This is part of China's multi-pronged strategy for taking over Taiwan.
One prong is coopting Taiwanese elites, in parts by allowing them to become very wealthy through China, but only if working in the background for unification. There is no way Foxconn would have been allowed to operate large factories in China, if its founder and chairman (Terry Gou) was pro independence.
This is empire building 101. Romans offered barbarian leaders a luxurious lifestyle with floor heating and access to a wide variety of regional specialties from around the empire in exchange for loyalty to the city. Quite many took that offer, those who didn't were convinced with help of the military.
This is brilliantly targeted then since the Chinese officially abandoned Mazu during the Cultural Revolution. Not that Guo could run for China President, anyways.
Strange women, lying in ponds, distributing presidential candidacy advice is no basis for a system of government.
On a more serious note, can any readers from ROC or anyone who's more in touch with the situation there give an insight into whether he stands a chance given (a) the sea goddess angle, and (b) the apparently PRC-friendly platform?
When translated into English the sea goddess thing can be really weird, but Ma Zhu is not really a sea goddess. She's more like a folk symbol combined with a patron/saint of the sea and a semi-lifestyle religion. With Taiwan being an island, the patron saint of the sea is an immensely important part of the culture.
She is widely known and revered in all of Taiwan. When you go to a Taiwanese family and say "Mazhu bao yo" (Mazu bless you) - it's generally well received even if the people don't believe in Taoism or natural / personified deities.
The idea that Gou says "Mazu wanted me to do it" is more like saying to a Catholic that Mother Teresa inspired you to visit India and start a non-profit agency to help the people there.
Hopefully the analogy holds for people who are not familiar with the culture there.
As Taiwanese, from what I observed, given the level of populism that's going on in the country, the chance of him being elected next year is highly probable. This is a very very very serious threat to Taiwan's effort to counter China's invasive actions.
Also even though Mazu is super big in Taiwan, Taiwanese are generally seeing this only as a political declaration. (Religion in Taiwan is more of a spiritual guidance than an actual superior being that dictates people lives.)
As he's a "mainlander" (外省人, i.e. at least one parent came over with Chiang Kai-shek following the 1949 loss to the Chinese Communist Party in the Chinese Civil War)the Mazu reference seems to be something meant to appeal to Taiwanese (本省人) voters, kind of like a presidential candidate in the U.S. claiming strong local ties when traveling to different regions where that plays well. Yes, he's religious, and he speaks Taiwanese, but I wouldn't assume a huge number of Taiwanese people will back him for those reasons alone.
If Gou has real support from the KMT -- no easy thing, considering he hasn't been heavily active in local politics AFAIK -- he might get some wind in his sails, particularly if he sticks with the practical themes relating to cross-strait trade and economic growth. He understands that very, very well.
If he doesn't have the right political network in place, though, he's going to piss off a lot of KMT people and likely to relegated to the margins -- or siphon off a lot of blue supporters for an indie run, which will lead to the same type of situation the U.S. Republican party had back in the 90s with Ross Perot.
It is depressing to me to think how much of the billions that went to Foxconn, as subsidies for an ongoingly-debated screen plant in Wisconsin, ultimately was a source of personal funding for this person's political campaign.
I could have lived the rest of my life in blissful ignorance of that possibility. Just gets my blood back up over how much Walker and his cronies let those guys fleece us for.
Is it just me or are others deeply disturbed by his correspondence with imaginary sea monsters? I am perplexed by the political appeal of claiming affiliation with imaginary power-symbols like this.... but it seems to appeal to voters nearly everywhere even in this day and age.
Well, we did have a fair number of leaders in the West claiming they went for office due to divine inspiration (i.e. George W. Bush), so, it's weird yes, but just as weird as invoking some monotheistic God.
...the Overton window is sliding to a place where we'll soon see the POTUS tweet about his dreams of Cthulhu and it will not even seem weird anymore :P
While such dreams would explain a lot about this presidency, I think you underestimate the velocity with which the Overton Window has already gleefully escaped the Earth's atmosphere. Remember the flying water tankers tweet from two days ago? Nobody else does either.
