【#TheDiplomat: 沈旭暉隨緣家書英文版🇭🇰】很久沒有向國際關係評論網 The Diplomat 供稿,但國際線十分重要,不應放棄。這次他們希望分享23條、國安法、反恐法風雨欲來的「新香港」前瞻,願國際社會能多了解快將出現的危機:
While the world is preoccupied with a fight against the COVID-19 pandemic, Beijing has been tightening its political grip on all aspects of Hong Kong’s civil society. Rumor has it that Beijing will push through legislating national security laws under Article 23 of Hong Kong’s Basic Law by unconventional means, such as massively disqualifying pro-democratic legislators or even directly applying a national law, widely argued as a major step to destroy the rights and freedom of Hong Kongers, and bring Chinese authoritarianism to Hong Kong.
After the 2019 protests, the administration of Carrie Lam, who theoretically is still leading the special administrative region of China, has little political capital at stake, with its legitimacy reaching rock bottom. The pro-government camp has dwindling prospects for the city’s upcoming Legislative Council election. The government‘s ”nothing to lose“ mentality is apparent from its recent blatant reinterpretation of the Basic Law’s Article 22 (another article that limits the influence of China’s offices in Hong Kong’s internal affairs). The debate is nothing new, but the pressure this time is quite different.
This article highlights the different strategies Beijing could adopt to enact Article 23 insidiously or under disguise to avoid backlash from the international community, while continuing to reap benefits from the city’s globally recognized special status. This seems to be part of Beijing’s brinkmanship to bring Hong Kong protesters and their supporters to their knees and move the city closer to authoritarianism. To counter these moves, Hong Kongers must define the boundaries beyond which Hong Kong falls into authoritarian rule and make a case as to why the city’s downfall is detrimental to the international community‘s interest.
The Long-Term Controversy Over National Security Laws
Back in 2003, the implementation of Article 23 was thwarted by the moderate pro-establishment politician James Tien. In face of overwhelming public disapproval of the law, he withdrew support and votes from his Liberal Party. However, 17 years later, it is hard to imagine Beijing following the old legislative playbook: start with a public consultation, followed by public discourse and political debate, and end with the majority rule. This playbook only works in peaceful societies ruled by a trustworthy government with integrity.
The aftermath of 2003, as well as the 2019 protests, should have taught Beijing and the Hong Kong government a lesson: pushing through national security legislation in a flawed parliament controlled by the minority pro-government camp would inevitably set off another full city-scale protest — and undoubtedly more fierce and focused this time. Given the current government’s numerous displays of dishonesty, it is conceivable that they will embark on a less-traveled path to implement Article 23.
Strategy One: “Anti-Terrorism”
In principle, one possible strategy could be to directly enact Chinese national law across Hong Kong, which can be achieved by declaring a state of emergency in the city. However, this is risky business as it would tarnish the integrity of “one country two systems” and subsequently Hong Kong’s international standing. Beijing, a risk-averse regime, is also unwilling to see Hong Kong’s status as a middleman for laundering money disappear into thin air.
Instead, Beijing could be concocting a narrative that would see Chinese national law applied to Hong Kong while not damaging Hong Kong’s international standing and Beijing’s own interests. The key word in this script is “anti-terrorism.” As early as 2014, pro-Beijing scholars have been claiming the emergence of “local terrorist ideology” on Hong Kong soil. Since the anti-extradition bill protests last year, government rhetoric frequently described the protests, which caused no deaths at all in the entire year, with phrases like “inclination to terrorist ideology.” That was a signal to the world that Hong Kong’s internal conflicts had ballooned into a national security issue. This gives the government the legitimacy to justify the implementation of Chinese national laws across the highly autonomous region to counter terrorism. The Chinese government knows that if it can persuade the world that terrorism exists in Hong Kong, and that it is as severe as the terror threat facing many other nations today, the international community will be less critical of Beijing’s actions in Hong Kong. Enacting Chinese laws directly is a convenient path that will save Beijing from having to tackle Hong Kong’s internal conflicts, basically turning the Hong Kong issue into a nonissue.
Strategy Two: Stacking the Legislature by Disqualifying Candidates
An even bolder strategy was probably foretold by a recent incident where the Hong Kong government and Beijing’s agencies for Hong Kong affairs (HKMAO and the Liaison Office) jointly criticized lawmaker Dennis Kwok for filibustering, framing it as “misconduct in public office” and “violating his oath.” It is incomprehensible to claim that filibustering goes against a lawmaker’s main duty; rather, it is common understanding that legislative work includes debating the law and representing public opinion against unreasonable laws. In a parliament controlled by the minority, pro-democratic members representing the majority of Hong Kongers are forced to express their objections using means like filibustering. Wouldn’t a lack of different political opinions turn the legislative branch into a rubber-stamp institution?
