
There's this saying that “A man who carries gold on his head cannot run from war.”
Every time you unlock your phone, stream a video, or send a message, there’s a high chance that a sliver of silicon from Taiwan is powering it.
TSMC the chipmaking titan is the heart beat of the digital economy. But here’s the irony, while the world stretches greedy hands to grab Taiwan’s chips, few want to touch Taiwan’s political and existential struggle. Because no one wants trouble they just want some chips.
Global leaders praise TSMC’s brilliance, invest billions in duplicating its factories abroad, and fight for its attention like teenage high school girls fighting for the hottest boy.
The Untold truth is that TSMC is both Taiwan’s shield and its shackle. It makes Taiwan “too important to abandon,” but also “too risky to embrace.” Western powers want the chips, not the responsibility. They want the supply chain, not the sovereignty question.
And TSMC plays along, expanding to Arizona, Germany, and Japan becoming a global company while its home trembles under threat. Some call this smart hedging others see it as a slow hollowing of Taiwan’s leverage. Because what happens when the world no longer needs Taiwan itself—just TSMC abroad?