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回复:回复:回复:回复:回复:我担心仗一开打,中共土崩瓦解,军队倒戈,国家分裂,百姓受苦
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回复:回复:回复:回复:我担心仗一开打,中共土崩瓦解,军队倒戈,国家分裂,百姓受苦
那就请您去国内的某些网站看看台湾的贴子,猫眼看人你知道吧,海南省政府办的,流量非常大,里面一边倒地支持台湾,比我的思想激进多了。
不要以为你了解中国老百姓,甚至中共你都不会了解,你了解的是中共的教科书而已。
白费劲!
知道Daily Mail吧?这家媒体两个月前明确的指出台湾政客在公众面前的打斗场面是事先安排好的,目的无非是拉选票而已,这难道不是欺骗选民,愚弄大众吗?
不知道将政客打斗作为台湾民主标志的一些人怎么想?
Politician punch-ups in Taiwan are 'staged to make MPs look tough'[/FONT]
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages ... amp;in_page_id=1811
For years TV networks around the world have broadcast furious brawls from inside the Taiwan parliament, with fists and chairs being thrown and MPs crashing to the ground.
It is almost as good as TV wrestling bouts, but of course, we all know that those sporting events are well rehearsed beforehand. The Taiwanese punch-ups are for real - or so we've all been led to believe.
But it was revealed yesterday that the fights are as fake as those brutal wrestling matches.
Reports from the Taiwanese capital, Taipei, yesterday quoted legislators and political observers as admitting that the televised fights are staged acts, planned in advance to generate media attention and garner favour with voters who like to see their MPs fighting for all their worth on tough issues.
The brawls are so well planned, it is claimed, that MPs have even called up one another to ensure they wear sports shoes ahead of their choreographed clashes. And when it's all over, after the pulled punches have been delivered and the broken chairs removed, they all get together for a merry drink.
Admitting that the fights were a fraud, Nationalist Party legislator Miss Joanna Lei said: 'It's staged for media coverage. They have a strategy sessions, like a war plan.' During the latest televised brawl earlier this month no less than 40 MPs blocked the speaker from his podium to prevent a vote on changing the central Election Commission.
Earlier this year 50 MPs who wanted to stop the speaker from accessing his podium staged a brawl that lasted for an incredible four hours.
A microphone was ripped out and thrown across the chambers and shoes were thrown at the speaker. The speaker never made it to his chair. But sometimes even the most well-rehearsed fight scenes can have their mishaps. In 2005 an MP needed stitches after he was accidentally struck by a mobile phone.
'All they are trying to do is steal the spotlight,' said People First Party MP Lee Hung-chun.
'This shouldn't be happening, of course. Parliament should be a sacred and noble place.'
http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/05_01/taiwan170507_468x333.jpg
http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/05_01/Videograb170507_468x296.jpg |
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