Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 22 octobre 2019

The Battle Of Hong Kong

‘Magic: The Gathering’ Pro Shows Support For Hong Kong Protests During Broadcast
By Matt Perez

Lee Shi Tian at "Magic: The Gathering" Mythic Championship V.
Topline: In what now can be considered a contrarian move for major American companies, Wizards of the Coast has seemingly allowed pro player Lee Shi Tian to show solidarity to Hong Kong protesters during its broadcast of the Magic: The Gathering Mythic Championship V.
As Tian walked on stage at Thunder Studios in Long Beach, California, he donned a red scarf over his face and covered one of his eyes, both symbols of support for the Hong Kong pro-Democracy protests.
During a post-match interview where Tian took the win to break into the tournament's top 8, Tian said, "Life has been very tough in my hometown, in Hong Kong. ... It feels so good to play as a free man."
The broadcast did not cut away and there has thus far not been any action against Tian for the demonstration.
Tian told Polygon he was inspired by the actions of Chung “blitzchung” Ng Wai, who was suspended and temporarily stripped of prize winnings by game company Activision Blizzard for comments made supporting Hong Kong protests during a broadcasted Hearthstone competition this month.
According to Polygon, Tian pulled a similar move in 2014 during the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour, where he played a deck named “Umbrella Revolution,” a reference to the protests in Hong Kong over electoral reform at the time.
Forbes has reached out for comment.

Key background: Major companies from the NBA to Apple have been criticized for curtailing criticism of China in response to the threat of losing the country's business. 
Fans of Activision Blizzard have been calling for a boycott of their games like Hearthstone and the upcoming Call of Duty: Modern Warfare due to the suspensions of “blitzchung,” and three college players who held up a sign that said “Free Hong Kong, Boycott Blizz.” 
Last Friday, a bipartisan group of lawmakers, including Marco Rubio and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, signed a letter addressed to Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick criticizing the company’s actions. 
For Wizards of the Coast, its parent company, Hasbro, has steadily decreased its manufacturing in China to avoid the crush of impending Trump tariffs against the country.

Crucial quote: From the joint letter to Kotick: “Because your company is such a pillar of the gaming industry, your disappointing decision could have a chilling effect on gamers who seek to use their platform to promote human rights and basic freedoms.”

What to watch for
: How other game companies—especially those with large markets in China—react to players showing solidarity with Hong Kong protesters.

mardi 15 octobre 2019

What’s Happening With the Hong Kong Protests?

The demonstrations created the city’s worst political crisis in years, ensnaring Beijing, Washington and foreign businesses. Here’s a guide to what’s happening.
By Daniel Victor and Mike Ives

Hundreds of thousands of people in Hong Kong, a city of about seven million, protested a contentious extradition law on June 9.

At first, the hundreds of thousands of peaceful Hong Kong demonstrators who took to the streets this June were focused on contentious, local legislation that would have allowed extraditions to the Chinese mainland.
But as the list of demands grew in the semiautonomous territory, and as clashes between the police and the protesters increased, the movement took on greater global importance.
China has viewed the protests as a challenge to its power, while democracy supporters worldwide have cheered what they see as a poke in the eye of the autocratic Chinese government. 
It all comes amid a rancorous trade war between China and the United States, and some international businesses have found themselves stuck in a political mess they wanted no part of.
How did we get here?
Here’s a primer on what’s happening in Hong Kong, and how the protests have unfolded over several months.

What is Hong Kong’s relationship with China?
Hong Kong, an international finance hub on China’s southern coast, was a British colony until 1997, when it was handed back to China under a policy known as “one country, two systems.”
The policy made Hong Kong part of China but let it keep many liberties denied to citizens on the mainland, including free speech, unrestricted internet access and the right to free assembly. 
The territory has its own laws, system of government and police force under a mini-constitution known as the Basic Law. 
China promised that this system would remain in place until at least 2047.
But Beijing is chipping away at Hong Kong's autonomy, and the local government does its bidding. 
The territory’s top leader, the chief executive — currently Carrie Lam — is appointed by a pro-Beijing committee. 
And she recently used her emergency powers to single-handedly enact a ban on face masks at protests, bypassing the partially elected legislature.

