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Montoliu: The West looks away from China's oppression of Tibet PDF Print E-mail
Written by Raphael Montoliu   
Sunday, 23 March 2008
The current uprising in Tibet could be seen as an opportunity for western nations to officially condemn China's occupation and oppression of Tibet, if such nations had actual moral foundations and their government officials had functioning consciences.


Tibetans were a people who, before embracing Buddhism, had never been defeated in war ... and they were aggressive, war-like. After becoming primarily Buddhists, they never again waged war on anyone, becoming a nonviolent, peaceful, deeply spiritual people. They became as intensely and effectively committed to the Buddhist concept of overcoming the limits of this world spiritually as they were previously committed to overcoming their enemies.


Then came Mao, and its army ... Nuns were raped, children were forced to shoot and kill their own parents to amuse the Chinese soldiers, Tibet was being "liberated" with bombs, bullets, bayonets and rape, and the world turned its back on the Tibetans who everywhere went to ask for help, believing in the universal decency of human kind, in the Buddhist idea of compassion.


Today, decades of unbearable oppression and gross abuse by China have apparently erased centuries of a nonviolent tradition embodied by the Dalai Lama, and made thousands of Tibetans desperately angry, with nothing to loose but a life they no longer cherish.


Would you have anything left to loose if your nation had been invaded and occupied by a foreign power, your flag had been outlawed, your centuries-old temples and monasteries were destroyed, your sacred manuscripts burned, your spiritual leaders imprisoned, tortured and killed, your culture regarded as inadequate and your traditions and language to be replaced by those of the invader, the young women of your nation sterilized against their will, your natural resources taken, your children indoctrinated, your most sacred places deliberately disfigured and trashed by a blatant disrespect for your culture and your race, and you were made a minority of impoverished, despised, second-class citizens on your own land?


Come to think of it, it might sound familiar to some among you ... next thing you know, after having destroyed Tibetan culture and severely damaged the spirit of Tibetan people, the Chinese will accuse them of lacking self-respect, the way Native Americans are criticized by rednecks and other ignorant and racist bullies on this continent.


Back to Tibet: China has absolutely no business being in Tibet, and cannot in any way justify its aggression, invasion and occupation of a formally sovereign and nonthreatening nation. China cannot legitimize its current and ongoing oppression of Tibetans, and its agendas of cultural genocide and ethnic "assimilation," anymore than it can validate the tyrannical control and oppression of its own citizens.


Wait, what am I saying? I cannot criticize communist China, although Tibetans have less freedom under the Chinese boot than Koreans, Cubans or Venezuelans ... why? Because China is one of the largest trade partners of the US, it is an integral part of the globalization agenda, of the "new world order," and causes finance capitalists and investors to salivate copiously at the prospects of immensely juicy profits, of unprecedented economic growth and unbelievable investment opportunities. It really does not matter that China has already severely polluted 80 percent of its waterways, that it is spewing so much smoke from its coal power plants that in some of its cities it is dark at noon and the sun is no longer seen, that its toxic fumes fall over Canada and will soon come to your neighborhood, and that it tortures and imprisons anyone who objects to its tyrannical communist ideology and its corrupt regional government.


You might have noticed that China has never been part of Bush's "Axis of Evil," and that its communist regime is hardly ever mentioned, even though Americans were trained for decades to fear and hate anything that looked communist or red, even shadows and hallucinations. No, China's communism has become invisible to western eyes and minds.


It is then no surprise that C-SPAN, which along with KQED usually covers events, such as demonstrations against the war in Iraq, no other military-industrial complex-controlled network would touch, is broadcasting the official Chinese version of the current events in Tibet, directly translating from China's propaganda machine, the Chinese Central Television. Of course it does not help that all western journalists have been expelled from Tibet, so as to allow the Chinese militarized police thugs to crack down with unrestrained brutality on Tibetans-meaning shooting civilians, as they have already begun to do a few days ago.


