Conversation with Noah Smith
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Audrey TangThe recorder is just to make sure that we can make the corrections to the transcript for 10 days, as part of the protocol. Feel free to edit away anything you don't want to publish.
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(laughter)
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Noah SmithIt's nice to know this. I just wanted to meet and, just find out what is going on in Taiwan. This is my first time here. I wrote a pretty well-read blog post about Taiwan last year.
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Noah SmithYes. I try to give my posts dramatic titles to get attention, when it's really about...If I titled that post "Americans don't pay enough attention to Taiwan," the readership would be much smaller.
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Noah SmithI've got to dramatize it. It was good. Much of that was, of course, sourced from Taiwanese people I know. Everyone said, "Why don't you go to Taiwan?" [laughs] The pandemic made it a little difficult, obviously.
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Noah SmithA couple of my friends got the gold card, and they spent a lot of the pandemic here. Very cool. I'm leaving tomorrow morning.
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Noah SmithGreat. Did anything surprise me? I was surprised at how chill it is, laid back.
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Noah SmithYeah, it's not really like Japan. Japan is very friendly, but it's also incredibly high energy. Everyone's always extremely obsessed with the details of everything. Taiwan seems much more relaxed.
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(laughter)
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Noah SmithI just came for a vacation, but I suggested to my Silicon Valley friends that they come. They came, and then some VC people started doing VC deals here. Then my other friend came. He's doing electronic sourcing. We turned into a group trip.
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Audrey TangAh. That's right, and the Gogoro charging stations counts as a reverse energy store for decentralized preparation.
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Noah SmithOf course, more bicycles, but a lot of scooters. Scooters use the bike paths, not the roads. That's very odd.
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(laughter)
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(laughter)
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Noah SmithI do feel like I'm going to be run down by scooters here sometimes. They're very good at avoiding people, but still. Eventually, luck has to run out.
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Audrey TangYes. Also e-scooters. We've got testing sites within the campuses for them. vTaiwan helped to consult to make the E-scooter Bill Amendment. I think it's already passed. It's awaiting the results from the experimental campuses before municipal governments adopts them into general regulation, but the legislature already passed that amendment.
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Noah SmithVery cool. Any other observations? Let's see. Very laid back. Many buildings in Taipei are new, but many buildings look extremely old and dilapidated. Why is this? What are these old, extremely...?
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Noah SmithRight, because the infrastructure and building materials are so similar to Japan that some time I naturally contrasted it, and then...
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Audrey TangI think it's only really taken down and rebuilt if there's a serious earthquake risk.
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John Scott MarchantThey don't really care so much about the external look of the house, but the internal...
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Audrey TangThe social pressure to make a cultural landscape, things like that, simply wasn't there. There was a little bit during the flower expo, but other than that, no.
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Noah SmithGot it. I do feel like Taiwan has extremely good skill at interior arrangement and design and that this should be exported to the world somehow. Any other observations? Not really.
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Noah SmithI didn't go to hot springs, although I want to go. I've been to lots of hot springs in Japan, but I think that Taiwan has more natural hot springs.
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Noah SmithJust outside, but I don't think that's a geologic difference. I think it's just because Japan insisted on building something over every natural hot spring and turning it into a non-natural hot spring, turning it into a bath.
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Noah SmithThey commercialized every nature spot, and that's sort of the downside of Japan, just too much construction, too much overdevelopment of a lot of natural stuff. I think Taiwan gets that right. It's a lot more greenery. I really liked that.
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Noah SmithI've met a lot of expats too. I don't speak Chinese, unfortunately. I feel very embarrassed traveling in a place where I don't speak the local language. I met some expats or sort of international people who will go back and forth. They're some interesting people, just looking at the businesses that they do. It feels like it's sort of a mecca for Asian American expats.
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Audrey TangThere's that, and then there's this whole diversity. It's beyond just tolerance, it's collaborative diversity, and people celebrate the diversity here.
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(laughter)
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Noah SmithCalifornia is all about exclusionary land ownership. It's always been, since the very beginning, the California dream is to get a plot of land, and then exclude everyone else as much as you can. This is, of course, not good. I think it was only World War Two that motivated a lot of development in California.
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Noah SmithAfter that, there was about 15 or 20 years when the momentum of that built a lot of the modern California. After that, they passed Prop 13. As you know, it limits property tax and a lot of other statutes and regulations to limit development. Now, California is the central battleground for America's struggle to build more stuff.
