Taiwan Tati Cultural and Educational Foundation

 
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

Taipei Times


Title Filter     Display # 
# Article Title Author Hits
81 Deepfakes pose risk for the election Weber Lai 賴祥蔚 67
82 Nothing is deep-green about Ko Lai Yen-cheng 賴彥丞 70
83 Countering CCP cognitive warfare Taipei Times Editorial 73
84 Young voters must learn to discern Yang Tsung-li楊宗澧 64
85 Independence is already ‘status quo’ Taipei Times 65
86 KMT miscalculates again Taipei Times Editorial 75
87 Lessons for Taiwan: Israeli Social Resilience During War Guermantes Lailari 58
88 Jaw and Wu could be liabilities Taipei Times Editorial 70
89 Fight with ballots, not bullets Lee Hsiao-feng 李筱峰 88
90 Ko Wen-je is not trustworthy Lai Yen-cheng 賴彥丞 69
91 Avoiding an at-large Han speaker Yeh Chi-cheng 葉其政 66
92 KMT, Ma, Hou need history lesson Jan Nilsson 64
93 Taipei, Tokyo should stand together Tommy Lin 林逸民 73
94 Remembering a Taiwan gentleman Lin Jin-jia 林進嘉 86
95 US deterrence policy and Taiwan Daniel McIntyre 馬恕聃 78
96 BeiDou a threat to national security Taipei Times Editorial 106
97 My regret in voting for Ko Wen-je Lin Jin-jia 林進嘉 79
98 ‘Sixty percent want change’ a myth Chen Ching-kuen 86
99 TPP-KMT union raises China issues Linus Chiou 邱士哲 97
100 Repatriated indigenous bones and justice Chang Lien 張璉 105
 
Page 5 of 139

Newsflash

Suicide is usually a private, impulsive response to extreme personal stress or anxiety, and is carried out, in most cases, in the confines of a person’s home or office, far from the glare of photographers and news reporters.

However, for more than 100 Tibetans who have committed suicide in public by dousing themselves with gasoline and setting themselves on fire — “self-immolation” is the Western media’s polite word for this — such actions were intentionally public and carry an important message.