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I can't stand China.
It is a despicable dictatorship in every regard and it is certainly our rival, if not our enemy. I have cursed it all of my adult life, and am not about to stop.
But we need to be clear about the Olympics. The Olympics are not about politics, they are not about making a point, they are not about thumbing your nose at a country you do not like. The Olympics are about sports and about laying aside your differences long enough to let some athletes compete.
Calls for boycotts or demonstrations against the looming Beijing Olympics are wrong and should be stopped. They are not honorable.
Again, I do not like China. I think its communist oppression and one-child policy — like the religious and gender discrimination of the Muslim world — is the greatest moral wrong since the Holocaust. I think nowhere in modern history is there a parallel for the current Chinese raiding of the U.S. economy. I think anyone who can't see China building military might with the sole intention of dominating the United States is purposely blind.
I think the poisoning of Chinese products destined for American markets is the result of a society that lacks the fundamental morality to honorably keep a contract.
I'm not kidding. I don't like or trust China.
But it is the Olympic host. And it earned that right by competing in a longstanding process with other nations. And all of China's failings and evils were public and known before it was chosen for the Olympics. It's not like they were hiding anything.
To now try to embarrass China or exploit the Olympics over pre-existing wrongs is not right.
In recent weeks, there has been unrest in Tibet, a country invaded by China about 50 years ago. Tibetans don't like being occupied, they don't like seeing the cultural and linguistic genocide which have been bedrocks of Chinese policy toward Tibet.









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