What’s driving the protests?

Protesters threw back tear gas canisters fired by police outside the Legislative Council building in Hong Kong on June 12.

In February, the local government introduced a bill, since scrapped, that would have allowed people accused of crimes to be sent to places with which Hong Kong had no extradition treaty — including mainland China, where the courts are controlled by the Communist Party. 
Lam argued that the bill was needed to guarantee justice in cases like a man who was accused of killing his girlfriend in Taiwan, then evaded prosecution by fleeing to Hong Kong. 
Critics said the bill would allow Beijing to target dissidents in Hong Kong with phony charges, exposing activists to China’s opaque legal system.
Hundreds of thousands of people, including elderly residents and families with children, joined a peaceful march to oppose the bill on June 9. 
But on June 12, the discussion and demands changed when the police used pepper spray, batons and more than 150 canisters of tear gas to disperse thousands of protesters, a small number of whom had thrown projectiles at the police.
Irate at the police response, protesters demanded an independent investigation of the police force — a demand leaders have refused. 
Anger toward the police has grown precipitously since then, as has violence on both sides.

Why have the demonstrations turned violent?

Protesters throw bricks and molotov cocktails at riot police.

Fueled by anger toward the police, as well as the slow erosion of civil liberties, the largely leaderless protests morphed into a broader, more complicated movement about protecting freedoms, democracy and Hong Kong’s autonomy. 
The list of protesters’ demands has grown to include amnesty for arrested participants and direct elections for all lawmakers and the chief executive.
Only one of their demands has been met: the withdrawal of the extradition bill. 
So protesters have continued to take over streets, and have adapted their tactics in hopes of forcing the government’s hand.
While the vast majority of participants have been nonviolent, clashes between the police and young protesters in hard hats, masks and black T-shirts have escalated sharply. 
The police have used water cannons, tear gas, pepper spray and rubber bullets while dispersing crowds, and their tactics have been criticized by protesters and international watchdogs. 
Videos of particularly brutal arrests have infuriated protesters, especially a scene from October in which a police officer shot a protester in the chest with a live round.
Having felt their peaceful rallies were ineffective, a minority of protesters has become increasingly aggressive.
They have thrown bricks and Molotov cocktails, and in one case stabbed a police officer. 
The police say that one homemade bomb has been detonated during a protest. 
And there has been property damage to the train system, which support the police, and pro-China businesses.
Still, nonviolent protests have continued. 
The demonstrators have staged strikes, surrounded police stations, shut down the airport and formed huge marches, while the city’s creative class has turned protest into art and song.

What are the implications for China?

The N.B.A. flagship retail store in Beijing last week.

Much of the international intrigue is based on closely examining how China responds to the protests, and how much democracy its leaders can stomach in its efforts to prove its model works.
Thus far, fears of a Tiananmen-style crackdown have not borne out. 
The Chinese military has a garrison in Hong Kong, but its deployment is widely seen as a worst-case scenario that all sides want to avoid. 
The international business community would likely see a military intervention as the end of “one country, two systems,” and an exodus of businesses could soon follow.
Instead, China has tried to turn public opinion against the protesters. 
The state media has depicted them as violent separatists.
The state media fanned the flames of a backlash against the N.B.A. after a team executive expressed support of the protests on Twitter.
The issue has added another layer of intrigue to the ongoing trade discussions between the United States and China. 
Democratic and Republican politicians have been largely united in support of the protests, but Trump has been more muted.

Why is there bipartisan agreement in the United States on supporting the protesters?

A rally in Hong Kong on Monday evening calling for the US Congress to pass the Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act.