The above allegation has set a dangerous precedent for twisting the logic behind a certain provision in the Basic Law to target opposing lawmakers. In other words, to fulfill Beijing’s interpretation of the principal requirement for holding public office in Hong Kong, one could be required to take a meticulously legalistic approach to uphold the Basic Law down to its every single wording. A public official, by this new definition, not only needs to support “one country, two systems” or object Hong Kong independence, but also must abide by every single provision in the Basic Law. Worst of all, based on the previous cases, whether an official’s words or actions oversteps a provision is up to Beijing’s interpretation of his/her “intent.”
If this approach is applied, in the next election, there might be additional official questions for screening candidates like the following: “The Basic Law states that the enactment of Article 23 is a constitutional duty. Failing to support Article 23 legislation violates the Basic Law. Do you support it?” This question would suffice to disqualify even moderate or even pro-establishment candidates like James Tien. Even if any pro-democratic candidates were elected, once Article 23 re-enters the legislative process, they could risk ouster by raising objections.
Despite the absurdity of this tactic, the Chinese regime may just be tempted enough if such a strategy could resolve two of China’s current nuisances — voices of dissent in the Legislative Council and the previous failure to implement Article 23.
Strategy Three: The “Boiling Frog Effect”
Article 23 is not yet implemented, but the dystopian world that the protesters pictured in 2003 is already becoming reality. Regular citizens have been persecuted for “sedition” for sharing their views on social media or participating in legal protests; workers face retaliation for taking part in strikes; corporations are pressured to publicly side with the government’s stance; employees who have the “wrong” political views are fired; schools have been closely monitored for teaching material; protest-supporting fundraisers were framed for money laundering; a retweet or like may lead to persecution, under a colonial-era law. Only now have Hong Kongers woken up to their new reality — although the Basic Law technically protects citizens’ rights to speak, rally, march, demonstrate, and go on strike, the government could enfeeble civil rights by bending antiquated laws and legal provisions. The frequent abuse of law enforcement power on a small scale, such as improper arrests and police violence, is desensitizing the public and the international community. In a few years, Hong Kong will become unrecognizable. This is indeed a clever play on Beijing’s part to slowly strip away Hong Kong’s autonomy and freedom, without causing much international attention.
Counter-Strategies Against Beijing’s Brinkmanship
Beijing’s overarching goal is to hollow out Hong Kong but, at the same time, avoid major backlash from the international community, which could spell the end of the privileged global status of Hong Kong not granted to other Chinese cities. Beijing also aims at preventing single incidents that could cascade down into mass protests as seen in 2003, 2014, and 2019; and eliminating any resistance forces from within Hong Kong’s legislature. The tactics outlined above are typical in a game of brinkmanship.
In response, Hong Kongers in Hong Kong and on the so-called “international frontline” must know their strengths and bargaining chips on this negotiating table with Beijing.
Unlike Xinjiang and Tibet, Hong Kong is a city with transparency and free flow of information. Hong Kongers need to make a case to the world that the protests are not acts of terrorism. Some suggestions include comparing the Hong Kong protests to similar struggles in 20 or so other counties in the world at the present time, none of which were classified as terrorism; collecting a large amount of concrete evidence of the disproportionate use of force by the Hong Kong police; and showing how enacting Chinese national laws in Hong Kong will end the city’s autonomy and spell disaster for international community‘s interests.
The Legislative Council is the institution that can counteract Beijing’s “boiling frog” strategy and to keep Hong Kongers’ hope alive in the system. Those who plan to run for legislative office must be prepared to be disqualified from running. If only individuals are banned, there need to be alternative candidates as back-up plans. However, if and when the disqualification process is applied broadly to entire camps of candidates (for example, all who object to Article 23), the pro-democracy camp must make a strong case to the Hong Kong and global public that this is the endgame for Hong Kong democracy. Then the incumbent popularly elected legislators will hold the internationally recognized mandate from the public and serve as the last resistance.
These recommendations delineates how the slogan “if we burn, you burn with us,” often seen in the protests, may play out in the game of international relations. If the national security laws are “passed” by a legislature that is jury-rigged in this manner, or if related national laws are directly implemented in Hong Kong, Hong Kongers should signal clearly to the world that it goes way beyond the promised “one country, two systems.” Crossing this red line by Beijing should be seen by the world as a blunt violation of its promised autonomy to Hong Kongers. At that time, if the international community led by the United States and the United Kingdom decided to revoke the “non-sovereignty entity” status of Hong Kong and regard the SAR as an ordinary Chinese city, it shouldn’t come as a surprise.
