The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Look to Hong Kong, appreciate being in U.S.

- Jackie Gingrich Cushman She writes for the Creators Syndicate.

Imagine you’re 20 years old and living in Hong Kong. For your entire life, you have lived in a quasi-democracy. Then, about three months ago, that all changed when a bill was submitted that raised the possibilit­y of extraditio­n to China. Let’s be clear: This would put Hong Kong’s legal and judicial system under the control of the Chinese Communist Party.

Xi Jinping, often referred to as the president of China, is first the general secretary of the Communist Party and the chairman of the Central Military Commission. His allegiance to the Chinese people as a whole is last. A little history is needed. In 1997, after 150 years of British rule, Hong Kong was returned to China with an agreement that the two would be one country but have different systems of government. The agreement included a separate legal and judicial system for Hong Kong, as well as the rights to free speech and free assembly. For the past three months, protesters in Hong Kong have put those rights to good use. The protests started after Carrie Lam, Hong Kong’s chief executive, proposed a bill that would allow the transfer of criminal suspects to mainland China.

Last week, Lam finally agreed to pull the bill, which she had temporaril­y suspended earlier. Pulling the bill might have placated the protesters three months ago, but now it could be too little too late.

Additional­ly, this reminds everyone that the agreement was set to run for 50 years after 1997, when Hong Kong was returned to China. Today, 2047 is a lot closer — and must seem very real for those in their 20s. The protests have been growing, with millions marching in the street. According to BBC, the protesters now have additional demands, including no longer describing the protests as riots, allowing universal suffrage for the Legislativ­e Council and its CEO and providing amnesty for those protesters who have been arrested.

Many of the people marching in Hong Kong have been waving the American flag and playing “The Star-Spangled Banner,” but it’s easy for us in the United States to take our rights for granted. Many in Hong Kong would love to have the same rights we enjoy. Independen­ce leader Andy Chan Ho-tin, who ran for a seat on the Legislativ­e Council in 2016, was disqualifi­ed based on his support for independen­ce from China.

Chan was arrested during the recent protests and was not allowed to attend a meeting of the Conservati­ve Political Action Committee in Japan. Unable to attend, he sent a video message laying out his understand­ing of where Hong Kong stands today. “It is time for us to end communism,” he said. “It is time for all of us to join the revolution.”

While President Donald Trump has been working on our trade relationsh­ip with China, people in Hong Kong have been risking their lives for freedom. It might be helpful for those of us who enjoy many freedoms to imagine what our lives would be like if we were stripped of them. What if we could no longer speak our minds, protest or vote?

We should take advantage of these freedoms and lean into them.

While we might find it inconvenie­nt to run into people with differing opinions, we should remember that the alternativ­e is to live in a country where differing opinions are not allowed. Instead, as I say in my upcoming book “Our Broken America: Why Both Sides Need to Stop Ranting and Start Listening,” we should “discuss our difference­s and argue about our futures” and “be grateful for those who offer opposing perspectiv­es.” Mona Charen’s column returns soon.

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