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Noah SmithI'm trying to think of questions that I have. I didn't necessarily expect...
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Audrey TangAfterwards, feel free to have more open conversation with John here. [laughs]
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Noah SmithOne thing that's a little sensitive to talk to people about is how worried are people about...
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Noah SmithWell, how worried are people about earthquakes? How bad are the earthquakes here? Is it like Japan?
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Audrey TangAround the turn of the century in 1999. Not as bad as Tōhoku -- without the nuclear plant situation -- but in some places almost as bad.
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Noah SmithHow many big ones? When was the last big one that knocked something down?
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John Scott MarchantThe last couple weeks. Remember, we had three or four a couple weeks ago?
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Noah SmithI've been in just one big earthquake ever. It was in Japan a long time ago.
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Audrey TangIf you'd arrived just a week earlier, I think you would have experienced three.
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(laughter)
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Audrey TangWe had an earthquake in '99, really, really bad. We, of course, still build buildings after that. It's not like we don't build buildings because of earthquakes. We've just got to build with resilience in mind.
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Noah SmithOf course, Taiwan hasn't had a war since the Nationalist occupation or whatever that's called.
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Noah SmithA million cyber attacks and, I assume, essentially all coming from China.
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Audrey TangWe know that it's foreign because foreign packets travels through submarine cables somewhere. It could be a botnet.
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Audrey TangRight now we're pretty resilient, with all those zero-days we had to deal with, hybrid cognitive warfare, you name it. So it's exactly like earthquakes.
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Noah SmithWith all this experience defending against cyberattacks, is cybersecurity a major Taiwanese export?
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Audrey TangIt is, with Trend Micro and so on. There's also a new, young generation who consistently places second in DEFCON CTF, right after the US team, of course.
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Audrey TangThere's an area that we may excel in cyber security, the semiconductor supply chain. The E187 semiconductor supply chain cybersecurity standard came from Taiwan, and we're trying to export that in the sense of mutually compatible lab...
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Noah SmithThe one about the Chinese chip exploit. There was an article. It was a big feature story. They didn't retract it. A lot of people claim that it was wrong. This was years ago when I was working at Bloomberg. I was at Bloomberg Opinion. This was at Bloomberg News.
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Noah SmithI heard everyone talking about and arguing about it, but I didn't know anything about it. Then I asked some people, but nobody really knew whether this was likely to be true or not. Bloomberg stuck by it, but then a lot of people got mad at them.
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Noah SmithI'm trying to remember. The claim was some chip that had been sourced from China had an exploit built in...
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Audrey TangYeah, I think in one of the servers used by public cloud services. It was long ago.
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Audrey TangSure. I don't know about that particular incidence for sure, but similar stories were the prompt during the Sunflower Movement in 2014 to say that, if we use PRC's so-called private sector product in our telecommunication -- at the time not 5G -- 4G infrastructure, then it cost a lot more to do system risk analysis as compared to sourcing with European counterparts.
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Noah SmithWas it coincident with the umbrella protests in Hong Kong, or was it before or after? I don't remember.
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Audrey TangIt's immediately before. Some of the people who participated in Sunflower happened to be visiting Hong Kong sharing some of the Sunflower stories when Umbrella happened.
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Noah SmithThat's interesting. I was in Hong Kong for a little while during the protests and saw some protestors.
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Noah SmithI wrote a blog post about it. One of my first blog posts I ever wrote was about that same...
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Noah SmithI knew that China was going to crack down, and I knew that the city would be really changed. Of course, I couldn't predict COVID, but I knew that something was going to happen, and the city was going to be changed. I'd never been. I'm really bad at traveling. I almost never travel.
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Noah SmithI just wanted to see what it was like while I still could. I felt it had already changed a lot. The Hong Kong that I'd seen portrayed in media as a kid in the 90s, it'd already been changed a lot.
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Audrey TangThere's a couple bookstore in Taipei that tries to snapshot that moment and transport it here, run by Hong Kong expats and with the Hong Kong community currently in Taipei. Have you been there?
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Noah SmithChina's now retroactively editing a lot of the Hong Kong cinema and stuff like that. Did you see "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once?"
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Audrey TangIt's very silly. We've got a Department of Democracy Network within moda now. Within that department, there's a division dedicated for we would call it Plurality, or web3-enabled decentralized social technology.
