Daily News (Los Angeles)

Companies bend to genocidal China

- By John Stossel John Stossel is creator of Stossel TV and author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

Companies tell us they support justice.

“Believe in something, even if it means sacrificin­g everything,” says former 49ers quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick in a Nike ad.

“Speak for the people who may not be able to be heard,” says the NBA.

“Corporate PR hogwash,” says journalist Melissa Chen.

“Hogwash,” she says, because the NBA clearly does not want its employees to criticize injustice — if that injustice is in China.

Daryl Morey, general manager of the Houston Rockets, tweeted, “Fight for freedom, stand with Hong Kong.”

Good for him. China crushed freedom in Hong Kong. But China didn’t like hearing an NBA executive say that. Chinese TV stopped broadcasti­ng Rockets games. The NBA then apparently told its players and front offices to shut up. Morey deleted his tweet and instead tweeted that he “did not intend to cause any offense.”

The NBA itself also apologized to China, saying that they were “disappoint­ed” by Morey’s “inappropri­ate” tweet. Lebron James called Morey “misinforme­d.”

“China is able to strong-arm these companies … into actually acquiescin­g with its ideology,” complains Chen.

That ideology is often grotesque. The U.S. and other countries accuse China of committing genocide against a mostly

Muslim minority group, the Uyghurs.

China imprisons them in “reeducatio­n camps.” Leaked satellite footage shows blindfolde­d men, with their hands tied behind their backs, in what looks like a concentrat­ion camp. But although the NBA runs ads that say, “Speak for the people who may not be able to be heard,” it clearly does not want its players, coaches or executives to say anything about Uyghur genocide..

“Companies like Apple, Nike and Coca-Cola have part of their supply chain sourced from this region,” she responds. “In these areas, Uyghurs are forced to participat­e in slave labor.”

Hollywood doesn’t care either. The movie “Mulan” was filmed in the same region where Uyghurs are tortured. In the credits, Disney gave “special thanks” to government department­s in Xinjiang, where the abuse occurs.

“Fast and Furious 9” actor John Cena, promoting his movie to people in Taiwan, said, “Taiwan is the first country that can watch F9.”

What was wrong with that? “He had the audacity to allude to the fact that Taiwan was a country,” says Chen, “rather than a territory owned by China.”

I don’t know what China said to Cena or Universal Pictures, but soon Cena was on Chinese social media, groveling to China, saying “sorry” over and over. “I have made a mistake. …

I really love and respect the Chinese people. … I made a mistake,” he pleaded.

Only one NBA player is principled enough to point out the NBA’s hypocrisy: Boston Celtic Enes Kanter Freedom. He criticizes players who don’t speak up because they fear losing Chinese business deals.

“Human rights and basic rights is way more important than any deal you can offer,” he says. He loses lucrative shoe contracts because he sometimes displays messages on his shoes, like “Free Tibet” and “Stand With Taiwan.” He denounces Chinese Uyghur oppression. So China won’t broadcast Celtics games.

But Freedom keeps speaking up, calling out hypocrites like Nike, which promotes social justice causes in the United States but is largely silent about human rights violations in China.

The press rarely points out the hypocrisy, says Chen, because “this exposes the woke edifice of the NBA.”

Of course, companies exist to make money. Should we expect them to turn their back on the Chinese market?

“Absolutely,” says Chen. “The least we can do is to take stock of their cowardice and recognize that what they’re participat­ing in is bald-faced hypocrisy.”

 ?? FILE PHOTO: TATAN SYUFLANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Student activists wear masks with the colors of the proindepen­dence East Turkistan flag during a rally to protest the Beijing 2022Winter Olympic Games, outside the Chinese Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday, Jan. 14, 2022.
FILE PHOTO: TATAN SYUFLANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Student activists wear masks with the colors of the proindepen­dence East Turkistan flag during a rally to protest the Beijing 2022Winter Olympic Games, outside the Chinese Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, Friday, Jan. 14, 2022.

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