A logical continuation of yesterday’s blog entry by John Whitehead.
The Chinese record on Tibet is sickening, and has been since the initial invasion of 1950. But what’s more sickening is the willing complicity of those who rule us (legally and illegally, with or without our consent). And now that they have pretty well destroyed our economy and our dollar, they probably don’t dare say too much to the Chinese even if they wish to, because the one who pays the piper still chooses the tune, regardless of whatever pretense is universally agreed to.
From the online San Francisco Chronicle, SFGate: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/g/a/2008/03/21/notes032108.DTL
Friday, March 21, 2008 (SF Gate)
Note to China: Please Implode
Could the Olympics rain down shame on Chinese oppression and Tibet abuses? Let’s hope
By Mark Morford, SF Gate Columnist
I hope it all comes crashing down on their heads.
Is that wrong? Is it ill-minded and somehow unfair to wish that the
Chinese government’s notorious record of human rights abuses and
absolutely horrid treatment of Tibet be exposed to the world–and
the Chinese people themselves–to the point where it is shamed and
humiliated and perhaps even forced by unprecedented international scrutiny
to upheave its oppressive ways and improve conditions and even (heaven
forfend) honor religious and political freedom within its borders? No, I
do not think it is.
Let me admit outright: I am no expert on Chinese-Tibetan relations. I do
not know the full histories, the deeper conflicts, the enormous
prejudices, the religious oppression that goes back decades and
generations.
But I do know something of Tibet, of the Dalai Lama, of his unadorned
messages of peace and love. And I know something of Tibetan Buddhism, of
China’s abduction of the true Panchen Lama, of the brutal oppression and
the massacres and the cultural genocide, the forced relocation of Han
Chinese into Tibetan holy land, of the Tibetan’s peaceful rallies and
chanting and nonviolence, all contrasted with images of jackbooted Chinese
riot police stomping on the heads of protesters marching in the street.
And I know whom I tend to believe when I read “unconfirmed” reports of
soldiers firing on Tibetan protesters, of dead bodies in the streets of
Lhasa, of tanks rolling through crowds and hundreds of students arrested,
Tibetan monasteries being locked down and Tibet again under martial law,
all media cut off, all access denied, as sour and rather vile hardline
Communist leader Zhang Qingli steps up to a microphone and calls the Dalai
Lama — perhaps the gentlest, kindest human soul on the face of the
planet — a “wolf in monk’s robes, a devil with a human face but the
heart of a beast.” Yes, I think I know where the truth lies.
Read the rest of this entry »