This is some shoddy coverage by the Washington Post, which misses the point of today's enormous march, and the reason it turned destructive. Hong Kongers were marching to ask America to pass a specific law, the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Acthttps://www.washingtonpost.com/world/hong-kong-protesters-call-on-trump-to-liberate-hong-kong/2019/09/08/4123008c-d215-11e9-9610-fb56c5522e1c_story.html …
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This act would reaffirm US support for Hong Kong's autonomy, add specific support for universal suffrage by 2020 (promised to Hong Kongers by the Basic Law), and add harsh financial penalties for individuals identified as denying Hong Kongers their basic rights.
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The Act has several other provisions, but its most important role is to draw a clear line that China must not cross in Hong Kong—infringing on the "One Country, Two Systems" promise of autonomy that is supposed to keep Hong Kong free from authoritarian rule. It's a great law!
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Hong Kongers marched today just to ask us to pass this law. Many young people wore neckties in the stifling heat, as a sign of respect. They took pains to chant in English. They gave out instructions on how to properly collect US flags after the event. They sang our awful anthem.
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The march had a police permit until evening, but midway through it, riot police shut down the central subway station, panicking commuters and demonstrators. They insisted that everyone must go home two hours early, while giving them no way to get home.
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This behavior comes against a background of shocking police violence, including an attack in a subway station on 8/31 that put several people in the hospital. Protesters have been demanding for days that the MTR or police release the footage from this police rampage, to no avail
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So the violence tonight was very deliberately targeted at MTR stations and public infrastructure (like traffic lights). Anyone who goes to Hong Kong protests sees that demonstrators don't destroy private property, or attack individuals. The police are the ones who hurt people.
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Reporters write about these demonstrations "descending into violence" as if it were a failure by Hong Kongers to keep their cool, keep the high road. The high road got them nothing in 2014, and nothing in 2019. When the police declares war on you, sometimes you have to fight back
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Replying to @Pinboard
I wouldn't say the "high road" got us nothing in 2019. Without the million people marches we wouldn't have been where we are now either. They were the things that got us frontpage news in the first place. 2014 peaceful occupation also gave most Westerners good impression of HKers
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Replying to @MandyDUBHKG @Pinboard
"Good impressions" are assets in media war of HK vs China. No need to downplay effectiveness of peaceful protest to justify use of radical tactic. We need both. People on the outside need proper justification to intervene & we need to capture moral highground as much as possible.
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I am actually not a fan of radical tactics. But I dislike the criticism of Hong Kong protests for not being universally "peaceful" as if that were an end in itself. Peaceful protests only work when there is some good faith and accountability.
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Replying to @Pinboard
Well I don't think anyone in HK nowadays are just for universally peaceful as end in itself. Look at the polls! Hongkongers are pragmatic. But don't diss the WorLeiFei approach as useless / "got us nothing" when you know that is not the truth.
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