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Audrey TangIts Mandarin name is very similar to the movie's title, it went quite popular for a while. People kept telling me that I should hire Michelle Yeoh, the actress, to head that division.
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Noah SmithShe was good. Because one of the, small spoiler, alternate realities that her character experiences is actually just her being herself, her real self. That's one of the alternate.
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Audrey TangI read about her being a stone. The translation for that is very interesting.
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Noah SmithVery philosophical. One thing that I haven't heard much about is Hong Kong immigration to Taiwan. I know that lots of Hong Kong people are leaving. It's not a great place to live so much anymore.
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Noah SmithI'd heard that there was like a two year wait for a lot of these people to be vetted.
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Audrey TangIt depends on whether you joined by investments or by employment or things like that. It's...
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Audrey TangThere's something like whether you joined the Chinese Communist Party and worked in the Hong Kong government there, things like that...
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Noah SmithI really feel like I've been a big immigration advocate in the United States. I think like also true of Taiwan.
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Noah SmithThey get the job done. Yeah, exactly. Taiwan's, birth rate is extremely low and so of course you're going to need a lot of immigrants, right?
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Audrey TangIt's a free society. You don't have to naturalize... today. Let's talk tomorrow. [laughs]
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Audrey TangThey do. Yes. The idea is that the gold card, because it's renewable, if you renew by that point maybe we try to convince you to naturalize. Because you get to keep your original passports if you make significant contributions, like if you're a gold card holder...
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Noah SmithI'm afraid I could never make a significant contribution. I don't think blogging is significant enough.
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Audrey TangNo, I think it's very significant. There's a three-year period. Get your gold card, blog for three years and then it'll be sigifiant.
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Audrey TangThat's fine. We have 20 national languages. Pick one to learn. John here doen't speak any of them either.
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John Scott MarchantI'll just give you some perspective on it. I lived in Korea, South Korea before I came here.
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John Scott MarchantI lived in South Korea for six years. No one speaks English in South Korea.
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John Scott MarchantComing to Taiwan felt like a completely open and international society where people were speaking English and they were prepared to speak English to you. there are pros and cons with that. Because the con is that you are comfortable.
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John Scott MarchantYou never actually social pressure, there's utopia again. You're not actually forced. You learn basic, but you're not forced to do it. In Korea, you don't speak that language and you don't speak enough of it, you'll be in conflict constantly.
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Noah SmithHere is more like Texas, I feel like, which is where I am originally from.
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Noah SmithWe would play them in football every year and there would be fights between us, and our fans, and their fans would give them fist fights because they both cared about football so much. That's Odessa for me, it's Friday Nightlights.
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Noah SmithThey were more corrupt. They did a lot of crime and we didn't, so that's why they got the show about them. Because they did crime.
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Audrey TangMakes sense. So, you don't have to learn Mandarin. We have 19 other national languages, including the sign language.
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Noah SmithIncluding sign language, which I also don't speak. That just feels weird. I don't know. I feel like such a jerky American going everywhere in the world expecting people to speak my language. I just feel it's like a little imperialist, I don't know.
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Noah SmithWhen I lived in Japan, I had taken Japanese in college, but then my Japanese was still really bad. For the first year I was there, I made sure to not interact with any English speakers at all.
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Audrey TangAmong the very senior population and the junior population, Nihongo can take you very far.
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Noah SmithOh, really? Oh, yes. Went to a tea house that caters to Japanese customers. They spoke Japanese. It was very useful.
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Noah SmithYes. This comes too late. I should have come to Taiwan in the '90s, but I was a kid so I couldn't. I didn't think of this until now, but Taiwan should cultivate pop culture industry. I know there's Taiwanese pop culture industry that's domestically focused, or even focused on the sort of Chinese speaking world.
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Noah Smith...of course beyond Southeast Asia, Chinese people know Jay Chou and stuff. I really feel like South Korea has... Of course Japan succeeded by accident. It was really interesting because I interviewed someone from Kodansha, the Mongo publisher in 2014 or 2015.
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Noah SmithI was talking about cultural exports and he said, "Americans don't want to see Japanese people on screen." I said, "Are you crazy? That's all Americans want to see." their stuff got exported by accident. Whereas Korea, it was very intentional.
