【第4屆 #玉山論壇 共同打造堅韌未來】
#臺灣亞洲交流基金會
10/8 將舉辦第4屆「玉山論壇」
今年的論壇以視訊和實體會議混合方式
與會陣容簡直不要太猛
澳洲前總理 #騰博
瑞典前總理 #畢爾德
日華議員懇談會會長 #古屋圭司
丹麥前總理暨北約前秘書長 #拉斯穆森
美國聯邦眾議院外委會亞太小組共和黨首席議員 #游賀
等共12國意見領袖及專家學者
共同就 #疫後區域經濟復甦
#公衛危機應處 及 #全球治理 等議題交換意見🎙
一起提升區域韌性🤝
相關新聞稿搶先看👉 https://bit.ly/34zKQcb
#理念相近國家
#護國神山論壇也很神
The 4th Yushan Forum, under the theme ‘Forging a Resilient Future Together’, will be held on October 8 at the Grand Hyatt Taipei. Opinion leaders and experts from 12 countries, including our #NewSouthboundPolicy partners, the #US, #Japan and #Europe, will take part via video link.
President 蔡英文 Tsai Ing-wen will give an address, while former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt and head of Japan’s all-party parliamentary group Representative Furuya Keiji will give speeches at the opening ceremony, addressing the challenges and the shifts in the regional political landscape in the #PostCOVID era.
Digital Minister Audrey Tang will host a round-table on the outlook for #Asia in the afternoon, so that international political and economic leaders can exchange ideas on developments in the region.
#SDG17 #PartnershipForTheGoals #RecoverBetterTogether
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過92萬的網紅ochikeron,也在其Youtube影片中提到,♥FOLLOW ME HERE♥ https://www.facebook.com/ochikeron https://plus.google.com/111926234494130917642 http://twitter.com/ochikeron http://createeathappy.b...
opening party ideas 在 肯腦濕的人生相談室 Facebook 的精選貼文
經濟學人的封面,圖片是龍的嘴咬向香港,爪子伸向台灣
中國在香港用恐懼來統治
全世界應該感到擔憂
https://www.economist.com/…/china-has-launched-rule-by-fear…
Dragon strike
China has launched rule by fear in Hong Kong
The rest of the world should worry, too
The people of Hong Kong want two things: to choose how they are governed, and to be subject to the rule of law. The Chinese Communist Party finds both ideas so frightening that many expected it to send troops to crush last year’s vast protests in Hong Kong. Instead, it bided its time. Now, with the world distracted by covid-19 and mass protests difficult because of social distancing, it has chosen a quieter way to show who’s boss. That threatens a broader reckoning with the world—and not just over Hong Kong, but also over the South China Sea and Taiwan.
On May 21st China declared, in effect, that Hong Kongers deemed to pose a threat to the party will become subject to the party’s wrath. A new security law, written in Beijing, will create still-to-be defined crimes of subversion and secession, terms used elsewhere in China to lock up dissidents, including Uighurs and Tibetans. Hong Kong will have no say in drafting the law, which will let China station its secret police there. The message is clear. Rule by fear is about to begin.
This is the most flagrant violation yet of the principle of “one country, two systems”. When the British colony was handed back to China in 1997, China agreed that Hong Kong would enjoy a “high degree of autonomy”, including impartial courts and free speech. Many Hong Kongers are outraged (see article). Some investors are scared, too. The territory’s stockmarket fell by 5.6% on May 22nd, its biggest drop in five years. Hong Kong is a global commercial hub not only because it is situated next to the Chinese mainland, but also because it enjoys the rule of law. Business disputes are settled impartially, by rules that are known in advance. If China’s unaccountable enforcers are free to impose the party’s whims in Hong Kong, it will be a less attractive place for global firms to operate.
China’s move also has implications far beyond Hong Kong. “One country, two systems” was supposed to be a model for Taiwan, a democratic island of 24m that China also sees as its own. The aim was to show that reunification with the motherland need not mean losing one’s liberty. Under President Xi Jinping, China seems to have tired of this charade. Increasingly, it is making bare-knuckle threats instead. The re-election in January of a China-sceptic Taiwanese president, Tsai Ing-wen, will have convinced China’s rulers that the chances of a peaceful reunification are vanishingly small. On May 22nd, at the opening of China’s rubber-stamp parliament, the prime minister, Li Keqiang, ominously cut the word “peaceful” from his ritual reference to reunification. China has stepped up war games around Taiwan and its nationalists have been braying online for an invasion.
China is at odds with other countries, too. In its building of island fortresses in the South China Sea, it ignores both international law and the claims of smaller neighbours. This week hundreds, perhaps thousands of Chinese troops crossed China’s disputed border with India in the Himalayas. Minor scuffles along this frontier are common, but the latest incursion came as a state-owned Chinese paper asserted new claims to land that its nuclear-armed neighbour deems Indian (see article). And, as a sombre backdrop to all this, relations with the United States are worse than they have been in decades, poisoning everything from trade and investment to scientific collaboration.
However much all the regional muscle-flexing appals the world, it makes sense to the Chinese Communist Party. In Hong Kong the party wants to stop a “colour revolution”, which it thinks could bring democrats to power there despite China’s best efforts to rig the system. If eroding Hong Kong’s freedoms causes economic damage, so be it, party bigwigs reason. The territory is still an important place for Chinese firms to raise international capital, especially since the Sino-American feud makes it harder and riskier for them to do so in New York. But Hong Kong’s gdp is equivalent to only 3% of mainland China’s now, down from more than 18% in 1997, because the mainland’s economy has grown 15-fold since then. China’s rulers assume that multinational firms and banks will keep a base in Hong Kong, simply to be near the vast Chinese market. They are probably right.
