The movement is being called leaderless. But there is as much order and organization to the movement as there is in a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter. There is purpose. There is defiance. There is thought. There is discussion. There is mission. There is action.
Hong Kong leads. I don't see Hong Kong clamoring for what others have but they don't. I see Hong Kong leading. I see Hong Kong demanding for what other big cities don't have either. Hong Kong leads New York. Hong Kong leads DC. Maybe this is how Washington DC will gain statehood and due representation. Maybe this is how residents of New York City will gain voting rights. 40% of New Yorkers do not get to vote in the city elections.
Hong Kong leads the way.
Bu the method is important. Non-violence is the only good option. Not because the Hong Kong protestors are weak, but because that is how they keep their moral high ground.
The entire world is watching in real time.
The Hong Kong protests should become better organized politically. There is need for political conversations. Options have to be explored. If a near total shutdown of the city is not working, maybe a total shutdown has to be attempted. Because the current protests can not go on forever.
And the nuclear option is organizing for independence. I hope things don't go that far. But Beijing might not budge otherwise.
It is best that the five demands are met and one country, two systems is maintained. That is what is best for Hong Kong. That is what is best for the Chinese mainland, and the cause of democracy there.
But organizing for independence will take greater political sophistication. Millions of Hong Kongers will have to become active members of political parties. Leaders will have to emerge. Political strategies will have to be discussed.
Organizing protests does require conversations and strategies. But organizing for independence is a whole another level. Right now that political organization is lacking. Unless Beijing feels it might lose Hong Kong altogether, it might not budge. So that threat has to be created.
The world stands by Hong Kong. If Beijing attempts military action in Hong Kong, the world will shut down the Chinese economy. Chinese exports will come down dramatically. Beijing knows that to be the case. And so a credible threat for independence has to be created. That is the only way Beijing will come around to accepting the five demands. Hong Kong deserves nothing less.
The police have to be investigated. Only an independent commission could do that. The Chief Executive of Hong Kong has to be directly elected. It is going to be one of the leaders of the movement. All members of the Hong Kong Legislature need to be directly elected by Hong Kong citizens. A vast majority of them are going to be those who are currently part of the movement.
That is the way forward. The earlier Beijing makes peace with that, the better.
One country, two systems. Really.
“You say...that you understand the urgency, but no matter how sad and angry I am, I do not want to believe that, because if you really understood the situation and still kept on failing to act, then you would be evil, and that I refuse to believe.” pic.twitter.com/SA06P4bXZ7
— Justice Democrats (@justicedems) September 23, 2019
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Navigating The Hong Kong Protests
UN human rights experts express concern about excessive use of force in Hong Kong protests https://t.co/oqaD1bPv1z
— Hong Kong Watch (@hk_watch) September 11, 2019
Bar Human Rights Committee of England and Wales speaking out about the need for an independent inquiry https://t.co/9OaG5xsrh2
— Hong Kong Watch (@hk_watch) September 13, 2019
BHRC issues statement raising serious concern about response by #HongKong authorities to ongoing protests, including credible reports of police brutality, violence against & mass arrests of protestors, & HK gov't failure to order a full/transparent inquiry https://t.co/LBmq8pExf9 pic.twitter.com/r6FTe3XfNh
— BHRC (@BarHumanRights) September 13, 2019
Great to see momentum building behind the Human Rights and Democracy Act at the @CECCgov hearing. Time for it to be passed. https://t.co/46hrgjvyrb
— Hong Kong Watch (@hk_watch) September 18, 2019
Chris Patten: China must give Hong Kong leaders the space to compromise.https://t.co/Xf4b62Q18V
— Hong Kong Watch (@hk_watch) September 19, 2019
This is a major positive step forward https://t.co/E0Jvm6yurl
— Hong Kong Watch (@hk_watch) September 19, 2019
Amnesty looked into the conduct of the Hong Kong Police Force and we came back with a clear conclusion:
— Nicholas Bequelin 林偉 (@bequelin) September 19, 2019
The Independent Police Complaints Council (ICCP) is totally unfit to address police misconduct.
It is urgent to set up an independent and impartial investigation. https://t.co/Yt1E43EuaN
Amnesty accuses Hong Kong police of abuses, torture of protesters https://t.co/HiHnnWfu0f pic.twitter.com/AZPyMbjUDo
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) September 20, 2019
Hong Kong: The Power Lies In Non-Violence https://t.co/EbrWkaUfVl @demosisto @joshuawongcf @nathanlawkc @maryhui @kinlinglo @sumlokkei @rachel_cheung1 @lokinhei @HKDemocrats @WilsonLeungWS @HongKongPLG@jasonyng @BillyOYLi @cng1238 @Fight4HongKong #HongKong #HongKongProtests
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) September 23, 2019
Hong Kong: The Power Lies In Non-Violence https://t.co/EbrWkaUfVl @FreedomHKG @BeWaterHKG @ezracheungtoto @antd @RichScotford @XinqiSu @holmeschan_ @chowtingagnes @ray_slowbeat @hk_watch @hkpoliceforce @EricCheungwc @hoccgoomusic #HongKong #HongKongProtests #hongkongpolice
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) September 23, 2019
Hong Kong: The Power Lies In Non-Violence https://t.co/EbrWkaUfVl @lokinhei @kevinkfyam @hkjohnsonyeung @AmnestyHK @HKWORLDCITY @missy_lao @elson_tong @hkchrislau @alexhofford @alexhofford @GlobalSolidHK @antd @BillyOYLi @hk_watch @bequelin #HongKong #HongKongPolice
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) September 23, 2019