Special Pages

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

Goodnight Hong Kong?

The protests in Hong Kong have been going on since the end of March, so over four months.  The protests initially were directed against a new extradition law that China wants to impose on the formerly sovereign Hong Kong.  Now it seems that those protests have extended to wanting to improve their government.  It seems that the root of the protests is that when China and Great Britain reached their agreement for the transfer of Hong Kong, it was agreed that Hong Kong would be autonomous; "one country, two systems" for 50 years.  Here, not quite halfway to 2047, the Chinese have been abandoning that. 

China has been staging units of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) as a warning to the protesters.  Tuesday morning (last night US time), the PLA began a show of force of the preparations. Conservative member of the British Parliament Daniel Hannan tweeted an ominous video from the Chinese side of the border with Hong Kong:


The eight second video shows troop carriers and support vehicles as far as the eye can see in two directions from that vantage point.   The Chinese government released this video, showing the vehicles going to Shenzen, on the border.




From my standpoint, the protesters' chances are grim.  They're under a government that's pro-China (or else they wouldn't be allowed to be there) and are protesting the Chinese (mainland) government that killed 10,000 in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests for Democracy.  Communist governments don't have much history of listening to protests and thinking they might be wrong - like all leftists, the Chinese party leaders consider themselves better than the common people. 

Rick Moran, writing at PJ Media has this summary, with a quote from the South China Morning Post:
The protesters are demonstrating against a bill that would allow citizens of Hong Kong to be extradited to China for some crimes. This is a direct attack on Hong Kong's special status within China, and the Communist leadership fully realized it when they proposed it. Little by little, the protesters are seeing Beijing stifle the freedoms that citizens of Hong Kong were guaranteed when Great Britain returned the territory to China in 1997. Beijing underestimates their resolve at their peril. That much has been made clear by the protesters themselves.

South China Morning Post:
Today, this chant is heard everywhere on the streets: “Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times.” When Edward Leung  invented this rallying cry three years ago, the cause of “revolution” – whatever he meant it to mean – did not resonate. It gains traction now, not because the likelihood of its success is any greater or any less unrealistic, but because recent  responses by our government have made it clear that what protesters (and I believe the rest of Hong Kong) have demanded, namely democracy, autonomy, and above all, good government, will never come to be unless and until the current political order is turned on its head.
The problem for the protesters is that to "turn the political order on its head," there will almost certainly be a lot of blood in the streets before that happens.
A pundit on the news today said (approximately, from memory), "giving Hong Kong to China was like giving a Stradivarius to a chimp."  China, with their puppet Chief Executive Carrie Lam, has filled the protesters with resolve.  The protesters probably see they have no future if things continue the way China is pushing.  If they feel they have no future and nothing to live for, I don't expect this to be over very soon.  Unless the Chinese PLA kills them all.

There was talk when Great Britain and China agreed to transfer Hong Kong back to China that China would take the role model of Hong Kong and make China more like Hong Kong, improving the lives of over a billion people.  In reality, they're going to make Hong Kong into China. 



6 comments:

  1. Red China has increased its military to the point that it feels it doesn't need to fear world opinion. Doesn't hurt that they own the debt of about half the 3rd world nations directly.

    And people thought Great Britain was 'oppressive' in its rule...

    Expect to see a sudden attempt at a huge boat exodus, and it being stopped cold turkey and quite bloodily by the PLAN.

    Taiwan and Singapore must be freaking out, quietly.

    Wonder what's happening on the Red China/Vietnam border? Last time those two sparred, the ChiComs pulled back a bloody stump.

    ReplyDelete
  2. China will not hesitate to do whatever it takes to preserve its (presumed) territorial integrity. Period. If they lose Hong Kong, what about Shanghai?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Seven million human beings in Hong Kong, and approximately none of them will hide on the side of a road and shoot at an invading army. Isn't it better for the human gene pool to allow the fraction who makes themselves food for politicians to be killed off?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Any question why the second amendment is part of our constitutional law of the land?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And by corollary, any question why the crop of leftist presidential candidates want to get rid of the 2A?

      Delete
  5. If the Hong Kongians used cell phones for radio density, there could have defeated a truck convoy with a drone-with-pistol for every truck, operated far beyond the reach of return fire. The armored vehicles could have been trapped with roadblocks, the gun disabled with plugs, tires slashed, hatches tied closed, then left there with the soldiers inside them until an acceptable formal apology and reparations were offered.

    Primatologists observe great ape political instincts work acceptably with a group size of 200. But with a group size of 2 million, those instincts are an often fatal weakness for politicians and mainstream media to exploit. Libertarianism tries to patch the software in human brains, but it doesn't work.

    ReplyDelete