
Mark Twain said, “To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.” The tool one has to solve one’s problems determines one’s perspectives and choice of solution.
Beijing’s problem now is that it’s holding a hammer, only to find that Hong Kong is not the nail the regime thought it was.
The Chinese communist regime’s hammer is a dictatorial tool under an autocratic system. Forging such a tool requires a variety of conditions.
First of all, a closed environment including closed media, monopolized social resources, and closed cultural environment. In such an environment, social resources are exclusive to the dictatorship. The dictatorship can deprive people’s property at any time. A closed cultural environment includes censorship of ideology and values.
Secondly, the regime needs to subject people to long-term terrorist training in this environment. These conditions are formed at the same time as authoritarian political tools. It requires a “forging” process that takes gradual implementation and accumulation.
Let’s borrow the concept from Daniel Kahneman’s book “Thinking, Fast and Slow.” When “system 2” in the brain completes the calculation, statistics, and logic calculation process, “system 1” takes over and proceeds with energy-saving automatic operation.
After the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) formed its dictatorship tools, the regime then entered an automatic mechanism for its judgment and handling of issues. They normally don’t distinguish the differences between specific problems but simplify the classification and find the so-called “best solution.”
The hammer of dictatorship can only be used effectively under authoritarian conditions, something not fully formed in Hong Kong. If the CCP wants to use autocracy in Hong Kong, then it must establish an authoritarian system condition in a long period of time that is likely to be quite bloody.
This is exactly what the CCP and its agents are imposing on Hong Kong.
Humanity’s development over thousands of years has led towards the principles of freedom, openness, equality and tolerance. When we talk about a modern social system, openness, prosperity, tolerance, and freedom are a must have, even if we omit democracy, rule of law, and so on.
The modern civilized system has these connotations in general. With the absence of complete democracy, Hong Kong is still a social system with characteristics of a modern civilization. This drives the fact that when Beijing waves its hammer, it does not achieve the same effect as in mainland China. Sometimes the opposite outcome ensues.
By Cang Shan
From The Epoch Times