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Note to everyone: When you are going to visit some event hosted somewhere, do not bring your own "set of guidelines" of what is "good and evil". You are a "foreigner", in other words, you do not know that country's culture.
Especially when we're talking about the Western and Eastern worlds. We are totally different. The Western world have so many things that they get offended about which isn't offending at all to us. For example, that photo of a Chinese where (take note) "HIS FRIENDS" mimicked his eyes.
Many people (including Asians "born" in the West) were offended, but guess what? It is pretty normal here in the Eastern world.
If you don't want our "openness" and "non-offending" culture, don't do events in our part of the planet.
^_^
PS.
I am not defending Yahoo! Taiwan here and I am leaving many factors out (like the "corporate" factor; "religious/faith" factor; "women image" factor; etc.) There are many factors to be considered, if an NGO or company or event organizer still decided to go on with something that is offending to someone else, there's no other explanation but that - "cultural".
It may be weird, crazy, strange, silly to you and me, but to them it is not. So don't get me wrong, because if I we are going to consider those factors I mentioned, I wouldn't approve of lap dancing at all even if it is a cultural thing.
How is this relevant?
Believe me Asian cultures have just as many things that offend them. They're often just DIFFERENT things. Trust me, they're no more known for their "openness" or "non offending culture" than any other country on the planet. The "West", of course, always gets portrayed as being far more sensitive than all of these other "progressive" cultures in the world. Please, spare me the long look down those noses. EVERY culture has things it collectively takes offense at, and things individiduals within that culture take offense at, too, depending on their political leanings, religious leanings, economic status, and, most importantly, their age (note this guy is pretty young, so naturally he thinks his whole culture is somehow more open than the rest of the world)
And apparently white people making "Asian eyes" is considered normal there "in the Eastern World." Yeah, I'm sure caucasians just LOVE running around Taiwan, Hong Kong, Seoul, Beijing, Tokyo and everywhere in between making "slant eyes" with their fingers and feeling completely safe in the knowledge that every Asian person around them considers it "normal".
Think before you write, JC John. ;)
Grave Stakes. Time Magazine. Monday, Jun. 11, 2001
http://bit.ly/YIbQ1
and this made the mainstream U.S. press last year:
http://bit.ly/4tnWAS
On a side note, maybe they should have consider the feelings of the females and possibly other people who belong to traditions/religions that maintain stricter gender rules, in this event.
That's as far as I will get on my American mentality. I don't really like imposing our values (honestly, a lot of it is quite superficial) on others. I didn't like the previous post not long ago about the Cove movie involving the dolphins in Japan and someone reply back that my comment didn't matter (not exact words but the implied meaning).
Other than all of that, I'm in large agreement with JC John.
I have to say, though, that while using half-naked women to sell everything from beer and betelnuts to cars, computers and designer toys is ubiquitous in Taiwan, not everyone is comfortable with it. There are a lot of Taiwanese women AND men who don't find the practice appealing, to say the least. I don't think being offended or at least exasperated is a "shockingly white" reaction.
Plus, although there's an openness toward more female body like cleavage (and the popularity of "celebs" like YaoYao), nudity itself is still taboo, and any women who goes around half-naked would be consider not fit for society; meaning, they won't be hired to do shows for major tech companies. The average Taiwanese is MUCH more conservative sexually than your average American, but they are not as hypocritically prudish. Acknowledgment of sex and frank discussions is normal between friends, and pole dancing for fun is just an exercise for bored housewives.
Before any of you start feeling bad for the poorly oppressed Taiwanese women, consider this: 30% of Taiwan's legislature is female, while in the US, this bastion of modern feminism, a paltry 18%.