China’s state-run Global Times newspaper accused the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong of hosting speeches full of “violence, hostility, and racism” towards Chinese people in a column Wednesday, not mentioning that the vast majority of the population of Hong Kong is Han Chinese. The newspaper once again blamed the allegedly inferior “education” in Hong Kong – where universities champion free speech and thought – for teaching “problematic” truths about the repressive nature of Chinese communism. Without the Communist Party thoroughly infiltrating Hong Kong academia, the article concludes, protests and “conflict” with continue in the autonomous region.
Protests against the Chinese Communist Party have not abated for nearly two months, beginning with a city-wide commemoration of the Tiananmen Square massacre in early June. Protesters have organized another march, likely attracting thousands, for Sunday.
This is the underreported story of the month. The Globalists do NOT want the Hong Kong Protests to get wide play, they are already desperately looking for any remotely legit-seeming excuse to protect their outsourcing Chinese businesses.
They were screwed in 1997, thinking that the handover was a formality. Did they really think that Guangzhou & Shanghai were going to sit still and not try to eat HK's lunch as the gateway to mainland China?
In essence, HK's greatest asset was that it was a free trading post (plus banking), but in time, with Singapore as the 'Free China' in terms of ethnicity/independent status from Britain, would take that position, since it's the hub for all of Southeast Asia and not just the communist PRC.
China’s state-run Global Times newspaper accused the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong of hosting speeches full of “violence, hostility, and racism” towards Chinese people in a column Wednesday, not mentioning that the vast majority of the population of Hong Kong is Han Chinese.
The newspaper once again blamed the allegedly inferior “education” in Hong Kong – where universities champion free speech and thought – for teaching “problematic” truths about the repressive nature of Chinese communism. Without the Communist Party thoroughly infiltrating Hong Kong academia, the article concludes, protests and “conflict” with continue in the autonomous region.
Protests against the Chinese Communist Party have not abated for nearly two months, beginning with a city-wide commemoration of the Tiananmen Square massacre in early June. Protesters have organized another march, likely attracting thousands, for Sunday.