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Strategies & Market Trends : Asia Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: CIMA who wrote (9891)1/16/2001 11:31:27 PM
From: Rolla Coasta  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
Fascination with Nazis is shameful for Taiwan

taipeitimes.com

HUANG JUI-MING
The craze among Taiwanese teenagers for Nazi culture has
recently become a topic of local media discussion. The
swastika has become the hottest fashion ornament and tattoo
design. Nazi souvenirs are available for sale here, although
they cannot be auctioned from the Yahoo Web site. An evil
criminal organization is actually being worshipped by our
youngsters. Regretfully, the numbers of those fascinated with
Nazis is not small.

About a year ago, a Newsweek reporter, Andrew Nagorski,
wrote an article, in which he commented on some
observations he had made while stationed in Berlin. He
noticed that World War II continued to overshadow
Germany. One of the reasons is that non-Germans associate
Germany with the Auschwitz concentration camp. He used a
Taiwan company licensed to sell German-made electronic
appliances as an example. The company used a smiling Hitler
to advertise the products. The spokesperson proudly said,
"We decided to use Hitler as the main character, because
everyone who sees him immediately thinks of Germany."

The fondness for Hitler does not stop here. A Taiwanese
subsidiary of a printer manufacturer also used in its
advertisement an old photo of both Adolf Hitler and head of
the Nazi Brown Shirts, Ernst Roehm, whom Hitler later had
killed. The ad showed how users of the company's
photocopiers could create realistic looking pictures in which
their heads were attached to Roehm's short, stubby body.
They did this by simply cutting and pasting together their own
mug shots and the picture of Roehm, and then making
photocopies.

A few years ago, an ICRT host commented during his show
about the emergence of this strange fascination for Nazi
culture in Taiwan. The director of the German Cultural
Center in Taiwan, Heidegert A. Hoesch said in disbelief that,
"Taiwanese seem to hold some unfounded admiration for
everything German, even the most despicable aspect of
German history."

What Taiwanese consider to be cool is exactly what
Germany considers to be a disgrace. Hitler is a source of
agony for the Germans. That is why, when film footage of
Hitler and his feverish fans was used in a commercial for
Taiwanese instant noodles, I heard a young German woman
angrily ask, "How would you guys feel if we used the 228
Incident as part of an ad for German pig's feet."

A butcher has been turned into a spokesperson. To the
German, this is a serious issue. As Nagorski said, Germans
are probably the group most capable of reflecting about past
wrongs. Although modern-day Nazis continue to engage in
hate crimes, most Germans loath the evils conducted by
Hitler. His book Mein Kampf remains banned in Germany,
where the use of Nazi symbols and the Hitler salute are
punishable crimes. Not long ago, a German magazine even
picked Hitler as the number one villain of the 20th century.
No wonder when a German TV station used the question of
whether it was acceptable to make Hitler jokes as a topic of
discussion, the conclusion reached was an absolute no.

The Nazi craze in Taiwan has not only insulted German
residents of Taiwan, but has also turned Taiwan into a
laughing stock. Advertising agencies cannot continue to use
evil as a gimmick and teenagers should not turn ignorance
into a trend. The blind worship of Nazis is more than just bad
taste, but involves issues of ethics and conscience. Since we
long to join the global village, we must learn to face the
history of others with a serious attitude. Hitler brought shame
to the German people, and was a public enemy of all
mankind. Taiwanese should join those who despise him.

Huang Jui-ming is an assistant professor at the
Department of Labor Relations, National Chung Cheng
University.



To: CIMA who wrote (9891)1/17/2001 11:45:36 PM
From: Rolla Coasta  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9980
 
I guess anyone can create a make-up story about China ... here's one about the son of Li Peng:

The son of Li Peng was being sent to US studying there, trying to reveal something for his dad. But then he quickly found himself fitting right into a liberal group in the US. By the time when Li Peng called him back to China, the son of Li Peng went back home trying to reveal something that he had found in the US. Li Peng asked his son,
"Son, what did you reveal in US ?"
The son of Li Peng freakingly told his dad,
"My sexuality has been revealed!!! My name is Li-Ly now!!!"
Li Peng hardened himself in a hardline stand, while the pateranl elders laughed out loudly enough to break the Great Wall of China. The son of Li Peng then freaked out from his dad and established a freak party that caused an internal turmoil within China.
~ The son of Li Peng.

Q