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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!rutgers!att-out!cbfsb!cbnews!liaohen
- From: liaohen@cbnews.cb.att.com (Heng-Hsin Liao)
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.taiwan
- Subject: Re: more than 50% support TI
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.213900.29298@cbnews.cb.att.com>
- Date: 23 Dec 92 21:39:00 GMT
- References: <YCHEN.92Dec23145112@sp1.csrd.uiuc.edu>
- Organization: AT&T Bell Lab
- Lines: 24
-
- From article <YCHEN.92Dec23145112@sp1.csrd.uiuc.edu>, by ychen@sp1.csrd.uiuc.edu (Yung-Chin Chen):
- > In article <Bzq28F.15x@cs.uiuc.edu> yang@milton.cs.uiuc.edu (Der-Shung Yang) writes:
- >
- >> Is "One China, One Taiwan" equivelent to TI? I think the idea of "One China,
- >> One Taiwan" is more moderate than TI. I guess you can say that most people
- >> in Taiwan do not want to reunify with China. However, it's not the same as
- >> saying that most people in Taiwan support TI.
- >
- > I would call "One China, One Taiwan" as IT (independent Taiwan). No
- > matter what it is, TI or IT, from CCP's point of view (and Mr. Hau),
- > they are all TI and they cannot be tolerated.
-
- I would be a little bit conservative on this. My estimation is 35-40%.
- However, this number encourages me to predict a referendum and an
- independence declaration before 2000.
-
- One thing needs to be noted is that after the election, Mainstream KMT
- will need some time for reintegration. Non-mainstream KMT, on the other
- hand, have no problem on reintegration for several reasons. This fact
- will impact whether Hau stays and whether KMT will be conservative or
- progressive for the next few years a lot.
-
-
- Heng-Hsin
-