It’s a rare source of across-the-aisle unity. 
There aren’t many issues that would bring together Senator Ted Cruz, a Republican from Texas, and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, the Democrat from New York, but they were among a bipartisan coalition to sign the same letter in support of the protesters. 
Other politicians, including leaders Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, and Senator Mitch McConnell, the Republican majority leader, have been in virtually unanimous agreement.
It stems from a shared distrust of the Chinese government, a much broader issue that often creates agreement between Republicans and Democrats. 
China’s authoritarian model is considered a wide-ranging threat to the United States, and the pro-democracy, anti-China sentiment of the protests aligns with popular American attitudes.
The protesters’ supporters in the United States, and elsewhere in the world, see them as being on the right side of a battle between democracy and authoritarianism. 
They view supporting the protesters as supporting the concept of democracy.

mercredi 9 octobre 2019

American greed: NBA sold its soul to China over cash

Ted Cruz, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Demand NBA to Suspend China Activities Over Boycott
AFP

Washington – A bipartisan set of US lawmakers urged the NBA on Wednesday to suspend all activities in China until Chinese firms and broadcasters end their boycott of the league and the Houston Rockets.
The open letter to NBA commissioner Adam Silver came from eight US lawmakers as politically diverse as Ted Cruz of Texas and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez from New York, both from states with multiple NBA teams.
“You have more power to take a stand than most of the Chinese government’s targets and should have the courage and integrity to use it,” the letter said.
“It’s not unreasonable to expect American companies to put our fundamental democratic rights ahead of profit.”
The letter comes in the wake of a since-deleted tweet from Rockets general manager Daryl Morey supporting Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters.
That prompted the Chinese government to end sponsorships for the team and league and drop planned NBA telecasts in China, huge NBA logos and banner being stripped off buildings a sign of the anger.
After early NBA statements were seen as overly capitulating, Silver said, “I understand there are consequences from … his freedom of speech. We will have to live with those consequences. As a league, we’re not willing to compromise those values.”
The full cost might not be known for months, with the NBA having made lucrative deals to a nation of 1.4 billion that loves basketball. 
But the lawmakers demanded values win over profits.
“Equivocating when profits are at stake is a betrayal of fundamental American values,” the lawmakers wrote. 
“That you have more potential fans in China than in Hong Kong is no excuse for bending over backwards to express ‘sensitivity’ only to one side.”
Lawmakers urged Silver to take four steps to harden the NBA’s stance against China’s retaliatory moves, most notably shutting down NBA activities in China, where two pre-season exhibition games were slated to be played.
“The NBA should have anticipated the challenges of doing business in a country run by a repressive single party government, including by being prepared to stand in strong defense of the freedom of expression of its employees, players, and affiliates across the globe,”
the lawmakers wrote.
They also pushed for an end to punishments to the Rockets, saying the NBA must be united against “future efforts by Chinese government-controlled entities to single out individual teams, players, or associates for boycotts or selective treatment.”
That would also include NBA stars with major sponsor deals in China, including LeBron James, James Harden and now-retired Kobe Bryant.
Lawmakers want Silver to “re-evaluate” having an NBA Academy in East Turkestan, “where up to a million Chinese citizens are held in concentration camps as part of a massive government-run campaign of ethno-religious repression.” 

Lawmakers fear self-censorship
The threat of capitulating on free speech issues to Chinese Communist Party censorship by the NBA and other businesses was a major emphasis for lawmakers.
“We would hope to see Americans standing up and speaking out in defense of the rights of the people of Hong Kong,” the letter said, saying pressure on Morey to back away from his tweet “sold out an American citizen.”
“We are deeply concerned that individuals associated with the league may now engage in self-censorship that is inconsistent with American and the league’s stated values.
“This is an outcome that Americans reject, and one that you should reject — especially given that the NBA represents a unique brand for which there is no competition inside or outside China.”
A hard split could leave basketball-hungry fans in China struggling for banished NBA news, much like baseball fans in Communist Cuba struggled for news on US major league teams.
Lawmakers asked Silver to support the rights for all NBA players, staff, partners and fans to express their opinions no matter the economic repercussions and stress that while Chinese law will be respected in China, American laws and principles will govern global NBA operations.
They also want Silver to clarify in NBA documents that “public commentary on international human rights repression — including in Tibet, Hong Kong, and East Turkestan –falls within expected standards of public behavior and expression.”