The Boba Diplomacy of Taiwan

Take your tea with a splash of politics

Karen Sims 蘇祺
Heated

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Photo: TaPhotograph/Getty Images

About a month ago, I came across something kind of atrocious yet oddly beautiful trending on Twitter. It was a photo from a Domino’s in Taiwan of its new boba milk tea pizza. It looked like it could tasteOK? A cheap crust topped with milk-tea sauce, mozzarella, honey, and tapioca pearls: As fast-food dessert pizzas go, it looked stickily inviting.

Photo: Domino’s

I kept scrolling and, along with this tasty corporate advertising, saw updates about the Hong Kong protests, South Park’s parody of Chinese Communist Party censorship, and the food world’s latest obsession with a new trend called Q. Somewhere amid this eclectic mix of desserts and international conflict, I found another story: one of Taiwanese democratic freedom in the face of the Chinese Communist Party.

This probably isn’t the time or place to get into the lengthy and complicated history of why Taiwan is or is not a part of China, but the gist of it is, Taiwan today is an autonomous, self-governed nation with its own distinct politics, culture, language, and identity. The CCP disagrees with this, as it does with Hong Kong attempting to do the same. Like Hong Kong…

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