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Noah SmithIt was like, "Everyone's going to watch." They even have K-pop groups that are oriented toward various countries. Twice as a K-pop group with Japanese members, that's styled more like J-Pop. Whereas Black Pink is styled like hip hop. It has a Thai, a New Zealand member, and etc. They do this intentionally.
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Noah SmithIt's really interesting how they promote the Stuff. Do you know anything about that from having lived...?
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Noah SmithThen Taiwanese do this. Realistically it's going to take 10 to 15 years, so it's maybe 10 years at the shortest. It's a little late of a...
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Noah SmithAside from bubble tea, everybody knows that. Which form? See, I don't know because I'm not an entertainment industry person. If Korea had asked me for advice, I would say I don't know.
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Audrey TangThere's suggestions that maybe the web3 NFTs are it, maybe we we should just double down on that metaverse thing.
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Noah SmithOh, food is great. The thing is that food gets disassociated from the place. Then it's just...
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Noah SmithInvented by a Korean chef in the East Bay. A California roll. That's really interesting because American sushi was all invented by Koreans. Because when Korea was occupied by Japan, they wanted to eat sushi, but they couldn't get enough vinegar, and their ingredients were more stale.
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Noah SmithThey just added extra ingredients, used softer, less vinegar in the rice, and then they baked it sometimes. Of course this was just like... Japanese people would be like that's awesome. When you actually then add in the same techniques with the good ingredients, it's better than Japanese sushi. Now it's taking over.
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Noah SmithLet's see. The basics are TV, movies, video games, comics, cartoons. Those are the main...
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Noah SmithVideo games. Video games are huge. I would argue that more than anime, manga, or anything, or fashion or cosplay is the, or however you pronounce that, cosplay, is...
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Audrey Tang
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Noah SmithI would do that. I would also try to focus on something with live action. Live action includes TV, movies, and music because you actually see the person.
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Noah SmithPerformance. There some sort of thing where you see the people. The least connected is...
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Noah SmithOnly my jokes are dangerous. Noah's principle of pop cultural exports. I will just make it up. Source? "I made it up."
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Noah SmithThe more packaged and separated from the people a product is, the less it connects forward it is to the country. The least are like, for example, Sony products. I would say that probably 90 percent of Americans think Sony is an American company. Nobody even had...Which was part of the reason they named it Sony.
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Noah SmithThey thought Americans would want to buy domestic products and so they knew it. Manufacturing products than food, then things like video games and comics that depict stylized representations of a culture and a people.
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Noah SmithThen music, TV, and movies are the most, because when Americans watch "Parasite" the Korean movie. which I thought started good but got bad at the end.
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Noah SmithWith Parasite, you see Korean people living in Korean ways, and then suddenly everyone in America wants to go to Korea. Hopefully they don't expect Squid Game.
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Noah SmithI don't want anyone to go to Korea expecting to play Squid Game. It's not good. I guess you see the principle. Video games, comics, and cartoons are in the middle. Good but not the very best because they don't show the people themselves. What's the Taiwanese TV and movie scene like?
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Audrey TangPretty good. There's also some public TV projects that collaborating with Netflix and the like. The thing is that, as you mentioned, the Koreans made it a national project to convey this whole cultural diplomacy thing. Every art form, pop culture form, links back to this Korean tourism or Korean cultural image thing.
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Audrey TangIn Taiwan, we're only seriously starting to coordinate that with the forward-looking infrastructure budget, starting in 2016. That's when "The Worlds Between Us" were made and so on. Actually, Ya-chi may be more qualified...
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(laughter)
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Ya-chi LeiI follow manga and anime, and because of manga and anime I learned of Japanese. I think maybe now real people could also transfer culture to the other countries involved, to the whole cultural life and lifestyle foods.
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Noah SmithAmericans have no consciousness of Taiwan at all. They have some consciousness of China, but not much, because China produces very few pop cultural things. Hong Kong, they have some because of Hong Kong movies, but that was only a short era.
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Noah SmithJapan a lot and Korea a lot, but then I think Taiwan has a real opportunity here. China's closed itself off. Xi Jinping is not making TV shows for Americans to watch, and he doesn't care. In terms of Chinese-inspired things, and now Hong Kong is not going to make it anymore either...
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Noah SmithMaybe they can learn some of the other 19. [laughs] That's a good question. It's startling how little cultural product China's created that resonates with not just American but people from various countries. Japanese people I know don't know any Chinese products. It's not because of some sort of national enmity. Otherwise, they wouldn't like Korea stuff so much.
