China

China

From

Published 2019-11-20 by Drew Chadwick DeVault

This article will be difficult to read and was difficult to write. I hope that
you can stomach the uncomfortable nature of this topic and read my thoughts in
earnest. I usually focus on technology-related content, but at the end of the
day, this is my personal blog and I feel that it would betray my personal
principles to remain silent. I’ve made an effort to provide citations for all of
my assertions.

Note: if you are interested in conducting an independent review of the
factuality of the claims expressed in this article, please contact
me
.

The keyboard I’m typing these words into bears “Made in China” on the bottom.
The same is true of the monitor I’m using to edit the article. It’s not true of
all of my electronics — the graphics processing unit which is driving the
monitor was made in Taiwan1 and my phone was made in
Vietnam.2 Regardless, there’s no doubt that my life would be,
to some degree, worse off if not for trade with China. Despite this, I am
prepared to accept the consequences of severing economic relations with China.

How bad would being cut-off from China’s economy be? We’re a net importer from
China, and by over 4 times the volume.3 Let’s assume, in
the worst case, trade ties were completely severed. The United States would be
unable to buy $155B worth of electronics, which we already have domestic
manufacturing capabilities for4 and which have a productive
life of several years. We could definitely stand to get used to repairing and
reusing these instead of throwing them out. We’d lose $34B in mattresses and
furniture — same story. The bulk of our imports from China are luxury
goods that we can already make here at home5 — it’s just
cheaper to buy them from China. But cheaper for whom?

This gets at the heart of the reason why we’re tied to China economically. It’s
economically productive for the 1% to maintain a trade relationship with
China. The financial incentives don’t help any Americans, and in fact, most of
us are hurt by this relationship.6 Trade is what keeps
us shackled to the Chinese Communist Party government, but it’s not beneficial
to anyone but those who are already obscenely rich, and certainly not for our
poorest — who, going into 2020, are as likely to be high school dropouts
as they are to be doctors.7

So, we can cut off China. Why should we? Let’s lay out the facts: China is
conducting human rights violations on the largest scale the world has seen since
Nazi Germany. China executes political prisoners8 and
harvests their organs for transplant to sick elites on an industrial scale,
targeting and killing civilians based on not only political, but also ethnic and
religious factors. This is commonly known as genocide. China denies using the
organs of prisoners, but there’s credible doubt9 from
the scientific community.

Recent evidence directly connecting executions to organ harvesting is somewhat
unreliable, but I don’t think China deserves the benefit of the doubt.
China is a world leader in executions, and is believed to conduct more
executions than the rest of the world combined.10
Wait times for organ transplantation are extraordinarily low in
China,11 on the order of weeks — in most of the developed
world these timeframes are measured in terms of years,12 and China has
been unable to explain the source for tens of thousands of transplants in the
past13. And, looking past recent evidence, China directly admitted to
using the organs of executed prisoners in 2005.14

These atrocities are being committed against cultural minorities to further
China’s power. The UN published a statement in August 2018 stating that they
have credible reports of over a million ethnic Uighurs being held in internment
camps in Xinjiang,15 imprisoned with various other ethnic
minorities from the region. Leaks in November 2019 reported by the New York
Times showed that China admits the imprisoned have committed no crimes other
than dissent,16 and that the camps were to be run with, quote,
“absolutely no mercy”.

It’s nice to believe that we would have stood up to Nazi Germany if we had been
there in the 1940’s. China is our generation’s chance to prove ourselves of that
conviction. We talk a big game about fighting against white nationalists in our
own country, and pride ourselves on standing up against “fascists”. It’s time we
turned attention to the real fascists, on the world stage.

Instead, the staunch capitalism of America, and the West as a whole, has swooped
in to leverage Chinese fascism for a profit. Marriott Hotels apologized for
listing Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan as countries separate from China.17
Apple removed the Taiwanese flag from iOS in China and the territories it
claims.18 Activision/Blizzard banned several players for making pro-Hong
Kong statements in tournaments and online.19 These behaviors make me
ashamed to be an American.

