About the Blogmaster
Tim Maddog was abducted by aliens several years ago and is now secretly blogging from an island where even the domestic media doesn't know its name.
Before his abduction he helped to create The Sedition Commission, actively opposed an infamous racist political candidate, hosted his very own weekly radio show (where he was threatened by backers of the aforementioned candidate), and fought the College Republicans singlehandedly. During the 1980s and 90s he published the 'zine Vital Information.
Tim Maddog is an atheist, a vegetarian, a non-drinker, and a bicyclist. If you don't use your rear view mirror when driving alongside him, he will rip it off of your car with his bare hands. If you're an extra-large uniformed soldier, and you crash your motorcycle into him, be prepared for an ass-whoopin'. He's a Maddog! On the other hand, if you smile at him, he'll smile back at you. (See more on my Blogger profile)
The name of the rap?
The name of this blog comes from the title of a rap done by Tim Maddog on The Sedition Commission's An Ambient Boot to the Head. Listen to it online here.
Maddog Quotes
* Question everything -- especially this.
* My race is human. What's yours?
* They cannot control us!
* Part of the real secret is that "us" includes you.
* Ignorance is bliss, and I'm pissed.
* I only eat live meat.
* Everything in moderation -- even moderation itself. (...though I'm apparently not the first to have said it.)
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My Taiwan shitlist
Be careful with these motherfuckers who disguise themselves as "journalists." They're armed with memes like "renegade province" and aren't afraid to use them. If any of 'em ever see me, they'd better get on the other side of the fucking street.
Why do they hate Taiwan?
- Mike "I want my KMT" Chinoy
- William "Bulletgate" Pesek, Jr.
- Keith "Dime Novel" Bradsher
- Bevin "Anti-War (except when it comes to Taiwan)" Chu
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"Pay close attention to that man behind the curtain!"
Tuesday, September 02, 2008
Photos and video from the August 30 anti-Ma rally
The decent ones, anyway
There are some images here that already appeared in my previous post, but here are the rest of my best shots from the 830 "Hundred Days' Roar" rally (830百日怒吼全民站出). Video of the event is at the bottom of this post.
By request
All of the photos in this section are of people who specifically asked to have their pictures taken so that their message could be seen by even more people.
This whole group stopped for my camera and only moved again until I waved them on so I could shoot some video of them marching.
They seem to have something they want the world to know:
"We aren't Chinese, no matter how times certain people try to say we are."
(Click to enlarge)
''Taiwan,'' not ''China, Taiwan''
(Click to enlarge)
Hello from the Taiwan Republic
(Click to enlarge)
Another member of the 908 Taiwan Republic campaign
(Click to enlarge)
This guy stood in front of my camera and struck a pose, so I pressed the shutter.
(Click to enlarge)
In poetic language, the sign says
"Horrible government, step the fuck down"
(Click to enlarge)
A man gives my presence at the rally a thumbs up
(Click to enlarge)
Another man gives my presence an enthusiastic thumbs up
(Click to enlarge)
It says "Taiwan Republic"
(Click to enlarge)
A proud Taiwanese woman takes her message to thePresidential Office office of Mr. Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) along with somewhere between 100,000 and 300,000 other people.
(Click to enlarge)
Two guys in the back raise their black signs high. The signs say
"Ma takes office, and right away, we can barely survive!"
(Click to enlarge)
Grab bag
Here are a bunch more photos of all kinds of things: people, signs, flags, hats, banners, vehicles, chains, tents, buildings, shirts, bigwigs, questionable food products, and more.
A proposed Taiwan flag flies in front of the 228 Memorial
(Click to enlarge)
2 ladies with hats reading "TAIWAN my country"
(Click to enlarge)
The sign says, "Taiwan is not part of China."
The shirt says "One China, One Taiwan."
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwanese Independence banner
Hey, it's the status quo!
(Click to enlarge)
Young guys with gongs
(Click to enlarge)
The cry of a country enslaved
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwanan bloggers were there
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwan, not Chinese Taipei
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwan, not China, Taiwan
(Click to enlarge)
TAIWAN is not part of China
(Click to enlarge)
TAIWAN is not part of China
(Click to enlarge)
Mr. Ma's empty office
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwan GO!GO!GO!
(Click to enlarge)
Prices of commodities are rising in Taiwan, even when they're decreasing internationally.
Mr. Ma, is it a "mission: impossible" for you to do something about that?
(Click to enlarge)
Sovereignty, livelihood, and sunshine laws: three basic things desired by the Taiwanese people
(Click to enlarge)
Mr. Ma, stop betraying Taiwan
(Click to enlarge)
Ma Ying-jeou, gimme back my cow!
馬英九還我牛!
(Click to enlarge)
"Ma Ying-Jeou is quisling, Resign now!"
is what it says, I think.
(Click to enlarge)
"We want sunshine!" --
a request for laws to prevent corruption
(Click to enlarge)
It is NOT OKAY to bash TAIWAN
(Click to enlarge)
The road alongside NTU Hospital (台大醫院) was packed with people!
