What I was thinking about there—and I was hoping that somebody would ask about it—is that with our chair of Taiwan studies, we have generally had no problem at all and no pressure from China at all, but something did happen once. That was in the year 2015 when we had a guest speaker, Dr. Andrew Young, a political scientist and sociologist who came to talk about the role of the Republic of China in World War II.
An assistant put the flag of the Republic of China on the website as part of the advertisement, and the embassy actually contacted the university and just bombarded the administration all the way up to the president of the university with emails and phone calls about this. The university was quite concerned that they would cancel a signing ceremony event that was coming up with the Academy of Sciences. I was actually told by one of our vice-deans that in the future we should avoid using any language or symbol that would upset the embassy of the People's Republic of China.
That's what I was thinking about. We really need guidance from the government, in fact, that would tell the universities that they don't take orders from foreign embassies.