Wednesday, October 31, 2018

Week 8: Gay marriage in Taiwan

Readings and Discussions

1. Recent news (discussion only)

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy/article/2171037/united-states-wont-allow-force-against-taiwan-new-us-envoy-says


2. Images from Taipei 2018 Gay Pride Parade


3. J Michael Cole in Taiwan Sentinel:
As Taipei Celebrates Diversity, Anti-LGBT Group Warns of ‘Nefarious’ Western Influence 


 4. http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2017/03/25/2003667426 (discuss)

“The Civil Code stipulates that marriage shall be between a man and a woman, and as such it is not unconstitutional. The Constitution guarantees citizens’ right to marry as that between a man and a woman, while marriage between people of the same sex is not covered under the Constitution,” Chiu said.
“For thousands of years in the nation’s history, society has instituted traditions and codes of conduct regarding marriage. Has there ever been a cultural institution or social phenomenon for same-sex marriage?” Chiu said.
“Without a doubt, there has been none,” Chiu said.
5. http://tweb.cjcu.edu.tw/journal_abstract/2012_11_20_06_36_51.53.pdf
 During the first two decades of Kuomintang (KMT) rule, Taiwan experienced steady economic growth but changes to the political system were not permitted; the corporatist model of KMT rule was omnipresent. Taiwanese society between the 1950s and 1960s could be described as heterosexualized in terms of discourse; “family values” were regarded as deriving directly from a stable Confucian and Chinese tradition and public discourses of same-sex desire were almost non-existent: 
6. Brett Hinsch book.... Passions of the Cut Sleeve


7. New Bloom: 
https://newbloommag.net/2018/10/31/anti-gay-televised-debate-rig/
Anti-gay groups attempt to rig televised debates




QUESTIONS w/partner
1. Read Chiu Tai-san's comments in #4.

Look it up: What does the constitution say about marriage?
Look it up: Brett Hinsch say about homosexual marriage in Chinese history?
Look at up (#5): what was the KMT position on homosexuality in the martial law era?

2. Who is funding the anti-gay groups in Taiwan, according to J Michael Cole? Where do their ideas and thinking come from?







Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Week 7: TPP/CPTPP Issue

1. Week 7 Middle East review quiz

15 points -- don't forget your names.
1. The major division in the Islamic world is...  (a) north africa vs the middle east  (B) men vs women  (c) Arabs vs Persions  (d) Shia vs Sunni

2. The people found in southeastern Turkey, northeastern Syria, and northern Iraq and Iran who want to form their own nation are the...  (a) Kurds   (b) Shia muslims  (c) Punjabis  (d) Persians

3. The Ottoman empire was based in   (a) Saudi Arabia  (b) Turkey  (c) Iran  (d) Greece

4. The Sykes-Picot Treaty between France and the UK gave France control and influence in  (a) most of Iraq and Iran  (b) most of Syria and Lebanon  (c) most of Israel  (d) most of Iraq and Syria

5. US policy in the Middle East follows UK policy, which was  (a) to control the most territory  (b) to control the fossil fuel purchasing  (c) to put the oil under many different governments (d) to control the pipeline networks

6. Which two countries are the Sunni and Shia leaders in the Middle East, respectively...  (a) Israel and Syria  (b) Turkey and Saudi Arabia  (c) Saudi Arabia and Iran  (d) Iran and Syria

7. The US attacked Iraq and Libya because their leaders  (a) did not want to sell oil to the US  (b) threatened to change oil from dollars to another kind of money  (c) wanted to unite the Muslim world against the US  (d) became Communists

2. CTP/TPP


Reference: 
OPINION: Taiwan Should Not Join the CPTPP Trade Pact
https://international.thenewslens.com/article/106539

Assignment: look at the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) on the following issues, Explore on the internet using your phone.

worker rights
digital rights, internet management and internet service providers
investor-state settlements
environment
international banks
medicines

1. Explain in English with your partner 7 problems Taiwan will have if it joins the TPP/CPTPP.
2. Describe the courts that will decide how TPP cases are resolved and who will be the judges.

Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Week 6 Middle East 2


Read this backgrounder on Syria and the article on oil, Russia, and Iran

Why is there a war in Syria?