Dr. Simon Shen is the Founding Chairman of GLOs (Glocal Learning Offices), an international relations start-up company. He also serves as an adjunct associate professor in the University of Hong Kong, Chinese University of Hong Kong and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, and associate director of the Master of Global Political Economy Programme of the CUHK. The author acknowledges Jean Lin, Coco Ho, Chris Wong, Michelle King, and Alex Yap for their assistance in this piece.
▶️ 高度自治 vs 全面管治
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwt8wZl8jHQ
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過173的網紅電扶梯走左邊 Jacky,也在其Youtube影片中提到,✨本集來賓:Sean 是我在 Instagram 紐約的同事 - 我們雖然在 IG 不同 Team 在一些project合作過的經驗 | Projects we collaborated on at IG on different teams - 在Facebook可怕的升遷制度學到的經驗 | ...
definition of disaster 在 Eric's English Lounge Facebook 的最佳解答
[時事英文] 台灣學子IEYI奪9金
超厲害的!
When you encounter a problem, don’t just give up. Think, collaborate, and solve the problem together! Truly a paradigm of a growth mindset!
1. a paradigm of... 一個...的典範,範例*
面臨問題時,絕不要立即放棄。而去思考,跟他人一起合作解決問題!這條新聞完全是成長心態的典範!
*paradigm: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/paradigm
★★★★★★★★★★★★
Taiwan’s gold medal winners from International Exhibition for Young Inventors (IEYI) 2019 were presented with awards by Chu Nan-shyan, chief secretary of the Ministry of Education, March 13 at MOE headquarters in Taipei City.
2. International Exhibition for Young Inventors (IEYI) 世界青少年發明展
3. be presented with 被頒發了
4. the Ministry of Education 教育部
3月13日,教育部主任秘書朱南錫在台北市教育部總部頒發了台灣國際青年發明展金獎。
★★★★★★★★★★★★
At the event held last year in Jakarta, Indonesia, Chu said, the Taiwan team submitted 43 inventions to the competition, nine of which won gold medals. Of the 140 entries from 11 countries, IEYI gave out 33 golds in total, Chu added.
5. entries from many countries 來自多個國家的參賽作品
6. give out 發出了
7. in total 總共
他說,去年於印尼雅加達舉行的比賽中,台灣隊提交了43項發明,其中9項獲得了金牌。他補充說,在來自於11個國家的140個參賽作品中,IEYI總共發出了33金。
★★★★★★★★★★★★
Among notable winners was a tilting suitcase, a collaborative effort by representatives from three schools in southern Taiwan. It was created to address the inconvenience of staying in a hotel room too small to accommodate luggage.
8. a tilting suitcase 一個傾斜的手提箱
9. a collaborative effort 共同的努力
10. address a problem 面對,處理問題*
11. accommodate 容納
在得勝者那麼多作品中,其中最引人注目的是一個傾斜的手提箱。這是來自台灣南部三所學校學生代表共同努力完成的參賽作品。同學發想的靈感來自於為了解決在飯店住宿時因空間太小而無法輕鬆開啟行李的問題。
*address (v.): https://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/address
★★★★★★★★★★★★
An electrical socket designed by students from an elementary school in northeastern Taiwan’s Yilan County to protect outlets from flood waters also snagged one of the top prizes.
12. an electrical socket 電源插座
13. protect somebody/something/yourself (against/from something) 保護…免…
14. snag (v.) US informal 攫取,抓到
台灣東北部宜蘭縣一所小學的學生( 小學生喔!!!) 設計的一種電源插座,可以保護插座避免受到洪水的侵蝕,也得到其中一項大獎。
★★★★★★★★★★★★
Chu said IEYI encourages innovation through hands-on experimentation, a goal in line with new curriculum guidelines released by the MOE’s K-12 Education Administration in 2019. All entries to the competition were geared toward solving problems or catering to specific individual needs, Chu added.
15. encourage innovation 鼓勵創新
16. hands-on experimentation 親自動手做的實驗
17. in line with… 與…一致
18. curriculum guidelines 課程指導原則
19. entries to the competition 參賽作品
20. be geared toward… 被設定旨在/往…
21. cater for sb/sth 迎合;滿足某事件或某人的需要
22. specific individual needs 特定的個人需求
朱主秘說,「世界青少年發明展」鼓勵通過動手實驗來創新,這一目標與教育部在2019年發布的K-12課綱指導方向一致。Chu補充說,所有參賽作品都旨在解決問題或滿足特定的個人需求。 。
★★★★★★★★★★★★
Invention categories include disaster management, education and recreation, food and agriculture, green technology, health and safety, technology for special needs and art technology. Participants aged six to 19 are eligible to enter the competition.
