E-Balla wrote:Duffman100 wrote:E-Balla wrote:Personally my thoughts on the matter goes as far as this: Hong Kong is a symbol of British imperialism in the West that shouldn't exist and what China does with what's rightfully there's is their business. As a citizen of the West the criticism of China to me is a criticism of people lashing out against Western imperialism similar to the massive hate for Zimbabwe and the massive lashing out against South Africa when they said they were going to start forcing people to sell the government land.
You brought up Chinese freedom of speech violations as a whataboutism, deal with that same energy back (IDK what started this all I just saw your comment and felt it was a bit arrogant).
So all the current citizens, who have lived in a different situation? **** them? All those journalists, bloggers, etc, who have spoken out against Chinese human rights issues, you're basically signing their death sentence).
There's no whataboutism. China regularly prevents any criticism of their government and journalists who persist often are never seen again. There's no defending that. That's wrong.
I'm not defending it, I'm saying it's not my place to criticize it. The current citizens are citizens of China last I checked so I'm not defending them in a not so thinly veiled attempt of defending western imperialism. All types of freedom of speech issues pop up concerning the NBA but I don't remember nearly this much outrage when Turkey refused to show Portland's playoff games. Not hard to see why if you take 2 seconds to read between the lines.
Let's be clear about what happened.
Morey, a US citizen working for a US company, on his private Twitter account, a site which is banned in China, retweeted "Fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong", then deleted it 5 minutes later.
The Chinese government shutdown a $4,000,000,000 Chinese subsidy of the US business Morey works for in response.