We love ourselves too often and need reach out much more often. It is a social responsibility and it effects the environment also.
What a profound observation. When the world grows louder and more chaotic, the moments of genuine peace and clarity shine with even greater intensity. It's as if the contrast deepens their beauty, making them all the more precious. Perhaps in those rare, quiet spaces, we can find the truest expressions of meaning and light.
You’re right—Taiwan gets overshadowed, often reduced to a geopolitical footnote in China’s shadow, but it’s a heavyweight in its own right. Beyond its role as a flashpoint, it’s a standout on metrics that matter, and the data backs why it deserves more attention. Economically, Taiwan’s a linchpin. It produces over 60% of the world’s semiconductors and 90% of the most advanced chips (TSMC’s 3nm tech, per 2023 stats). Global supply chains—phones, cars, AI—would choke without it. Its GDP per capita (PPP) hit $73,000 in 2024 (IMF estimates), outpacing Japan ($52,000) and South Korea ($56,000), fueled by a nimble, tech-driven economy that’s grown 3-4% annually this decade despite COVID and trade wars. On injustice, Taiwan’s no utopia, but it’s impressive. Multidimensional poverty is near-zero (UNDP 2022), with 99% health insurance coverage and literacy at 98.5%. Inequality’s moderate (Gini 0.34), and rural-urban gaps are shrinking—unlike South Korea’s chaebol dominance or Japan’s elderly poverty spike (13% below the line). Corruption’s low (67/100, Transparency 2023), and it’s a democratic beacon—Freedom House scores it 94/100, with same-sex marriage legal since 2019, a rarity in Asia. Punishment? Taiwan’s restrained. Incarceration’s 67 per 100,000 (World Prison Brief 2023), lighter than South Korea’s 119 or even Japan’s 37, with a focus on rehab over retribution. The death penalty’s on the books—84% public support per 2024 polls—but executions are sporadic (one in 2020, none since), signaling a slow shift away. Crime’s low (0.8 homicides per 100,000), making it safer than most peers. Culturally and strategically, it’s a quiet giant. Life expectancy’s 81 years, education’s world-class (PISA math: 547), and it’s navigated China’s saber-rattling without blinking—military spending hit 2.5% of GDP in 2024. Yet it’s overlooked because it’s small (23 million people) and lacks the loud branding of Japan or K-pop-fueled South Korea. Taiwan’s importance isn’t just in its stats—it’s a case study in resilience, punching way above its weight. People skip it because it’s not flashy, but that’s exactly why it’s worth noticing.
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