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Noah SmithLook, Xi Jinping has been cracking down on TV idols, video games. I feel this goes beyond simple national promotion or whatever. It goes to a very deep value of self-expression and being who you want. Pop culture, a lot of it's created by corporations and industry, but through fandom and through indie creation and through things like that, people can self-express using the pop cultural stuff.
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Noah SmithNow, Xi is telling people, "You can't be fans of these TV idols. We're just cracking down all the fandoms."
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Noah SmithIf they're effeminate, right. He's like, "No, you gotta be manly men." You've got to forgive him. He grew up in a cave, so he's a caveman.
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Noah SmithStill alive. Here's the most important blog post I wrote and probably the blog post I'm most proud of that I've ever written or the thing I'm most proud of that I have ever written was about weebs, W-E-E-B-S. Can you call up that blog post? If you speak Japanese, you might recognize the quote at the beginning...
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Noah Smith...which is from a cartoon, and you may get the pun. Weeb culture is not Japanese. Japan has geeks who love fantasy stuff, but they're just like American geeks who love Star Wars or Dungeons and Dragons. It's the same thing. Weebs are different.
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Noah SmithWeebs have used Japanese cultural products to create for themselves a subculture that fixes many of the problems that Americans have. I would say, if I have any insight to offer about what sort of pop cultural products offerings will work in America, it's contained in that blog post.
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Noah SmithThose are my thoughts on what matters in terms of how it works. I didn't do a follow up on K-Pop fans, but I think that you can easily see the extension of the same principles that I wrote about too, like K-pop.
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Noah SmithIf I had one sort of policy suggestion to come and deliver it, is that. The pop culture.
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Noah SmithI also wrote a post about cultural superpower. What makes a cultural superpower. Just about how stuff I already said, like Korea demands.
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Noah SmithI would say that's the only blog post that you should read for new insights on top of what I've already said is the one about weebs. It's a pretty short blog post, but I spent a day and a half writing it. Normally a blog post will take two hours. This one took more like 12.
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Noah SmithI had to think very carefully about what I wanted to say. Anyway, those are my thoughts on policy stuff.
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Noah SmithI'm not one of the top substackers, but I'm slowly linearly increasing linear growth. I don't have to have a real job anymore, so that's useful. I can blog in my pajamas.
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Noah SmithYeah. I hope to eventually make it into the top tier of sub stackers on...Some of the top sub stackers I really like and some of the top sub stackers are people that I don't really like. The only solution is to be more popular.
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Noah SmithAnyway, those are my pets. I just sit around, blogging in my pajamas with the rabbits. That's fine.
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Noah SmithNo. They're like cats. They would get freaked out by traveling. Then no. They're at a hotel. Do you have any pets?
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Noah SmithOh, nice. I always had dogs and cats, but then I decided to try something different this time. Do you have any questions for me? I just speechified, I don't know.
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Noah SmithI have more thoughts about pop culture stuff. Japan had a project called Cool Japan. It was a disaster. Had a complete failure. You know why?
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Noah SmithFirst, the approximate cause, the immediate cause of the disaster was that all this program did was give money to big advertising agencies. They had some capital which they thought these big companies must have the expertise in selling stuff.
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Noah SmithThose companies had no idea how to sell Japanese stuff overseas, because they'd never tried. They had no expertise. They didn't know what overseas people liked. They just ate the money and that was it. Then finally, after many years of failure, the Cool Japan program shifted to partnering with Netflix.
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Noah SmithThen they got a slight victory. Then meanwhile, the Japanese cultural products succeeded completely accidentally. Because what they didn't do was follow the demand. They didn't try stuff and see what the foreigners liked. Companies like Nintendo did.
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Noah SmithThey made some games and they saw what the foreigners liked and wasn't always what Japanese people liked. For example, Japanese people would prefer Dragon Quest -- Dragon Ball, and then Americans would prefer Final Fantasy.
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Noah SmithOh yeah. Final Fantasy Seven was the most popular game in America in the 1990s. It was just explosion, huge explosion. I would say that game introduced a lot of people to Japanese culture in America who would never, ever watch anime, read manga, or stuff like that. Final Fantasy sell.
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Noah SmithHaving individual companies doing their best entrepreneurially to search for things that Americans like. I think K Pop did this too. Of course the government had its strategy, whatever, but the production studios thought, "How can we sell this to other people?"
