China’s Bloody Anniversary

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Today is the thirtieth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square. The anti-communist revolutions we celebrate in the West have their evil twin in the East, where mass demonstrations did not lead to a freer China, but only to decades more of repression.

China made peace with capitalism since then, but their war on liberty continues unabated. We saw that in the arrests of Christian ministers late last year. In a greater enormity this year, we have seen the morally backward socialist government recreate the worst crimes of the twentieth century as they locked up more than a million Uighurs in concentration camps.

There should be a greater outcry against concentration camps! But maybe because the people there are Muslims from an ethnic group that is relatively unknown in the West, or maybe because our governments care more about the business we do with Red China than the human rights of their citizens, we hear little.

  • Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a fairly blistering statement against the Chinese government. It’s a good start.
  • Helen Raleigh writes for National Review about how China has tried to censor everything about the 1989 uprising.
  • She also writes for The Federalist about why the still-anonymous Tank Man was a hero.
  • Meanwhile, Silicon Valley shows where its loyalties lie: as Anthony Ha writes for TechCrunch, Twitter engaged in mass suppression of Chinese accounts in the days leading up to the anniversary.