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Date:      Mon, 29 Jun 1998 00:54:17 +0000
From:      "Frank Pawlak" <fpawlak@execpc.com>
To:        "Jason C. Wells" <jcwells@u.washington.edu>, "Jonathan M. Bresler" <jmb@FreeBSD.ORG>, Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
Cc:        drifter@stratos.net, freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Tiananmen square (was: Does it's true?)
Message-ID:  <980629005417.ZM1165@darkstar.connect.com>
In-Reply-To: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com> "Tiananmen square (was: Does it's true?)" (Jun 29,  9:16am)
References:  <199806281732.KAA15832@hub.freebsd.org>  <Pine.BSF.3.96.980628151901.2460H-100000@s8-37-26.student.washington.edu>  <19980629091624.M28872@freebie.lemis.com>

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On Jun 29,  9:16am, Greg Lehey wrote:
> Subject: Tiananmen square (was: Does it's true?)
> On Sunday, 28 June 1998 at 15:27:43 +0000, Jason C. Wells wrote:
> > On Sun, 28 Jun 1998, Jonathan M. Bresler wrote:
> >
> >>	ownership  of small arms is insufficient for the task.
> >>	if one embraces the purpose of the second amendment, rather
> >>	then just the language, we must allow the citizentry to own
> >>	heavy weapons.  no one that i know of advocates this.
> >
> > I feel that a rag tag militia that has heart and the support of the
> > population is incredibly difficult to defeat. I have heard commanders of
> > the South East Asian theater make this statement.
>
> Which country are you thinking of?
>
> > I feel that an auto loading rifle is sufficient for the purpose of
> > opposing tyranny. This is a personal opinion.
>
> It may make a token gesture.  It won't help if they're about to run
> over you with a tank.  On the other hand, it can be quite useful for
> killing individuals, innocent or otherwise.
>
> >>	what would it have availed the chinese students to have
> >>	small arms in tianamen (sp) square.  it would not have
> >>	forestalled action by the gov't.
> >
> > No it would not have forstalled the government. Here I will avoid
> > discussion (I am a proponent) of civil disobedience as an instrument of
> > power. Still, if the citizens of the nation of China were given the
> > weapons that the only the civilians of the US owns, there would be a shift
> > in power.
>
> Indeed.  There would probably have been a civil war.

I might add a very short civil war.  There is no way that an armed mass of
civilains can effectively fight a well equiped, trained, and displined army
such as China has.  The slaughter would have been worse.

>
> China's government is repressive, shuns western-style human rights,
> and ended the Tiananmen square problem in a bloody manner.  Before
> condemning them completely, look at how democracy and human rates
> score in other countries:
>
> 1.  In many US cities, the crime rate is so high that you really
>     *wouldn't* go walking alone at night.  You can walk at night in
>     any part of Beijing, despite the higher differences in income and
>     living standards.  The Chinese might see this as a result of
>     overly lax treatment of criminals, or, as the Americans call it,
>     "human rights".
>
> 2.  India is in complete political and economic chaos, the result of
>     50 years of "democracy" in a country which can't handle it.  The
>     average tenure of an Indian government is less than 12 months.  In
>     view of the level-headed government they're currently getting,
>     let's hope that this remains true.
>
> 3.  Russia is in turmoil.  The government is no longer in control, and
>     crime is rife.
>
> On the whole, if I had the choice of living only in one of the four
> locations above, I'd choose Beijing.
>
> The Chinese government consists of people elected by a small body for
> their merits, not their ability to campaign.  Generally, they're no
> fools.  China may be lagging behind the West in many areas, but
> they're slowly and steadily improving, and they're doing it without
> significant incidences of the problems other countries face.
> Considering the enormous problems facing them, I think they're doing
> as good a job as anybody could expect.


I will add just one more think to a well thought out answer.  They will
probably, over time, become the dominant economic and military power.  They are
taking a gradual, controlled shift to Capitalism.  They also have a more
favorable infrustructure than that of Russia to make that shift.

Frank

>
> Greg
> --
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>-- End of excerpt from Greg Lehey



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