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Noah SmithFor a long time they failed because for a long time those production studios tried to do stuff that was very like J-Pop. J-Pop just wasn't selling much. Then they thought, "OK, so well let's try a different cat then." Some started experimenting with more hip hop sounds, and that turned out to be much more successful.
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Noah SmithIt was because they experimented and they followed what people liked. In terms of movies, Korea produced a lot of movies about revenge, murder, death, and killing. Boring. Then, those didn't really become popular in America. Americans weren't interested in that.
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Noah SmithThen some Korean filmmakers made movies about inequality. Americans went, "Whoa, we want to see." Which is ironic because Korea is much more equal than America. Then Americans wanted to see this movie about stuff about inequality because they felt like this was a problem in their own society. That was a thing.
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Noah SmithIn terms of Korean dramas, those haven't caught on in America, but those have caught on in other countries. Most countries want to watch Korean dramas. Anyway, there was a lot of experimentation. I'm not actually sure how much the government of Korea actually helped.
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Noah SmithCompanies intentionally planned it, whereas in Japan, even the companies didn't plan it. The video game companies did, but then the publishers and cartoon, like animation studios did not plan their appeal. For decades you technically had to pirate them. You had to steal it because the companies wouldn't sell it.
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Noah SmithOnly recently with Netflix have they realized that there's an opportunity there, but then there must be some way to prod... I assume there are entertainment companies that exist.
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Noah SmithThere must be some way to prod them, incentivize them to start looking for overseas opportunities. Some sort of policy subsidizing cultural exports or something. I don't know exactly what the word.
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Audrey TangShe was, I think, head of international strategy in the Taiwan Creative Content Agency, the government-supported institution in charge of this.
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Audrey TangYeah. She knows all the connections and entertainment studios and so on, to try to -- not directly control because we don't do top-down controls anymore -- but incentivize, as I said, them to connect with international market.
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Noah SmithOh, I see. That's my thought. Pop culture is key. Then of course that leads to tourism and to immigration or pseudo immigration where expats... Immigration from rich countries to other rich countries is not as common, because, permanent immigration is often for economic reasons. Or for Hong Kong type of security, political stuff.
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Noah SmithOften people will... I spent four years in Japan and I came back, but see that's a common thing. Some people did that during the pandemic. I've been meeting a bunch of expats. That can be a way for people to get an attachment to another country. That's right.
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Noah SmithThese sort of pop cultural dreams are one reason why people do that. Now there's all these Americans who want to go live in Korea for a while, because K-Pop has given them this...
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Noah Smith...unrealistic dream of Korea. It's not going to quite live up to what they...There was this story, I've been tweeting a whole bunch of these, but I don't keep them correlated. Maybe I should, so that whenever I meet anyone, I can just pull out like 500 links on whatever topic.
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Noah SmithThere was a story about these British women who after watching Korean dramas and getting into K-Pop, decided they wanted to date Korean men. They went to Korea and they found the men were much more sexist than portrayed in the dramas. They were angry, but they tried.
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Noah SmithThey had that dream in mind. I just thought that was funny because British women were like, "Oh, Korea. The land of romance." It's a little hardass. It's similar to Texas because they really like beef, alcohol, Jesus, fighting and yeah, it's just...
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Noah SmithToday, we have a very natural connection. In fact, in my hometown, an ESL teacher said that Korean was spoken more commonly than Spanish in his ESL class in Texas.
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Noah SmithSo many Korean people moved to my hometown. Now, we have a bulgogi burgers, but people don't know that's Korean. I was at some burger restaurant in Texas, in my hometown, and these two redneck guys were in there. "Y'all wanna get a bulgogi burger? Ah, it's pretty good."
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Noah SmithI said, "Oh, yeah. Do you know where bulgogi's from?" He's like, "Well, I don't know. It's just pretty good beef." [laughs] He had no idea it was Korea. He's like, "Bulgogi, what's that?" Food can get divorced from stuff. It took me many, many years to learn boba was a Taiwanese thing.
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Noah SmithAlso, one thing that was inhibiting this process was that I would say most Taiwanese Americans, until very recently, had called themselves ethnically Chinese. Their parents taught them that they're ethnically Chinese. My guess is that probably many of those are descended from the later wave of people.
