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Hong Kong Supporters Demonstrate at SF Chinese Consulate, Call for US Help

Harry Reid Says Early Voting States Iowa, New Hampshire ‘Not Representative of the Country Anymore’

Former Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nevada) said on Nov. 18 that early voting states Iowa and New Hampshire are “not representative” of the United States in the modern era. “I don’t think it matters what happens in Iowa or New Hampshire because those states are not representative of the country anymore,” the longtime Nevada senator told reporters in Las Vegas. Reid said his state of Nevada is the third to weigh in on the election but the first that looks like the rest of the country, with a sizeable Latino population and significant groups of Asian American and black voters. While Nevada’s population is about 48 percent white, Iowa has a white population of about 85 percent and New Hampshire has a white population of about 90 percent, according to…

Hong Kong supporters demonstrate at the San Francisco Chinese Consulate on Nov. 18. (Nathan Su/The Epoch Times)

SAN FRANCISCO – A group of students and residents living in the San Francisco Bay Area gathered in front of the Chinese Consulate on Nov. 18 urging the Chinese communist regime and Hong Kong authorities to stop the violent crackdown on the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.

The demonstration took place largely because of growing concerns for the safety of student protesters at Hong Kong’s Polytechnic University (PolyU). The university campus is currently under siege by the police force.

The standoff between students and police at PolyU has been ongoing since the evening of the Nov. 16. Growing violence has been reported from both sides.

During the demonstration at the Consulate, a few students from UC Davis read a joint statement signed by students, alumni, and faculty from 54 American universities and colleges, “calling upon the United States government to take all necessary economic and diplomatic steps to avert potential bloodshed.”

The statement also urged Hong Kong’s Authority to “call off violent crackdowns on pro-democracy protesters, and answer the remaining four demands put forth by the protesters.”

The long list of Universities and Colleges that had organizations sign the joint statement included Columbia, Cornell, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, Pennsylvania, Princeton, UC Arizona, several schools of the UC California system, and more.

The Statement claimed there have been “a shocking number of unexplained disappearances, ‘suicides’ and police rape” in Hong Kong in the past several weeks, and the violence inflicted by the police against the pro-democracy protesters “has escalated to unprecedented levels.”

According to reports from Chinese media, most of the student protesters have left the university campus, but there were still more than 200 students who decided to stay to continue the protest.

The Hong Kong police made several requests to the besieged students on the campus to surrender. The students who walked out of the campus were either arrested, or had their identities recorded.

Concerns have been growing about the potential escalation into another Tiananmen Square Massacre. According to reports from Chinese media, the police officers are equipped with AR-15 rifles, and with authorizations to use lethal force.

A Chinese media released a video on Facebook of police officers marching towards the university campus while yelling: I want Six-Fourth to repeat! The word, “Six-Fourth” in Chinese, is a short name for Tiananmen Square Massacre, which took place on June 4, 1989.

“We simply want Chinese government to back off from Hong Kong affairs,” said Joyce Yueng, who led the demonstration in front of the Chinese Consulate. Yueng said that Hong Kong’s affairs shall be resolved according to the Basic Law, which was based on the concept of one country with two political systems.

Yueng criticized the Chinese regime for its endorsement of using tear gas, and other violent methods to suppress the protesters. “As the situation been escalated, we worried to see that a Tiananmen Square [Massacre] 2.0 to take place in Hong Kong,” Yueng said.

Yueng was a former PolyU student, and has been living in the San Francisco Bay Area for about 10 years. She said that many protesters who joined the demonstration at the Consulate had families and friends in Hong Kong.

She stated that the Hong Kong authority is dealing with the protesters in a wrong way, and “it only angers more people by silencing them in a brutal way.”

She also said that Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Carrie Lam was not capable of handling the current situation. If Chinese regime endorses Carrie Lam, then “it shows that they are equally incapable of governing the country,” Yueng asserted.

Rick Weyrich was one of few Caucasian protesters in the demonstration. He held a Chinese banner that read: I want universal suffrage.

Weyrich is an American artist, and his company has an office in Hong Kong. He has traveled back and forth between the Bay Area and Hong Kong many times.

He said that he became very angry watching Hong Kong’s pro-Beijing legislator. “I don’t understand why these people don’t wake up to see what is really going on,” he commented.

“I considered Xi Jingping as the new Stalin,” Weyrich said. As an American, he demanded the U.S. Senate to “pass the Hong Kong Democracy Act today.”

Helena Li, originally from mainland China, joined the demonstration. She was a college instructor before coming to the United States. She has been living in the Bay Area for 9 years.

Li said she carefully examined the five demands made by the protesters, and believed that none of them are seeking for the independence of Hong Kong from China. She said that Chinese regime has been brainwashing the people in mainland China by twisting the facts and accusing the protesters seeking for separation of Hong Kong from China.

“All Hong Kong’s protesters have asked are just the rights that Chinese government originally promised to them,” Li said. She told The Epoch Times that she has been very supportive to the pro-democracy activities organized by the local groups supporting Hong Kong.

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Oklahoma Walmart Shooting Leaves 3 Dead, Police Say

At least three people were killed during a shooting at a Walmart in Oklahoma on Monday morning, it was reported. Fox affiliate KOKH reported on the deaths, saying the shooting occurred in Duncan, which is about 75 miles south of Oklahoma City. KFOR also reported that the three people were killed. It cited the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. Duncan Police Chief Danny Ford told KSWO that the people were shot and killed outside the store by a vehicle, and one of the people who was killed was identified as the shooter. District Attorney Jason Hicks is on the scene of the crime, telling KOKH that the scene is contained and it is not an active shooter situation anymore. Several people were wounded in the incident, according to The Associated Press, which…