When you are so entrenched in China and so beholden to the party, that even the mere idea of decamping is dangerous to entertain, how good can he dance with shackles on?
FYI for those who didn't familiar with Taiwan culture: Saying that you're going to do something because some god/goddess tells you to do so in your dream is a pretty common excuse in ancient Taiwan. So it makes sense as elder population is probably Gou's target audience.
But of course, it looks F* *KING RIDICULOUS to younger generations.
[+] [-] YorkshireSeason|7 years ago|reply
One prong is coopting Taiwanese elites, in parts by allowing them to become very wealthy through China, but only if working in the background for unification. There is no way Foxconn would have been allowed to operate large factories in China, if its founder and chairman (Terry Gou) was pro independence.
[+] [-] est31|7 years ago|reply
This is empire building 101. Romans offered barbarian leaders a luxurious lifestyle with floor heating and access to a wide variety of regional specialties from around the empire in exchange for loyalty to the city. Quite many took that offer, those who didn't were convinced with help of the military.
[+] [-] runn1ng|7 years ago|reply
(Funny considering KMT history, but that's how things played out.)
[+] [-] bitxbitxbitcoin|7 years ago|reply
[+] [-] NotPaidToPost|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] _verandaguy|7 years ago|reply
Strange women, lying in ponds, distributing presidential candidacy advice is no basis for a system of government.
On a more serious note, can any readers from ROC or anyone who's more in touch with the situation there give an insight into whether he stands a chance given (a) the sea goddess angle, and (b) the apparently PRC-friendly platform?
[+] [-] barkingcat|7 years ago|reply
She is widely known and revered in all of Taiwan. When you go to a Taiwanese family and say "Mazhu bao yo" (Mazu bless you) - it's generally well received even if the people don't believe in Taoism or natural / personified deities.
The idea that Gou says "Mazu wanted me to do it" is more like saying to a Catholic that Mother Teresa inspired you to visit India and start a non-profit agency to help the people there.
Hopefully the analogy holds for people who are not familiar with the culture there.
[+] [-] EastToWest|7 years ago|reply
My observation:
1. Mazu is big in Taiwan.
2. DPP didn't have any political achievement in the past three years.
3. Taiwan has been stagnated for the past two decades due to ideology politics.
So yes Guo stands a (big?) chance.
[+] [-] showjackyang|7 years ago|reply
Also even though Mazu is super big in Taiwan, Taiwanese are generally seeing this only as a political declaration. (Religion in Taiwan is more of a spiritual guidance than an actual superior being that dictates people lives.)
[+] [-] ilamont|7 years ago|reply
If Gou has real support from the KMT -- no easy thing, considering he hasn't been heavily active in local politics AFAIK -- he might get some wind in his sails, particularly if he sticks with the practical themes relating to cross-strait trade and economic growth. He understands that very, very well.
If he doesn't have the right political network in place, though, he's going to piss off a lot of KMT people and likely to relegated to the margins -- or siphon off a lot of blue supporters for an indie run, which will lead to the same type of situation the U.S. Republican party had back in the 90s with Ross Perot.
[+] [-] unknown|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] bilbo0s|7 years ago|reply
I could have lived the rest of my life in blissful ignorance of that possibility. Just gets my blood back up over how much Walker and his cronies let those guys fleece us for.
Our fault.
We didn't have to elect the guy.
Still... it stings.
[+] [-] duxup|7 years ago|reply
Then going to be a weird amalgam of R&D / engineering offices spread out across Wisconsin for no reason.
And now ... back to some sort of manufacturing like ... thing ... maybe.
[+] [-] quotz|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] tyingq|7 years ago|reply
I had hung on to the notion that there should be some restraint and decorum associated with it for quite a while. That ship, though, has sailed.
[+] [-] clojurestan|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] AFascistWorld|7 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mshockwave|7 years ago|reply
But of course, it looks F* *KING RIDICULOUS to younger generations.
[+] [-] unknown|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] JudasGoat|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] adamnemecek|7 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] sctb|7 years ago|reply
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
[+] [-] EastToWest|7 years ago|reply