and invited fellow Internet users to copy his letter and send it to NASA. Within a day, NASA edited the Web page and changed Taiwan’s name back to “Taiwan.”

Shortcake went to school in the US and worked there for more than a decade. In his blog, he discusses acts by governments, agencies and international organizations that degrade Taiwan’s national sovereignty.

This is not the first time he has written a letter of protest and called on other Internet users to join in the written protest. Most organizations, after receiving letters of protest, change Taiwan’s name to Taiwan on their Web sites, he said, citing a US railway company, Google Maps, the WHO, the Global Invasive Species Database and Nokia as examples.

Shortcake returned to Taiwan in July last year, quitting a well-paid job because of the passion he felt for his country, he said.

Shortcake said he had promoted activism because he felt that Taiwan is often degraded in the international community.

“It is a country’s basic right to maintain its name, yet Taiwan’s name has been abused by others over and over again, revealing that there are still deficiencies in Taiwan’s right to exercise sovereignty,” he said.

He said he felt he had the duty to protest this treatment and help the nation combat it.

Over the years, Shortcake said he has been pleased to find many like-minded people. As long as people are willing to speak out, Taiwan has a good chance of having its name respected, he said.
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舊 2008-11-04, 10:35 AM #38
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