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-35806229


Russia Is Taking Over Syria’s Oil And Gas
  https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Russia-Is-Taking-Over-Syrias-Oil-And-Gas.html

20 points
1. The majority of people in Syria belong to what religious group? What religious group is Assad, the President?
2. What was the excuse for western intervention in Syria?
3. Why did the population revolt against Assad?
4. Look on the internet -- where in Syria are the Russian and Turkish bases?
5. Which side do Russia and Iran support? What help do they each give? What are they getting in return?
6. Which side does the West support?
7. What is Turkish policy in Syria?
8. Who supports the Kurds?




Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Week 5: the Middle East

Quiz on Week 1-4

Chinese name____________  English Name ____________  Student number_________________
Choose one answer! ㄅ points each
_____1. What is US policy on the status of Taiwan? A. Taiwan is part of the Republic of China   B.  Taiwan is part of the People’s Republic of China  C. Taiwan’s status has not been decided.  D. Taiwan is an independent state
_____2. The ROC government and PRC government decided to claim the Diaoyutai/Senkakus in the late 1960s because ….   A. oil and gas had been found there   B. The US invited them to claim the islands.  C. The US was finished with them  D. Japan wanted to give them up.
_____3. Dongsha Island was first developed for bird shit by a person from…  A. the US  B. France  C. China   D. Japan
_____4. In the 1930s the ROC government gave names to the Spratly Islands that were based on…  A. Maps the English gave them from Hong Kong  B. Maps the Americans gave them from Manila  C. Maps the Japanese gave them  D. Ancient Chinese maps
_____ 5. Before 1900, maps from China …  A. Showed that the South China Sea islands were part of China  B. Showed that the South China Sea was full of islands belonging to England.  C. Showed no islands and did not say the sea was part of China  D. Showed islands belonging to the local peoples.
_____6. Before 1971, the ROC government defined the northernmost point of Taiwan as….  A. The Diaoyutai/Senkakus  B. Pengjia Island   C. Keelung Island.  D. Green Island
_____7. Which two important treaties define the current international status of Taiwan?  A. The San Francisco Peace Treaty and SALT II    B.  The San Francisco Peace Treaty and the Treaty of Shimonoseki   C. The San Francisco Peace Treaty and the Treaty of Paris   D.  The San Francisco Peace Treaty and the Treaty of Taipei

Answer in short paragraph. Three points

8. The Chinese are building islands in the South China Sea. Why?



in which we touch on the middle east....

Video: spread of islam

Vox.com: forty maps that explain the Middle East

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

WEEK 3: Senkakus/Diaoyutai

Read the link below. Answer the following questions on a piece of paper. In English. In Pairs.

1. What does the author say about how nations get sovereignty over islands?

2. What were the northernmost and easternmost points of Taiwan in the Japanese period?

3. What were the northernmost and easternmost points of Taiwan during the KMT period before 1971? [easternmost not in]

4. What did the ROC say about the Senkakus before 1971?

5. Why did the ROC and PRC claim the Senkakus in the early 1970s?

6. What does the "使琉球錄" say about the Senkakus? According to that text, who did they belong to?

7. The writer says that the "三國通覽圖說(1785)" famous map of 1785, does not make the Senkakus part of the Qing or Taiwan because...?

8. What was the difference between ROC/PRC maps of the Senkakus before and after 1970?

9. What nation had people living on the Senkakus in the first half of the 20th century?

10. In the 1950s who controlled the Senkaku Islands? (not asking who OWNED them, asking who controlled them.) What were they used for?


https://web.archive.org/web/20131110185802/http://tw.myblog.yahoo.com/jw%21ARR7CzOBSEbGZjQIIAbtkQ--/article?mid=1582


Image result for eez definition

Sunday, September 16, 2018

WEEK 2 The South China Sea

Numbers 3-17, In English. What countries/territories/islands?