What do Bush, Cheney and the other "freedom-loving," "let's export democracy through shock and awe" neo-con ideologues and their "moderate" spineless Democrat supporters have to say about China? ... Not much. The point is, freedom, in the minds of the finance capitalist elite and the puppet politicians it controls, means "free-market," not free people. As long as nations open up their borders to US "interests" such as trade, commerce and investment, as long as their populations have the "freedom" to consume mass-produced junk, it matters not if they have freedom of speech or if union organizers are tortured to death. As a matter of fact, repressive regimes, whether fascist as in Central America-Columbia comes to mind-or communist as in China, that consider unionists and environmentalists to be enemies of the state, are said to be business-friendly, saving U.S. corporations much money they would otherwise have to pay on living wages and on cleaning up their toxic mess.


Hitler the psychopath himself would have continued to be seen as a viable economic partner and political ally – he was fiercely anti-communist – by America and England if he hadn't attacked western Europe, regardless of how many more millions of human beings he would have kept eliminating in his concentration camps ... he would have been our pal for a long time, like the Shah of Iran or the apartheid regime of South Africa, and like Saddam before he decided to free lance in Saudi Arabia and to nationalize the Iraqi oil industry. The devil himself, if he was real, would be well received by our corporate and banking elite if he was willing to make a deal that would increase their profits.


Back again to China: the globalization agenda today forbids anyone in the mainstream media to criticize China in any realistic and effective manner. China "deals," so China is good, and I am waiting to see Tibetans portrayed as thugs, criminals, murderers, terrorists, in line with the Chinese government propaganda machine that is working overtime in the U.S. today.


Our government gave a piece of metal (a medal) to the Dalai Lama and allowed him to address Congress, gave him a pat on the back and a nice applause (and a T-shirt and a coffee mug perhaps?), then turned around – literally – and made million dollars deals with communist China, that has kidnapped and imprisoned the successor to the Dalai Lama since he was a very young child, and possibly killed him, replacing him with a fake, Chinese-chosen puppet. Will this one also get a medal when he grows up?


My heart is with the Tibetans, a unique people who created a beautiful and deeply spiritual culture, just as it is with the native people of this continent. Different languages, cultures and locations, same destruction, same cultural genocide, same implicit acceptance by the world as a "regrettable" inevitability ... It is regrettable to loose one's watch, to destroy another people and culture without cause is criminal, and always will be, no matter how many times it is repeated and by whom it is done.


Raphael Montoliu lives in Lakeport.


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lcsage - Why Dont Registered | 03-24-2008 09:57:08
You move there.
Donna Christopher - You cannot bite the Author | 03-24-2008 11:41:41
hand that feeds you. You cannot slap the face of the banker who funds you. The only thing the average American can possibly do is not buy anything made in China - quite a task, I try it every time I make a purchase. Sorry RM, can't get my knickers in a knot over this, can only simply attach a number to Atrocity #___. I assume you are not suggesting we invade China but if you are then I better see your behind over at the recruiters' offices. Or are you suggesting some other person fight your battle for you.
Raphael - What I am Author | 03-24-2008 15:49:11
suggesting Donna, is the obvious. That the US, British, French, Canadian, etc governments put pressure on China to change its policies. This shouldn't be so hard to understand, should it? To place HUMAN RIGHTS before PROFITS and economic concerns? Is this so complicated? Were not Iraq and Cuba boycotted for decades? Was not the Soviet Union defeated? Hasn't our government the POWER to lead on this matter, or has it become the puppet of the Chinese?
And Donna, on a personal note, I wage my own battles, and I don't need to be at any recruiter's office to do so, then it wouldn't be my own battles anymore but those of the industrial-military complex, which I DO NOT support...I hope I clarified this for you. Besides, I am too old.
smurf - only one way out- Registered | 03-24-2008 11:42:07
of this mess, the Tibetans have to en-mass start killing Chinese, like they should have done when they first showed-up. Only if the bloodletting reached a massive level would the world community get to the point where they could put human life before economic concerns. This is an example of why sometimes you need to kill people and not get too idealistic about humanity, because it just might enslave you if you let it. So grab a rock, stick or brick, and crush a Chinese skull (if you are in Tibet!).
Raphael - There is Author | 03-24-2008 15:53:27
perhaps another way, and that would be for the Chinese population itself to wage another revolution, this time to do away with communism and in the process free the Tibetans. And it might happen, gradually or abruptly, as the Chinese people are fed up with their own oppression. If only this uprising in Tibet could spread all over China!...
patsy - So glad your heart Registered | 03-24-2008 14:03:11
is with the oppressed people of the world.