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Audrey TangMaybe. Also there's this tendency to call Mandarin "Chinese". Instead of saying we speak Mandarin and write traditional Han characters, people would say that they speak "Traditional Chinese". Then it sounds very Chinese. [laughs]
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Noah SmithHold on, people from Egypt speak Arabic, but they don't call it Egyptian.
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Noah SmithPeople from Venezuela speak Spanish, but they don't call it Venezuelan. They just call it Spanish. Taiwanese Americans, children of people who immigrated from Taiwan to the United States would call themselves Chinese instead of Taiwanese, until recently. Now, they're starting to call themselves Taiwanese.
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Audrey TangYes. That's because there's a cultural layer that covers basically the Sinophone or even the Sinosphere, like people writing Kanji, literally the "Han characters". Anyone who uses the Han ideographic writing system could have called themselves Chinese... That's the thing. Because it used to be that the ideographic characters were used to make communication possible between seven or so very distinct languages.
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Audrey TangThe ideographic characters nowadays, of course people call it kanji or "Han characters" now, but for the longest time people would just call them "Chinese characters".
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Audrey TangTechnically, it means a dynasty and groups that identify with the dynasty's culture. You can also call a cultural group "Tang" or whatever. These are dynasty names.
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Noah SmithThe original slur for white people in Japan -- where white people started showing up from Europe in Japan -- the ethnic slur was Ketō which translates to hairy Chinese people.
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Audrey TangNowadays the term "Chinese" has been re-politicized, that problem should solves itself real quickly.
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Noah SmithThat doesn't automatically mean people like me who have consciousness of Taiwan. I think that there's...
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Audrey TangGold cards. We discussed here actually quite recently because we're a new ministry. We may get to set -- if we want -- our gold card policies.
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Audrey TangBasically the idea is that, for example, the Ministry of Economic Affairs will look at your income level. Once you reach a certain income level, they grant you a gold card.
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Audrey TangThe National Science and Technology Council will hand you a gold card if you make research contributions, or they decided that running a startup counts as related to research, so they also hand out gold cards for successful entrepreneurs.
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Audrey TangBetween these two, now for moda, what kind of digital nomad should we hand gold cards to?
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Noah SmithI was a digital nomad in 2015. I heard that Taiwan has a program similar to Israel's Birthright program. What is it called?
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Noah SmithIsrael tries to recruit every Jewish person in the world to become Israeli. To this end, they provide free vacations for young people on which they...
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Noah SmithFree love. This is the only country I've been to recently where I still see the word love on advertisements. Unique in that. Everyone else has moved on to hate.
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(laughter)
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Audrey TangYes, of course. Instead of regulating hate speech, we would promote love speech.
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Audrey TangWe'll change the Twitter like button -- which is heart-shaped -- into love.
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(laughter)
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(laughter)
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Noah SmithMaybe. We'll see. I can only hope that Musk will turn it around instead of simply buying it and then ignoring it, which I think is probably more likely. I hope that he transforms it in some way so that it's not just a constant hate fest.
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Noah SmithRight now, Twitter is a video game of hatred. It's like you get points, likes and retweets, for effectively hating people. That's what it is. It wouldn't take that much of an algorithmic change to change it. It's just a lot of people to disable quote tweets.
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Noah SmithMake it so dunks don't work and then you won't get all this attention for hate. You'll still have some. You can bias it toward a positive interaction. They don't because their business model is hate.
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Noah SmithThe people who work there are not creative at all. Trust me. I know them. They don't have any idea for how to create an alternate business model for this thing. They accidentally discovered the hatred business model.
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Noah SmithMy friend is the person who designed the retweet button, Chris Wetherell. I was a big fan of his band when I was in college and would always go see their shows. He designed the retweet button. Now, he feels regret for the rest of his life. He feels like he unleashed this hate on the world.
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Noah SmithYeah. It was the nicest person I've ever met created the hate by accident. He had no idea that that's what would happen. They just stumbled on it. Once they saw, they could change it. They weren't creative enough to or bold enough to switch to a different business model than hatred. Maybe Elon will do that. I should send Elon this transcript.
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Noah SmithI don't think I have any connection with Elon to send it to. I hope he sees it.
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Noah SmithCan I publish this transcript as a blog post? I probably won't, but could I?
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Audrey TangIt's Creative Commons Zero, no copyright reserved. Do whatever. We say at most 10 days, but if you take just a couple days to finish editing, then feel free to tell us to publish sooner. Then you can put however you want.