Fuck that.

A brief history lesson: Hong Kong was originally controlled by the United
Kingdom at the end of the Opium Wars. It’s beyond the scope of this article, but
it’ll suffice to say that the United Kingdom was brutal and out of line, and the
end result is that Hong Kong became a British colony. Because of this, it was
protected from direct Chinese influence during China’s turbulent years
following, and they were insulated from the effects of the Great Leap Forward
and the Cultural Revolution, which together claimed tens of millions of lives
and secured the Communist Party of China’s power into the present.

On July 1st, 1997, the Sino-British Joint
Declaration
went
into effect
, and Hong Kong was
turned over to China. The agreement stipulated that Hong Kong would remain
effectively autonomous and self-governing for a period of 50 years —
until 2047. China has been gradually and illegally eroding that autonomy
ever since. Today, Hong Kong citizens have effectively no representation in
their government. The Legislative Council of Hong Kong has been deliberately
engineered by China to be pro-Beijing — a majority of the council is
selected through processes with an inherent pro-Beijing bias, giving Hong Kong
effectively no autonomous power to pass laws.20

Hong Kong’s executive branch is even worse. The Chief Executive of Hong Kong
(Carrie Lam) is elected by a committee of 1,200 members largely controlled by
pro-Beijing seats, from a pool of pro-Beijing candidates, and the people have
effectively no representation in the election. The office has been held by
pro-Beijing politicians since it was established.21

The ongoing protests in Hong Kong were sparked by a mainland attempt to rein
in Hong Kong’s judicial system in a similar manner, with the introduction of the
“Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation
(Amendment) Bill 2019”,22 which would have allowed the authorities
to extradite suspects awaiting trial to mainland China. These protests inspired
the Hong Kong people to stand up against all of the injustices they have faced
from China’s illegal encroachments on their politics. The protesters have five
demands:23

  1. Complete withdrawal of the extradition bill
  2. No prosecution of the protesters
  3. Retraction of the characterization of the protests as “riots”
  4. Establish an independent inquiry into police misconduct
  5. Resignation of Carrie Lam and the implementation of universal suffrage

Their first demand has been met, but the others are equally important and the
protests show no signs of slowing. Unfortunately, China shows no signs of
slowing their crackdown either, and have been consistently escalating the
matter. The police are now threatening to use live rounds on the
protesters,24 and people are already being shot in the
streets.25 China is going to kill the protesters, again.

The third demand — the retraction of the characterization of the
demonstrations as “riots” — and the government’s refusal to meet it,
conveys a lot about China’s true intentions. Chinese law defines rioting as a
capital offense,26 and we’ve already demonstrated their
willingness to execute political prisoners on a massive scale. These protesters
are going to be killed if their demands aren’t met.27

Hong Kong is the place where humanity makes its stand against oppressors. The
people of Hong Kong have been constant allies to the West, and their liberty is
at stake. If we want others to stand up for us when our liberties are on the
line, then it’s our turn to pay it forward now. The founding document of the
United States of America28 describes the rights they’re defending as
“unalienable” — endowed upon all people by their Creator. The people of
Hong Kong are our friends and we’re watching them get killed for rights that we
hold dear in our own nation’s founding principles.

We have a legal basis for demanding these rights for Hong Kong’s people —
China is blatantly violating their autonomy, which they agreed to uphold
in 1984. The United Kingdom should feel obligated to step in, but they’ll need
the support of the international community, which we need to be prepared to give
them. We need to make an ultimatum: if China uses deadly force in Hong Kong,
the international community will respond in kind.

China isn’t the only perpetrator of genocide today, but they are persecuting our
friends. China has the second highest GDP29 in the world, and somehow
this makes it okay. If we won’t stand up to them, then who will? I call for a
worldwide boycott of Chinese products, and of companies who kowtow to their
demands or accept investment from China. I call for international condemnation
of the Communist Party of China’s behavior and premise for governance. And I
call for an ultimatum to protect our allies from slaughter.

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