Where are your hands?
For instance, have you sent Nancy Pelosi any support for her recent comments on the China-Tibet situation?
http://www.speaker.gov/
Raphael - Would you Author | 03-24-2008 16:07:08
like me to pay for her trip? I have signed two dozen petitions, including one for the White House for Bush not to show up at the opening of the Olympic games in August, and have continually supported activist organizations for the liberation of Tibet. Would you like to see receipts? It is nice that Nancy Pelosi is willing to travel to China, but without any arm twisting from the highest levels of government and translated into serious economic pressures, it is nothing but a symbolic gesture which might or might not be sincere. And unfortunately, our INEPT, CLUELESS, BRAINLESS current administration has placed us in an inferior position, economically speaking, with the communist Chinese...in other words they can call the shots and ruin the US...so the White House bent over and we are all scr-wed, including the Tibetans.
Hey I am surprised the Republicans and other self-described "red-blooded American patriots" etc are not outraged at having had their nation put at a disadvantage vis-a-vis the Chinese, but if Rush Limbaugh doesn't tell them it is so, then it is not so...
patsy - how about Registered | 03-24-2008 17:36:25
a brief thank-you note? all your hard work of signing petitions appears to be paying off. Why not let Pelosi and others let them know you appreciate their actions?
Even the administration appears to be waking up.the following is from voice of America.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is urging China to reconsider its policy toward Tibet, and to meet with the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama. VOA's Kent Klein reports from the State Department.
Raphael - I will Author | 03-24-2008 18:30:11
send an email, and for everyone else out there I would suggest that signing petitions online is easy work, it doesn't take more than a few minutes...and it does influence politicians. It is a matter of wanting to participate in this democracy, or not. It is a matter of personal priorities, and of deciding whether this should be a government of, by, for the people, or of, by, for the corrupt elite whose only concern is the bottom line.
The Dalai Lama is scheduled to meet secretly with the Chinese leaders. Hopefully they won't put him in jail.
www.savetibet.org
www.dalailamadc.org
www.racefortibet.org
comments@whitehouse.org
Let's send 20 million signatures!! Can't the average American do this, Donna?? Or are we all sheep that need to be lead by our "dear Leader" into believing in fairy tales, like WMD's in Iraq?? What would be the excuse for the average American not being able to sign a petition Donna, too much time spent looking at porn on the web?
Donna Christopher - Obviously RM IP:12.206.148.xxx | 03-24-2008 15:41:09
its pretty hard to "boycott" your mortgage holder and grocer. And those countries had/have embargos, not boycotts. You want the Bush administration/Wall Street to put human rights before profits Dude, where you been the last (at least) 8 years. And no, the Soviet Union was not defeated, they stumbled for a few years because they wasted their treasure fighting in Afghanistan. They found their new name and their oil profits after putting a KGB dude in as president (Putin) and are just waiting to kick us when we are down. We cannot be the world's police force - it doesn't work out to well for us or those we invade. Nancy Pelosi petitions, yeah thats the ticket, that'll set China straight. I'm with smurf on this one, let them duke it out. You want to send a message to China, don't buy anything made there.
Raphael - That's Author | 03-24-2008 16:33:35
passive resistance, and that's okay I do it as much as I can (besides anything made in China is real junk)...Doesn't anyone remember when Japanese products started to flood the US, there was a campaign at the highest levels to "buy American", and to dismiss anything Japanese as junk? That was before the Bushes' "new world order"...
We get the governments we deserve, in accordance with our priorities. When the MAJORITY of westerners (that includes Europeans) place human rights before their own over-inflated status and privileges, we will get a better world. But we have to do away with all that prevents it in the first place, such as the ideological BS that emanates from places of power and wealth and trickles down into cynicism and defeat at the grass root level. Are we the government, or are they? and if we are, what the heck???...
lcsage - No Doubt About It Registered | 03-24-2008 18:09:53
You are 5150.
Raphael - I don't read Author | 03-24-2008 18:50:17
code Icsage, but a google search clarified the meaning of "5150" for me...Hey you are probably right, so keep your distances and you will be safe!
lcsage - A good distance Registered | 03-25-2008 10:47:48
would be if you would hyako out of here.
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