The authoritarian mindset really really believes that they can make better decisions than everyone else. Worse, those closest have unending incentive to cheer this on because once again this is tee source of all present largesse.
The difficulty is that it also naturally severs the communications necessary for the rest to prosper and stagnation becomes inevitable. China has had the luxury of yusing fiat currency expansion to agressively expand the economy and we now have the living standards of the base expanding. The size of the problem was so huge that it took all of thirty years.
At this point the holiday appears to be over. Yet the same mindset is grasping to assert control in Hong Kong. This is almost independent of the economic expansion and is more a study in opportunism. It is been opposed and frankly, as no good can be expected from acceptance, it needs to be opposed strongly.
Thus we see the demos speak in Hong Kong.
Faced With Communism, Hong Kong Should Remind Us of the Value of Democracy
By Joshua Philipp, November 28, 2014
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1109427-faced-with-communism-hong-kong-should-remind-us-the-value-of-democracy/
The greatest killers in the known history of the world never
faced justice, and in the void left by their unpunished crimes the world
risks slipping backward into the mistakes of history. That is the
message delivered by Marion Smith, the executive director of the Victims
of Communism Memorial Foundation, in an interview with Epoch Times.
Communism has claimed the lives of more than 100 million people in
the less than 100 years since Russia’s Bolshevik Revolution in October
1917, according to the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation. Its
death toll is higher than that of World War I and World War II combined.
Communism began a wave of famine and killing that swept through
Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America. In every country it touched,
totalitarian regimes took power or violent guerrilla movements launched
campaigns of terror and tyranny.
“The appalling ignorance of many Americans about the evils of communism
is a great disservice to the memories of the millions who died under
communist regimes,” said Smith in a phone interview.
“It is also making it much harder to combat those communist regimes
still in existence who are tormenting citizens, clamping down on free
speech, and posing a danger to the rest of the free world,” Smith said.
The U.S.-based Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation is a
nonprofit organization formed in 1994 by an Act of Congress to
memorialize the victims of communism, educate younger generations about
the nature of communism, and document evidence of its crimes.
Smith said education on the nature of communism is important, not
only because of its crimes—many of which have still not seen justice,
but also because it still exists in today’s world. And in countries
including China, North Korea, Vietnam, and Cuba it is continuing its
abusive legacy.
Hong Kong
Smith recently returned from a monthlong trip to Hong Kong where
activists are now protesting for democratic, free elections under threat
of mainland China’s communist rule. He met with business leaders, human
rights campaigners and leaders, student leaders and protesters,
academics, and even police officers to gain a better understanding of
the situation.
“The people of Hong Kong have a culture of liberty that they think is
being threatened,” he said, adding that the protesters believe if they
do not take a stand for free elections, “they’re afraid they may not be
able to have another opportunity.”
At its core, Smith said, what is now unfolding in Hong Kong is just
another case of a Communist regime attacking the freedom of a democratic
state. He said, “it is China trying to curtail the freedoms of Hong
Kong, which has been for decades a free society.”
Historically, communism has always created systems where choice and morality are governed by the state.
“The simple fact is that communism in the more than 40 countries that
it was tried, once they took power they outlawed religion, outlawed
free speech, they outlawed every other political party, they became
totalitarian states, and they as a matter of policy targeted and killed
significant portions of their own population in pursuit of ideological
goals,” Smith said.
“The history is very clear on this,” he said. “Communism is the
deadliest ideology in history. Communism is an enabling ideology for
totalitarianism. In no case has communism come to power and instigated
human dignity and flourishing.”
It is also an ideology that has taken deep roots in the modern
world—and in countries like China the Party elite have created new
state-approved versions of religions, and set in place state-run
educational systems to regulate political thought.
Dangers of Forgetting
A facade has been set in place over the ruins of religion and free
thought, and through the masquerade of Communist state-run news outlets
the world has been fooled.
He said that many people today are forgetting that China is still
ruled by the Chinese Communist Party, and behind its projection of a
growing economy is the same form of totalitarianism that has existed in
every other communist regime—including its suppression of dissidents,
forced labor, and tight regulation of free information from newspapers
to the Internet.
What the Chinese regime is using, he said, is “state capitalism,”
under which “you have no civic or political rights, but you have
economic freedom—and people think that makes perfect sense.”
“This inability to see totalitarianism for what it is comes from an
inability to recognize what is necessary for freedom and prosperity and a
government that respects the basic rights of its citizens,” he said.
Smith is concerned that despite the well documented history of
communism, and its totalitarian systems that still hold power in many
countries of the world, people are forgetting its nature—and some,
particularly among youth, are again promoting its ideologies.
“Our understanding of the history of the communist regime is very
important for us maintaining a free society in the future,” Smith said.
“It’s a very odd thing that here in the United States we could go
from fighting a decades long Cold War where tens of thousands of American
soldiers died protecting freedoms around the world,” he said. “We could
go from all of that to forgetting that communism ever really existed.”
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