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Noah SmithIf you think about what you're going to say, you don't need to make edits.
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Audrey TangI don't think we talk anything that is trade secret or confidential. No.
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Noah SmithNot today. That's right. Next time. Love boat for everyone. That's the best idea ever.
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Noah SmithSeason of love. Wait, how does the Love Boat actually work? Is it actually a boat. Is there a boat people go on like a cruise or something? I don't know about this program at all...
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Noah SmithYes. Because when you really think about what the world is dividing into political blocks. In World War I, the political blocks didn't really stand for different things. At least at first, Woodrow Wilson pretended they did, but really like Germany, Britain, and France.
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Noah SmithThese countries were not that different, in terms of values, they didn't really think about values. Then by World War II, people really defined the struggle as a struggle of values. They dramatically exaggerated how different how those values were.
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Noah SmithIt still held power and people still fought for it on both sides. Now we're seeing, unfortunately, I never wanted to see this again in my life, but we're seeing another era of great power conflict and I hope that would never return.
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Noah SmithYou're in the epicenter. Yes. It's really bad. There's only bad guys and worse guys when it comes to great power conflict, there's no real good guys. The last couple of times we had great power conflict, the less bad guys won. The guys who were less bad won the conflict. That shaped the destiny of the world.
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Noah SmithThe fact that the allies won World War II and even though the allies have plenty of bad guys on our side, including Mao, I mean he was on our side.
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Noah SmithThe fact that the allies won and that those that had the most influence over the allies and demanded that like the British Empire give up its possessions and wanted universal declaration of human rights, United Nations and all this stuff, had a real important effect that shaped the world for the next whatever.
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Noah SmithWe had a more minor great power conflict in the '70s and '80s with the Cold War. That also I think, resolved fairly well. I'm happy it did anyway.
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Noah SmithWe are the less bad...Yes. The less wrong. The less bad side. We can name all the bad things FDR did. You can rattle them off. Not to mention our allies. The many did bad things. Like in Taiwan, Taiwan has a history of some bad things.
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Noah SmithI met some people, some historians who were just telling me about the history of uprisings that were put down by the KMT and all the stuff back in the...
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Noah SmithYeah. Anyway, we're on the less bad side I hope. We've got to define what that means. Like what values? It's going to be exaggerated and partially hyped and part like...You see the videos of the Ukrainian soldiers rescuing kittens and stuff like that. They're not.
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Noah SmithYeah. OK. Maybe somebody did that, but they're not angels. They're soldiers. Then the Russian soldiers, you see the people who do raping and murdering and stuff like that, but they're not all like that. Some of the Russian soldiers are OK, but ultimately there is a values difference that makes some difference, even if it's not an absolute difference.
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Noah SmithIt's not Star Wars, but there is some real difference there. I think that the first person I saw who was able to articulate what these different sides stood for was you.
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Noah SmithYou're the first person I ever saw articulate, the divide of values between the two sides that was formed in a way that made sense to me.
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Audrey TangYeah. It dawned on me in 2014 during Sunflowers. Not just the PRC and Taiwan, everywhere has contracted the same retweet-button virus. That at the same time actually led to the Arab Spring and all that.
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Audrey TangThe PRC at the time had some civil society, especially online. They decided that this is too toxic, that this virus is like SARS, only worse. They clamped down and remained in lockdown for social media, putting in more budget than their military budget to this day.
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Audrey TangWhereas we discovered that, maybe we can find a cure, or vaccinate against this kind of virus of the mind, and then we went on bright side, or at least the brighter side.
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Noah SmithYou got to vaccinate people against the hate. I'm very worried this time for two reasons. Basically, got two reasons. Number one, China is really big.
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Noah SmithIt is much bigger than the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan, any of these guys.
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Noah SmithBigger than the US. Almost half the world. Well, a fifth, but then like it's a lot. Manufacturing-wise...
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John Scott MarchantActually, I'm going to have to stand on the bad side right now. I am very bad by nature, but Audrey, you need to get moving...
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Noah SmithAnyway, I'm worried, but I think you've managed to articulate some principles that our side could say it stands for.
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Audrey TangYeah, so figure it out with John and we'll turn that into our strategy whitepaper, or something.
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Data Source: Ministry of Digital Affairs
Create Date: 2022-10-28
Update Date: 2024-03-27