23. disaster management 災害管理
24. green technology 環境科技, 綠色科技
25. health and safety 健康與安全
26. special needs 特殊需求
27. be eligible 有資格*
發明類別包括災害管理,教育和娛樂,糧食和農業,綠色技術,健康與安全,特殊需求技術和藝術技術。年齡在6至19歲之間的參賽者有資格參加比賽。
*eligible (for something)/eligible (to do something): https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/eligible
★★★★★★★★★★★★
IEYI is an annual event showcasing the creative powers of youths from Asia and Africa. Founded in 2004, it aims to boost ingenuity among younger generations. (TYT-E)
28. showcase talents 展示天分
29. boost ingenuity 提高獨創力
30. the younger generation年輕的一代
IEYI是一年一度的活動,展示了來自亞洲和非洲的年輕人的創造力。它成立於2004年,旨在提高年輕一代的創造力。
★★★★★★★★★★★★
完整報導: https://bit.ly/2QU4NUU
圖片來源: https://bit.ly/2xC36Vh
A Growth Mindset (成長心態): https://bit.ly/2WBiUCi
definition of disaster 在 電扶梯走左邊 Jacky Youtube 的最佳貼文
✨本集來賓:Sean 是我在 Instagram 紐約的同事
- 我們雖然在 IG 不同 Team 在一些project合作過的經驗 | Projects we collaborated on at IG on different teams
- 在Facebook可怕的升遷制度學到的經驗 | Lessons learned from Facebook's tough promotion
- 如何在大公司內離開舒適圈 | Leaving your comfort zone at a big company
- 哪一本書讓Sean學到如何對自己的快樂負責走出低潮療癒自我 | The book that helped Sean take responsibility of happiness & self healing
- 忙碌的幻覺 | The mirage of busyness
- 一個健康的感情該有的依賴獨立觀念 | What a healthy relationship looks like in terms of dependency
- 還有Sean 做很多有趣的自我實驗 | Interesting social experiments Sean did
📚 Books mentioned:
- The Happiness Project
- Essentialism
- Extreme Ownership
- 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
- Working Out Loud
我們每集都會辦抽書活動,記得 follow 我們 🤩
IG: https://www.instagram.com/leftsideescalator.jacky/
FB: https://www.facebook.com/LeftSideEscalator.Jacky/
***
(00:02:20) 紐約疫情爆發的恐怖經驗 | Covid19 disaster in New York
(00:04:55) 台灣長大,美國念書的文化衝擊,如何融入 | Growing up in Taiwan, moving to the US, culture shock and assimilating
(00:07:27) 回來當兵?!| Military Service?
(00:07:40) 進Facebook的經驗,Instagram的工作經驗 | Experience joining Facebook and working at Instagram
(00:12:47) 如何在大公司跳出舒適圈,挑戰新領域 | Leaving your comfort zone at a big company, trying a new area
(00:17:25) Instagram工作的有趣經歷 | Interesting working experience at Instagram
(00:20:02) 職涯的意義 | Sean's career meaning
(00:23:48) 大家不喜歡「改變」這件事 | People resist change
(00:27:35) Kobe的啟發跟過世 | Kobe's inspiration & legacy
(00:32:22) 5am 早起運動,借助團體的力量達成更好的自律 | 5 am workouts, the power of communities
(00:34:12) 時間管理的好習慣 | Time management habits
(00:37:15) 最有影響的書幫他走出低潮療癒自我 | Most influential book to get through dark time & self heal
(00:39:41) 健康感情如何不失去自我 | How to not lose yourself in a healthy relationship
(00:44:26) 從 Facebook 升遷的壓力學到的慘痛經驗,解決問題代替責怪 | Lesson learned from Facebook's tough promotion pressure, ownership over blame game
(00:49:56) 如何改進 反省自己 | How to self reflect & improve
(00:52:40) 成功的定義 | Definition of success
(00:54:39) 快樂的定義 | Definition of happiness
(00:55:56) 如何改變世界 | How to change the world
(00:57:43) 一年吃素挑戰 | Vegetarian challenge for a year
(1:03:01) 總結 | Conclusion
definition of disaster 在 Disaster Definitions - YouTube 的推薦與評價
Learning objectives After watching this video, viewers will be able to: 1. Define the word “disaster”. 2. Define disaster “hazards”. 3. ... <看更多>