Don’t get overawed (Lee Yee)
On the day that the National Security Law was passed by the National People’s Congress, I got a message of a friend from afar: “Are you secure?” I answered without even giving it a thought: ”No one is secure in a secure country.”
When maximal authority of a country is realized, individual rights are so minimal that no one is secure. Even in China where the plebs would answer with a big NO, are people in power secure? Was Liu Shaoqi, the late Chairman of the People’s Republic of China persecuted to death during the Cultural Revolution, secure? In the past 70 years, have most of the people in power of different levels been secure in view of the miseries they have encountered? Was and is Jiang Zemin, the former General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party(CCP), secure? Is Xi Jinping secure?
The befalling of the National Security Law is likened to “the second handover of Hong Kong”. An online article points out “the difference between the first and second handover” is that “the people who resent the CCP in 2020 is countless times more than those in 1997, and in terms of reputation, conduct and calibre, the people who espouse the second handover in 2020 are not even comparable to those who espouse the first handover in 1997”. Another says that “Hong Kongers belonging to no country before handover used to live in peace and work with contentment”, and asks “where their homes are when they belong to a nation”? In China, even the movers and shakers evacuate their relatives by fair means or foul from their country to a strange place they call home in the West.
The Articles of the Hong Kong version of National Security Law was not announced until it took effect, so that Carrie Lam was unable to utter a word about the details of it on the day of implementation of the Law. Legislation as such is preposterous. The full text of it is awash with equivocal meanings of unfinished wordings, which is so jaw-dropping that even a layman would ask: What kind of legal document is that? Zhao Sile, a journalist from China, said online: “The Law is typically from China because the laws of China have always been ambiguous and ill-defined”. She continued, “How are they enforced? Arbitrary and flexible provisions are made by different administrative departments which then inflate in power unceasingly.”
Regarding the abovementioned, it is almost pointless to delve into every Article of it for clarifying under what circumstances does one offend and not offend the Law, and where the grey areas are. Take those dubbed the “four ringleaders of Hong Kong independence” and “gang of four that jeopardizes Hong Kong” by Chinese media as an example. While they are known to be opposed to Hong Kong independence and even anti-localist, and did not advocate the protest last year, China deems them to be guilty of all of the above by dismissing the actuality. Subsequently, some budding political groups disbanded in no time. However, if the CCP decides to recriminate, on no account can they escape. That being said, it is possible that China will sit on the issue of Hong Kong independence provisionally in an attempt to dilute the sanctions against it from overseas. With the arbitrariness and flexibility of laws of China and its enforcement, no one is secure, nor one is doomed to committing a crime. Falling into a trap is simply akin to running into a car accident.
Looking at the National Security Law, Hong Kongers, who are accustomed to living under the rule of law, will naturally get frightened and anxiety-ridden, and try to wash their hands of sensitive issues. They think they will stay secure by stopping short of slogans with content of “secession of state” or disbanding a political group. In reality, if the CCP wants to get you in trouble, it does not have to leverage the National Security Law. Manipulated by the CCP, the SAR government can do and will do whatever stipulated by the National Security Law. Is the Law retroactive? Wasn’t the disqualification sentence for Leung Chunghang and Yau Waiching, former Legislative Council members, retroactive? And the judge that brought in the verdict based on retroactivity was Andrew Cheung Kuinung, the next Chief Justice of the Court of Final Appeal to-be. Does it make sense to contemplate upon the situation differently before and after the enactment of the National Security Law?
Now that the CCP can do whatever it wants. Is the enactment of the National Security Law an unnecessary move? As Chinese officials said, the Law, like a sword dangling above Hong Kongers, is to get them overawed and frightened.
Scared? Surely. Yet, one should have been scared much earlier on. If one had been scared, one would have arranged for fleeing from Hong Kong. Those who choose to stay should not let fear take control of them.
I have always remembered what British writer Salman Rushdie wrote after September 11 attacks in 2001: “Amid the conflict between liberty and security, we should always opt to stand with liberty without remorse even though we make a wrong choice. How do we beat terrorism? Don’t get overawed and don’t let fear take control of you even though you are scared.”
The late U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” If we let fear take control of us, we give up liberty.
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ambiguous sentence 在 Alexander Wang 王梓沅英文 Facebook 的最佳解答
很熱愛英文的我,外加教學職業病,常常在逛美術館時,最後發現自己用了一半以上的時間都在看展品旁邊的英文敘述,而不是看展品本身 XD 在閱讀時,我喜歡看看有沒有什麼可以用來當閱讀、文法、字彙學習的教材(或是反教材 XD)。展品的敘述,常常充滿著比較低頻艱澀的學術字彙、敘述內容抽象、句子修飾語多又長,其實是練習分析句子和閱讀很好的教材。
但要增進議論文寫作的孩子們千萬別用它當教材。因為很多時候,我自己看半天,最後還是想問藝術家們:So what do you really wanna say? The sentence is convoluted and meaning ambiguous. Unclear writing implies unclear thinking. More supporting details are needed. XD
好啦應該是我不夠有藝術涵養。
ambiguous sentence 在 Alexander Wang 王梓沅英文 Facebook 的最佳解答
很熱愛英文的我,外加教學職業病,常常在逛美術館時,最後發現自己用了一半以上的時間都在看展品旁邊的英文敘述,而不是看展品本身 XD 在閱讀時,我喜歡看看有沒有什麼可以用來當閱讀、文法、字彙學習的教材(或是反教材 XD)。展品的敘述,常常充滿著比較低頻艱澀的學術字彙、敘述內容抽象、句子修飾語多又長,其實是練習分析句子和閱讀很好的教材。
但要增進議論文寫作的孩子們千萬別用它當教材。因為很多時候,我自己看半天,最後還是想問藝術家們:So what do you really wanna say? The sentence is convoluted and meaning ambiguous. Unclear writing implies unclear thinking. More supporting details are needed. XD
好啦應該是我不夠有藝術涵養。
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ambiguous sentence 在 大象中醫 Youtube 的最佳解答
ambiguous sentence 在 大象中醫 Youtube 的最佳貼文
ambiguous sentence 在 Ambiguous meaning of the sentence 的推薦與評價
Within the context of a paragraph, the sentence might be clear; but standing alone, the intended interpretation of the sentence is ambiguous ... ... <看更多>
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Some samples of ambiguous sentences ... Ambiguous Sentences. 36 views · 4 weeks ago ...more. Joel Wilborn. 201. ... <看更多>
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Both of them are ambiguous; in fact, your first sentence has three potential interpretations. Let's look at that first. ... <看更多>