The pages of this newspaper and other liberal publications are filled with  beautiful slogans about the need to “protect” Taiwan based on lofty principles  such as democracy, justice and human rights. Commendable as these prescriptions  may be, in and of themselves they are impotent in the face of the present  challenges confronting this nation.
Although the intentions of the  opinion writers who propose such measures are undoubtedly honorable, their prose  often lacks the rigorous intellectual inquisitiveness that would give them true  meaning, leaving us with little more than a constellation of presumptuous  abstracts. In fact, more often than not, the ideals they espouse are at best a  means to contrast what the authors are trying to protect with the entity that  poses the most formidable threat to it — China. 
However, using words to  describe what China is not is hardly the kind of call to action that will ward  off the threat to Taiwan’s continued existence.
An understanding of the  opponent makes this abundantly clear. Sloganeering doesn’t gain traction with  the Chinese Communist Party and the politicians and business leaders in Taipei  who seem inclined to be co-opted by the Chinese. It doesn’t move, sway or  frighten them. 
One should be careful, though, not to confuse slogans  with “soft power,” the term that seeks to explain a state’s ability to bring  about behavioral change in other states by virtue of the attractiveness of its  social mores and cultural practices. Soft power, if applied wisely and with  clear purpose, can effect change that is beneficial to the state exercising  it.
The problem with ideals like justice and democracy is that they are  merely formless concepts existing in nature; without direction and willful  purpose, they are neither here nor there. Absent a stated objective, they cannot  constitute “soft power” and will fail to achieve any effect whatsoever.  Therefore, what is required is not so much a parroting of Western liberal ideals  — which Beijing sheds like water off a duck’s back — but rather an action plan  with clearly stated objectives that can translate into concrete acts — both  pre-emptive and reactive — of “soft” and, in needed, “hard” power.
For  obvious reasons, this prescription requires a lot more homework, since looking  for solutions in the real world confronts us to all kinds of practicalities.  However, if we are to achieve our objective of saving Taiwan from what is  quickly shaping into an ominous fate, this is what is required of us. Anything  short of this is intellectual sloth, a facile churning out of concepts that  ultimately does nothing more than deresponsibilize the author while stating  which side of the divide he or she sits on.
Ironically, the abundance of  vague concepts that have been repeated ad nauseam in the past few years has also  been self-defeating, as it has served to turn Taiwan into an abstract idea  abroad, rather than an actual plot of land with 23 million people inhabiting it.  In many ways, this is exactly what Beijing has sought, and the many academics  who care and write about Taiwan should be horrified that their work is making  this objective more achievable for the communists.
Abstractions are easy  to ignore, and if Taiwan’s would-be defenders paint the issues as such to their  audience, then it will be immensely difficult to convince the rest of the world  to care about Taiwan’s fate, let alone take action to ensure a positive  outcome.
Nothing gets resolved in the ivory tower, especially in a  situation like Taiwan’s where the “other side” plays by different rules, rules  that are solidly grounded in reality and which come in the form of investments,  trade agreements, military deployments, backroom negotiations and so on. We can  scream “human rights” and “democracy” all we want. We can even shake in anger  when our constitutional “right” to hold a referendum on the Economic Cooperation  Framework Agreement (ECFA) is yet again denied by the authorities. However,  without concrete acts, those phantoms will be as useful as brandishing a flower  at the cold, crushing tracks of tanks storming the beaches.
After years  of deceiving ourselves into thinking that China’s opening to the rest of the  world would liberalize and democratize it by dint of exposure to Western ideals,  we should know better than to expect that the small army of academics who would  defend Taiwan against the illiberal behemoth can be any more  successful.
Writing in 1839, Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s adage “the pen is  mightier than the sword” may have rung nicely in his play, but in reality if no  one’s reading, the pen is nothing but a scribble seen by no one, wasting at the  bottom of a dark well.
Let us descend to Earth from our towering ideals  and meet the challenge that awaits us with our feet firmly planted on the  ground, and our minds filled with action.
J. Michael Cole is  deputy news editor at the Taipei Times.
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2010/08/16
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