June 8,1998---Newt Gingrich

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Taiwan Tati Cultural
And Educational Foundation
B16F, No.3 Ta-Tun 2St.
Taichung, Taiwan, R.O.C.
June 8, 1998.

Dear Mr. Newt Gingrich,

Washington, June 4---

Wearing white ribbons to honor those killed by the mainland Chinese military nine years ago.

The U.S. House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly to urge President Bill Clinton to consider visiting Tiananmem Square this month on his official trip to the mainland.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhu Bang Zao indicated on Thursday(June 5, 1998) that Beijing would stick firm to its traditional reception in the Square, even if that put Clinton in hot water with Congressional opponents back home.

There was no more worse idea for such kind of "decision", because it would denigrate the memory of pro-democracy students who died in 1989 demonstrations and discourage Chinese who continue to protest the communist rulers.

President Bill Clinton apparently believes that mainland China would marching toward democracy, that in the meantime economic reforms can succeed ahead of political reform and that increased trade and economic growth inevitably will make mainland China a force for stability on the world stage.

There are many questions have no answers yet'.Tibet's problems, political prisoners, human rights, and religious freedom.

Economic strength is only value for Beijing authority to prove the communist-China policy that was corrected by mainland China. So call "democratic reform" is not necessarily for Chinese.

However Chinese-style communism was perfect still now. Unquestionably; the "free economic exchange" still working in communist-China, isn't it? Economic reforms is not equal to "political change".

In the view of history of China; whether democracy or communism is not the key problems for communist-China. The only answer has pointed to the focus: that power is everything forever.

 

 

Sincerely Yours,
Yang Hsu-Tung.
President of
Taiwan Tati Cultural
And Educational Foundation

 

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