1. Give two reasons China is building islands in the South China Sea.
2. What important resources are found in the South China Sea?
3. What are the problems for the environment?
4. Which country sued China in international court? What was the result? How did China respond?

https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/chinas-artificial-islands-news-rumors/



SHOWDOWN IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA: CHINA’S ARTIFICIAL ISLANDS EXPLAINED













Extending south of China and ringed in by the Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, and Malaysia is a 1.35 million-square-mile body of water known as the South China Sea. If it truly is the case that East Asia is the global economy’s center of gravity, then the South China Sea might be its singularity. In 1405, the Chinese admiral Zheng He set sail with a fleet of treasure ships, traveling to neighboring nations and eventually as far as Mombasa, spreading knowledge of China’s wealth. Today, the South China Sea is again a venue for China to display its power — though with a very different fleet.
Although from on high the sea may seem a blue wasteland, punctuated occasionally by specks of uninhabited land, the islands have seen a frenzy of activity in recent years: China has constructed a series of artificial islands throughout the area. These artificial islands are a showcase of Chinese engineering, and this muscle-flexing has provoked strong reactions from China’s neighbors in the region, particularly the Philippines, which brought a suit against China to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague. On July 12, 2016, the international tribunal ruled against China, however, the superpower refused to acknowledge the decision or even the court’s jurisdiction.
What exactly are China’s artificial islands, and why are they so important? As it turns out, China’s island-building plan sits on a contentious intersection of technology, politics, and the environment.

How do you build an island?

For those wondering what an artificial island is made of, the answer is the same thing most islands are made of: sand. The process for building these islands is remarkably simple, although the technology involved is imposing.
The first requirement for an island is a base to build on. Naturally formed islands don’t float in the water; rather, an island is simply the top, visible part of a land mass that is mostly underwater.
To construct its artificial islands, China builds atop already existing, islands, rocks, and even coral reefs. Building an island that can support airstrips and other military installations requires a lot of sand, however. To gather it, China uses a fleet of dredgers, ships designed to pick up and move materials from the seafloor. These dredgers use large tubes with cutting attachments at the end to grind up material on the seafloor and suck it up. From there, the material is carried through pipes or hoses and dumped on top of reefs, rocks, and other existing formations.
dredgers pouring sand
CSIS Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative/DigitalGlobe
Once the islands are large and stable enough, China can then lay down cement and build structures on them. The extent of the changes can be striking. For example, below is Fiery Cross Reef in 2006.
fiery cross reef 2006
CSIS Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative / DigitalGlobe
Here is Fiery Cross Reef in 2015, after China converted it into an island.
fiery cross reef 2015
CSIS Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative / DigitalGlobe
The new island includes a runway and harbor, as well as numerous other buildings.

What’s the point?

China’s island-building efforts require a heavy investment in engineering and infrastructure, so why is the country going to all this trouble? Perhaps the prime motivation is to reinforce China’s claim over the region. The Spratly Islands and other nearby chains lack indigenous populations. As such, they are claimed by the various neighboring nations. Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, and China all claim portions of the South China Sea, but China’s claim is extraordinary. Dubbed the “nine-dash line,” China’s claim (as presented to the United Nations in 2009) covers most of the sea, extending down to the coast of Malaysia. Naturally, this has proven contentious, prompting the Philippines — located very close to the Spratlys, which China includes in its claims — to bring a case against China in international court.
By transforming reefs and cays into military installations, China is extending its military capabilities in the South China Sea. Airstrips, radar arrays, and all such buildings give China the ability to project force throughout the region.
Why is controlling the South China Sea so important? Although the scattered islands may be unimpressive, the South China Sea is one of the busiest trade routes in the world. According to information gathered by the council on Foreign Relations, more than $5.3 trillion worth of shipping travels through the sea each year; $1.2 trillion of this trade belongs to the United States.
Beyond its importance as a trade route, the South China Sea may also contain bountiful resources beneath the surface. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that there are 11 billion barrels of oil in the South China Sea, as well as 190 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. As East Asia continues to grow in importance, these resources — and who gets to control them — will become more important.
Fuel is not the only resource in abundance in the South China Sea. The region is one of the most important zones in the world for fishing. In fact, 12 percent of the global catch comes from the South China Sea. Astonishing as it may sound, this may be a far bigger point of contention than the fuel reserves. Fishing is a crucial industry for China, which is currently the largest producer of fish in the world. China accounts for 17.4 percent of the world’s marine catch, nearly three times that of runner up Indonesia, according to a report from the Center for Naval Analyses. China is also the world’s biggest exporter of fish products, with nearly $20 billion in exports in 2013.





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