The simple picture that President Donald Trump paints of America and China locked in confrontation suits China’s rulers well. The party thinks that the balance of power is shifting in China’s favour. Mr Trump’s insults feed Chinese nationalist anger, which the party is delighted to exploit—just as it does any tensions between America and its allies. It portrays the democracy movement in Hong Kong as an American plot. That is absurd, but it helps explain many mainlanders’ scorn for Hong Kong’s protesters.
The rest of the world should stand up to China’s bullying. On the Sino-Indian border, the two sides should talk more to avoid miscalculations, as their leaders promised to in 2018. China should realise that, if it tries the tactics it has used in the South China Sea, building structures on disputed ground and daring others to push back, it will be viewed with greater distrust by all its neighbours.
In the case of Taiwan China faces a powerful deterrent: a suggestion in American law that America might come to Taiwan’s aid were the island to be attacked. There is a growing risk that a cocksure China may decide to put that to the test. America should make clear that doing so would be extremely dangerous. America’s allies should echo that, loudly.
Hong Kong’s options are bleaker. The Hong Kong Policy Act requires America to certify annually that the territory should in trade and other matters be treated as separate from China. This week the secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, declared that “facts on the ground” show Hong Kong is no longer autonomous. This allows America to slap tariffs on the territory’s exports, as it already does to those from the mainland. That is a powerful weapon, but the scope for miscalculation is vast, potentially harming Hong Kongers and driving out global firms and banks. It would be better, as the law also proposes, to impose sanctions on officials who abuse human rights in Hong Kong. Also, Britain should grant full residency rights to the hundreds of thousands of Hong Kongers who hold a kind of second-class British passport—much as Ms Tsai this week opened Taiwan’s door to Hong Kong citizens. None of this will stop China from imposing its will on Hong Kong. The party’s interests always trump the people’s. ■
opening party ideas 在 貴婦出走日記 Travel Like A Lady Facebook 的最佳貼文
作為一個創業者,我也很明白良好工作環境的重要性。昨天參加了blueprint的 opening event, 才得悉鰂魚涌有這樣cool的 co-working space! 最喜歡它的露台位!工作壓力大時可以出外透透氣啊!
It was such a great party to meet different kinds of interesting entrepreneurs with cool food and beverage! Their business ideas inspired me a lot and made me want to explore my abilities more.
Too busy to take more photos, check out this cool place at the location tag!
#blueprint_hk #blueprintevent
#TheNearFuture
opening party ideas 在 ochikeron Youtube 的精選貼文
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This is super easy Christmas recipe that gives a Christmas feel to your Christmas dinner table☆
Currently 50 people photo reported me and said it was good. Please scroll down the page to view the photos. Some people added tomatoes and made it really cute!
http://cookpad.com/recipe/302562
Be creative ;D
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Christmas Broccoli Tree
Difficulty: Very Easy
Time: 5min
Number of servings: 1 Christmas tree
Ingredients:
1 large broccoli crown
salt
Kewpie Mayonnaise
dressing of your choice
star-shaped processed cheese
Directions:
1. Lightly wash the broccoli crown and cut into bite-sized florets. Boil water in a large pot. Add a pinch of salt in the boiling water (salt removes oxalic acid - bitter taste, and makes the broccoli nice and green). Boil broccoli for about 3 minute. Drain and cool down until you can touch.
2. Pile up the broccoli florets on a plate and mold them with your hands to shape like a tree.
3. Decorate the tree with mayonnaise (like a garland) and place the star-shaped cheese (attach it with a toothpick) on top of the tree. Pour some dressing of your choice over the tree and eat ;D
レシピ(日本語)
http://cooklabo.blogspot.com/2009/12/blog-post_25.html
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Product I used:
キューピー ハーフ (Kewpie Mayonnaise Calorie Half)
There are 100 calories in 1 serving (1 tbsp.) of regular Kewpie Mayonnaise. Calorie Half contains only 50 calories in 1 serving (1 tbsp.).
http://www.qphalf.com/pc/index.html?link=kphp#/about/about
Kewpie Mayonnaise, or Japanese Mayonnaise, is the undisputed king of mayonnaise. First made in Japan in 1925 and sold in glass jars this mayo is yellower, richer and more creamy than the standard American or European mayonnaise. Made with rice vinegar, instead of distilled vinegar makes it especially complimentary to Japanese cuisine.
The Kewpie bottle has a star-shaped opening at the top. If you lift up the red (or white) plastic cap, there is a small hole that could make you draw some designs on your food.
Today is my BD but I spent a day editing this video because we are celebrating it tomorrow ;D hehe
Music by
Alexandra Gyasi
Magic Angel
http://www.jamendo.com/en/
FYI (products I used in my videos):
http://www.amazon.co.jp/lm/R3VVDX7JZ5GYJE/?_encoding=UTF8&camp=247&creative=7399&linkCode=ur2&tag=shopping072-22
♥Original T-SHIRTS♥
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFsQE0qd_4w
♥Visit my Blog for more Recipes♥
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♥My Recipe Posts in Japanese♥
http://cooklabo.blogspot.jp/
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http://www.lettuceclub.net/mypage/toukou_top.html?user_code=00153826
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