Hong Kongers Protest Chinese Reforms

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
September 29, 2014

Hm.  Looks pretty serious.
Hm. Looks pretty serious.

Since the city state was turned over to the Chinese by the British in 1997, Hong Kong has remained largely the same as it was under British rule. Excluding a few Chinese reforms starting in 2009, they are presently going through the largest shake-up thus far, with the PRC letting the people know they are a part of China.

Some of the citizens are unhappy with this scenario, and have taken to the streets. Presently, they are refusing to disperse.

USA Today
:

Police officers tried to negotiate with protesters camped out on a normally busy highway near the Hong Kong government headquarters that was the scene of tear gas-fueled clashes that erupted the evening before.

The chaotic scene and mass civil disobedience are highly unusual in Hong Kong, a former British colony which returned to Chinese rule in 1997.

Many residents of the commerce-focused city have grown frustrated in recent weeks at Beijing’s refusal to allow a genuine choice of candidates for the 2017 vote for Hong Kong’s leader, called the chief executive.

The current chief executive, Leung Chun-ying, said there was no truth to rumors that the Chinese army was about to intervene and he called on the protesters to obey the law and return to their homes to avoid further trouble.

“We don’t want Hong Kong to get messy,” Leung said in a statement broadcast early Monday.

Chinese authorities revealed their anxiety about the ongoing democracy protests in Hong Kong by apparently blocking the picture-sharing service Instagram on the mainland Sunday.

Though it is hardly any of my business what goes on in Hong Kong, I do tend to support the PRC, as it is an authoritarian nationalist system. Corruption exists, but is largely exaggerated by the Chinese people. Hong Kong must have been becoming a social threat, or they wouldn’t have taken these steps.

Hopefully, they’ll get rid of all those sickening Nigerians hanging out on Nathan Street and kick those filthy Pakis out of Chung-King Mansions.

If this rioting continues, it could have a serious effect on global markets… or whatever. Seems it’s good for the dollar though, which I can’t complain about.