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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (6173)8/16/2020 3:06:19 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13803
 
After tasting freedom in Capetown We de-camped Vancouver for no good reason I can think of except our home is supposedly in Hong Kong

Now he is back to Hong Kong under the Chinese Communist boot.



Message 32885182



To: Elroy Jetson who wrote (6173)8/16/2020 3:47:20 AM
From: elmatador1 Recommendation

Recommended By
pak73

  Respond to of 13803
 
Each week Beijing's message to Hong Kong gets clearer: we can do what we like


it is hard to avoid a gut-wrenching feeling of doom: all that Hong Kong people asked, with dogged determination, was for the possibility of having a say in the way they are governed – something that was promised to them by Hong Kong’s mini-constitution, the Basic Law.


With equal determination, this has been denied. A common analysis of why this is so describes China as supposedly being too weak to accept limited democracy in one small corner of its territory. Too weak to be openly scrutinised and criticised by newspapers and radio shows produced in a language, Cantonese, that only a small portion of its population could understand, if it were freely accessible beyond the Great Firewall. It may be time to revise this assumption: China isn’t showing many signs of political weakness. Beijing is imposing its style of government on Hong Kong because it can. If a newspaper or a radio show or a group of young protesters are annoying, it can stop them. It isn’t scared of them.

theguardian.com