Taiwan is democratic.

Taiwan is a major economy.

Taiwan politics certainly is colorful.

My favorite thing about Taiwan is the food.

Taiwan is an independent sovereign country.

I have great confidence in Taiwan's democracy.

Whatever it took to help Taiwan defend theirself.

We recognize Taiwan as the beacon of Asian democracy.

I grew up in Taiwan, which was a military dictatorship.

We will never allow anybody to separate Taiwan from China.

People movements have heralded a new era of Taiwan politics.

In Taiwan, I'd be like Michael Jordan walking down the street.

I was born in Taiwan and came to the United States when I was 2.

It's very important for Taiwan to maintain its international contact.

I simply said that I would do everything to help Taiwan to defend itself.

When I was in Taiwan, I was taught in school that Taiwan is part of China.

The first decent building I did with my own practice was a chapel in Taiwan.

Relations between the two sides of the Taiwan Strait are like those of a family.

We must unify Taiwan; we cannot afford to have our society being divided in half.

I expect the ruling and opposition parties to work together for the future of Taiwan.

I'm just so happy to see my friends and fans in Taiwan, 'cause that's where I'm from.

Taiwan has been so well developed economically. But we are underdeveloped culturally.

We will strive to make Taiwan a better place and enable our people to live better lives.

With Taiwan, it took about 40 years to go from an authoritarian to a democratic society.

There is no question that Taiwan is a state in any political science definition of a state.

The greater concerns in China and Taiwan are on the political side, not on the economic side.

There is only one China. Taiwan is not independent. It does not enjoy sovereignty as a nation.

But if the Chinese mainland, the PRC, attacked Taiwan, we'd be obligated to come to their aid.

Britain cannot compete with China or Taiwan on price; we compete on skills, on arts and culture.

Even though I grew up in America, at home we spoke mostly Chinese, because my mom is from Taiwan.

Many of the Kuomintang elite in Taiwan have relatives among the ruling elite here on mainland China.

We had Taiwan, Egypt, Lebanon, and Oman open their markets to our beef, and we're excited about that.

I think that there is a relatively small number of people who are pushing for independence in Taiwan.

Taiwan's development in the past 20 years in high tech is almost 100 percent related to Silicon Valley.

Beijing's imperial reach extends far and wide, from Taiwan and Xinjiang to the South China Sea and beyond.

I will make the greatest efforts to seek mutually acceptable interaction between Taiwan and mainland China.

Ultimately, China may use force to push for unification with Taiwan, a scenario we all must work to prevent.

Ultimately, China may use force to push for unification with Taiwan, a scenario we all must work to prevent.

These days, the manufacturing is controlled by a small number of countries, primarily Taiwan and South Korea.

Free nations of the world cannot allow Taiwan, a beacon of democracy, to be subdued by an authoritarian China.

We will make every effort to unify all ethnic groups, to strengthen belief in Taiwan and to persist in reform.

I just want people to respect the privacy of my relatives in Taiwan. ... They need to live their lives as well.

Taiwan is a budding democracy, and the people have participated in multi-party democratic elections since 1996.

I will rebuild the people's trust in government and create a stable foundation for Taiwan's future development.

We have to convince mainland China that a free and democratic Taiwan is more in China's interest than reunification.

We came over when I was 8 from Taiwan. That was my life: going to school, working at the restaurant, playing basketball.

As I've said many times and publicly, a war between China and Taiwan that involves the United States is a lose-lose-lose.

The first time I went to Taiwan, there were cameras, paparazzi, TV stations outside my hotel twenty-four hours a day nonstop.

My affection for Taiwan... is witnessed by everyone. My wife is Taiwanese and I am a son-in-law of Taiwan. I am half Taiwanese.

The L.A. weather is a lot like Taiwan's, where you don't observe four seasons, so the years can pass and you don't feel a thing.

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