(Click to enlarge)
"TAIWAN" in decorative lettering on the back of someone's shirt
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwanese of all ages know that the TAIEX immediately dropped below 7,000 points when Ma took office.
and they remember his empty promises that it would go above 10,000 -- or even 20,000.
(Click to enlarge)
DPP chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) and Ker Chien-ming (柯建銘) lead a large group of marchers.
(They're all the way to the left of the image.)
(Click to enlarge)
Taipei Mitsukoshi building at twilight
(Click to enlarge)
Jingfumen (景福門)
(Click to enlarge)
Anti-Annexation (反併吞)
(Click to enlarge)
In 1969, it was the brown acid...
In 2008, don't eat the Taike Doritos!
(WTF were they thinking?!)
(Seen at a 7-Eleven in the Taipei Train Station on my way back home)
(Click to enlarge)
And then there was video
What? The pictures weren't enough? Okay. Here are some scenes I recorded near the 228 Peace Park, in front of National Taiwan University Hospital, and on Ketagalan Boulevard near Jingfumen (景福門):
4:29 YouTube video: "830 anti-Ma Rally, Taipei, Taiwan"
What to watch for:
0:05 - 0:34 - At the corner of Xiangyang Road (襄陽路) and Gongyuan Road (公園路), marchers have already started passing. Police are directing traffic away from the parade route. I had just arrived in Taipei via the HSR and had walked directly to this spot.
0:35 - 0:52 - Further south on Gongyuan Road, larger groups pass the camera chanting 馬英九下台! ("Ma Ying-jeou, step down!")
0:53 - 0:55 - Two young ladies in green "908 Taiwan Republic" vests display the Victory/Peace sign.
1:00 - 1:29 - Banging on pots, accompanied by a very Taiwanese singing style
1:30 - Two beeps at the camera with a compressed-air horn
1:43 - 1:49 - A man with a horse on a stick, representing Ma Ying-jeou (whose family name means "horse") strikes poses and shows me the two sides of his sign. I can't make out the first side, but the second side says 馬上失足, or "Ma gets elected, immediately loses footing."
1:50 - 1:58 - A man with a farmer's hat says to me in English, "Hello, hello. Thank you, thank you. Thank you." Then he shakes my hand -- the one that's strapped to the camera -- and I somehow maintain a fairly steady shot.
2:09 - 2:25 - A sound truck drives by playing a pro-Taiwan song with a nice melody and a bit of an island/reggae beat.
2:26 - 2:32 - A dog on a bicycle!
2:33 - 2:44 - This very energetic group stopped so I could record them, then moved on with a very Taiwanese "Thank you very much-y!" Another man in the group adds (in English), "Taiwan number one!"
2:45 - 2:53 - Both sides of Zhongshan South Road alongside National Taiwan University Hospital are packed with people as are the sidewalks -- all the way down to the Jingfu Gate.
2:54 - 3:10 - A Taiwan flag in front of the 228 Monument with the rhythmic beating of a pot in the background. This scene is slightly out of chronological order, and it wasn't actually that dark.
3:12 - 3:23 - Looking toward the main stage on Ketagalan Boulevard. I was closer to Jingfu Gate than I was to the stage.
3:24 - 3:52 - The crowd sings a Taiwan favorite, "She [Taiwan] is Our Baby."
3:53 - 4:29 - Credits roll over a longer audio clip of the song played earlier by the sound truck. YouTube chops off the last three seconds of my audio.
That's all I've got.
Expressive impressions: Taiwan, 台灣, Ma Ying-jeou, 馬英九, China, 中國, protest, 抗議
Cross-posted at Taiwan Matters!
There are some images here that already appeared in my previous post, but here are the rest of my best shots from the 830 "Hundred Days' Roar" rally (830百日怒吼全民站出). Video of the event is at the bottom of this post.
By request
All of the photos in this section are of people who specifically asked to have their pictures taken so that their message could be seen by even more people.
This whole group stopped for my camera and only moved again until I waved them on so I could shoot some video of them marching.
They seem to have something they want the world to know:
"We aren't Chinese, no matter how times certain people try to say we are."
(Click to enlarge)
''Taiwan,'' not ''China, Taiwan''
(Click to enlarge)
Hello from the Taiwan Republic
(Click to enlarge)
Another member of the 908 Taiwan Republic campaign
(Click to enlarge)
This guy stood in front of my camera and struck a pose, so I pressed the shutter.
(Click to enlarge)
In poetic language, the sign says
"Horrible government, step the fuck down"
(Click to enlarge)
A man gives my presence at the rally a thumbs up
(Click to enlarge)
Another man gives my presence an enthusiastic thumbs up
(Click to enlarge)
It says "Taiwan Republic"
(Click to enlarge)
A proud Taiwanese woman takes her message to the
(Click to enlarge)
Two guys in the back raise their black signs high. The signs say
"Ma takes office, and right away, we can barely survive!"
(Click to enlarge)
Grab bag
Here are a bunch more photos of all kinds of things: people, signs, flags, hats, banners, vehicles, chains, tents, buildings, shirts, bigwigs, questionable food products, and more.
A proposed Taiwan flag flies in front of the 228 Memorial
(Click to enlarge)
2 ladies with hats reading "TAIWAN my country"
(Click to enlarge)
The sign says, "Taiwan is not part of China."
The shirt says "One China, One Taiwan."
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwanese Independence banner
Hey, it's the status quo!
(Click to enlarge)
Young guys with gongs
(Click to enlarge)
The cry of a country enslaved
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwanan bloggers were there
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwan, not Chinese Taipei
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwan, not China, Taiwan
(Click to enlarge)
TAIWAN is not part of China
(Click to enlarge)
TAIWAN is not part of China
(Click to enlarge)
Mr. Ma's empty office
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwan GO!GO!GO!
(Click to enlarge)
Prices of commodities are rising in Taiwan, even when they're decreasing internationally.
Mr. Ma, is it a "mission: impossible" for you to do something about that?
(Click to enlarge)
Sovereignty, livelihood, and sunshine laws: three basic things desired by the Taiwanese people
(Click to enlarge)
Mr. Ma, stop betraying Taiwan
(Click to enlarge)
Ma Ying-jeou, gimme back my cow!
馬英九還我牛!
(Click to enlarge)
"Ma Ying-Jeou is quisling, Resign now!"
is what it says, I think.
(Click to enlarge)
"We want sunshine!" --
a request for laws to prevent corruption
(Click to enlarge)
It is NOT OKAY to bash TAIWAN
(Click to enlarge)
The road alongside NTU Hospital (台大醫院) was packed with people!
(Click to enlarge)
"TAIWAN" in decorative lettering on the back of someone's shirt
(Click to enlarge)
Taiwanese of all ages know that the TAIEX immediately dropped below 7,000 points when Ma took office.
and they remember his empty promises that it would go above 10,000 -- or even 20,000.
(Click to enlarge)
DPP chairwoman Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) and Ker Chien-ming (柯建銘) lead a large group of marchers.
(They're all the way to the left of the image.)
(Click to enlarge)
Taipei Mitsukoshi building at twilight
(Click to enlarge)
Jingfumen (景福門)
(Click to enlarge)
Anti-Annexation (反併吞)
(Click to enlarge)
In 1969, it was the brown acid...
In 2008, don't eat the Taike Doritos!
(WTF were they thinking?!)
(Seen at a 7-Eleven in the Taipei Train Station on my way back home)
(Click to enlarge)
And then there was video
What? The pictures weren't enough? Okay. Here are some scenes I recorded near the 228 Peace Park, in front of National Taiwan University Hospital, and on Ketagalan Boulevard near Jingfumen (景福門):
4:29 YouTube video: "830 anti-Ma Rally, Taipei, Taiwan"
What to watch for:
0:05 - 0:34 - At the corner of Xiangyang Road (襄陽路) and Gongyuan Road (公園路), marchers have already started passing. Police are directing traffic away from the parade route. I had just arrived in Taipei via the HSR and had walked directly to this spot.
0:35 - 0:52 - Further south on Gongyuan Road, larger groups pass the camera chanting 馬英九下台! ("Ma Ying-jeou, step down!")
0:53 - 0:55 - Two young ladies in green "908 Taiwan Republic" vests display the Victory/Peace sign.
1:00 - 1:29 - Banging on pots, accompanied by a very Taiwanese singing style
1:30 - Two beeps at the camera with a compressed-air horn
1:43 - 1:49 - A man with a horse on a stick, representing Ma Ying-jeou (whose family name means "horse") strikes poses and shows me the two sides of his sign. I can't make out the first side, but the second side says 馬上失足, or "Ma gets elected, immediately loses footing."
1:50 - 1:58 - A man with a farmer's hat says to me in English, "Hello, hello. Thank you, thank you. Thank you." Then he shakes my hand -- the one that's strapped to the camera -- and I somehow maintain a fairly steady shot.
2:09 - 2:25 - A sound truck drives by playing a pro-Taiwan song with a nice melody and a bit of an island/reggae beat.
2:26 - 2:32 - A dog on a bicycle!
2:33 - 2:44 - This very energetic group stopped so I could record them, then moved on with a very Taiwanese "Thank you very much-y!" Another man in the group adds (in English), "Taiwan number one!"
2:45 - 2:53 - Both sides of Zhongshan South Road alongside National Taiwan University Hospital are packed with people as are the sidewalks -- all the way down to the Jingfu Gate.
2:54 - 3:10 - A Taiwan flag in front of the 228 Monument with the rhythmic beating of a pot in the background. This scene is slightly out of chronological order, and it wasn't actually that dark.
3:12 - 3:23 - Looking toward the main stage on Ketagalan Boulevard. I was closer to Jingfu Gate than I was to the stage.
3:24 - 3:52 - The crowd sings a Taiwan favorite, "She [Taiwan] is Our Baby."
3:53 - 4:29 - Credits roll over a longer audio clip of the song played earlier by the sound truck. YouTube chops off the last three seconds of my audio.
That's all I've got.
Expressive impressions: Taiwan, 台灣, Ma Ying-jeou, 馬英九, China, 中國, protest, 抗議
Cross-posted at Taiwan Matters!
Labels: China, Ma Ying-jeou, protest, Taiwan, 中國, 台灣, 抗議, 馬英九