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Hong Kong Pop Star Amplifies the Message of Freedom at New York Forum

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Ethics Committee Opens Probe Into Rep. Katie Hill Over Alleged Affair With Congressional Staffer

According to a Nov. 2018 Ethics Committee report into another member of Congress, Congress members can also get in trouble for things that happen during the campaigns. “The Committee has repeatedly noted it has jurisdiction over ‘misconduct relating to a successful campaign for election to the House,” the report stated. Three photographs of Hill, 32, and a woman in her 20s were published last week by Red State, including a photograph showing Hill naked and brushing the staffer’s hair. Hill was in a long-term sexual relationship with her husband, Kenny Heslep, and the female campaign staffer, who was hired by Hill in 2017, through May 2017, according to texts obtained by Red State. Hill started in Congress in January. Other texts showed Heslep learning of an affair Hill had with…

Hong Kong-based singer Denise Ho performs on stage during the Oslo Freedom Forum in Oslo on May 27, 2019. (Ryan Kelly/AFP/Getty Images)

NEW YORK—Hong Kong singer Denise Ho was met with a standing ovation on Oct. 24 in New York City’s Town Hall, where she and 10 other activists recounted their experiences challenging repressive regimes.

Hong Kong, a former British colony, was returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with the guarantee that it retains the same degree of freedom and autonomy for the next half a century.

Since June, millions of Hong Kongers have marched against an extradition bill that they saw as a gateway for Beijing to further intrude in the city’s affairs. Protesters’ demands have since expanded to incorporate calls for greater democratic reform and universal suffrage.

“Who would have thought that Hong Kong, being this financial city where people previously only come up once in a while to protest, would become this most symbolic global icon of resilience in this year of 2019?” Ho, who has been a passionate advocate for the movement throughout, said to a packed audience of hundreds at the Oslo Freedom Forum.

The Hong Kong authorities formally withdrew the bill on Oct. 23, but to many, the decision was too late.

denise ho Denise Ho at the Oslo Freedom Forum in New York, N.Y., on Oct. 23, 2019. (Edwin Huang/The Epoch Times)

Ho showed picture after picture of protester injuries during clashes with the police, who have escalated their aggression as the protests have gone on: a journalist and a first-aider who suffered severe eye injuries after being shot by police pellet rounds, an 18-year-old protester shot by gunfire at point-blank range, and people facing police searches and being beating for wearing protester gear.

Police have fired thousands of tear gas canisters and arrested over 2,600 people since the start of the protest.

Ho, rally organizer Jimmy Sham, and local lawmakers have all experienced mob attacks for their support of the protests.

“In the course of just four months, we have become a very different Hong Kong, and our demands have been clear and simple since day one: We want justice, we want freedom, and we want reform,” Ho said.

denise ho Denise Ho at the Oslo Freedom Forum in New York, N.Y., on Oct. 23, 2019. The screen in the background shows Ho attacked with red paint.(Edwin Huang/The Epoch Times)

Unless these issues are addressed, there will be “no turning back to normal,” she said, adding that many Hongkongers believe that the extradition bill was the final straw in a battle between two different value systems: the mainland authoritarian regime and one that was moving towards democracy and had rule of law.

“The CCP [Chinese Communist Party] just could not comprehend why Hong Kong just would not back down,” Ho said. “We are not just another Chinese city. We are this very diverse city that embraces different cultures. We have held dear to our transparent institutions, our legislative and judicial system, and the freedom of expression.

“When these are ripped away from us, although we have not been known as the very revolting kind, we will fight back, and we fight hard,” she continued.

The fight, she emphasized, was not just between Hong Kong and Beijing, but tyrannies and the free world.

Just as with its handling with Hong Kong, the Chinese regime is now “working very hard to push their rules and priorities” in the West, she said, naming the NBA (National Basketball Association), Blizzard, Vans, and Apple among the latest examples of U.S. corporations succumbing to Beijing’s political pressure and silencing themselves on the Hong Kong issue.

“For anyone who believes that the world should be free, open, and civil, it should be alarming,” Ho said.

She led the crowd in chants of “Reclaim Hong Kong, revolution of our times,” a popular protest slogan, before singing a Cantonese song “Polar,” which paints a picture of people setting out on a journey for light while surrounded by darkness.

“Stand strong for everything you believe in. You are not alone in this fight,” she said to those who stand with Hong Kong.

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Nike CEO Who Oversaw Colin Kaepernick Ad Campaign Is Stepping Down: Reports

Nike’s CEO Mark Parker, who was behind the ad campaign featuring Colin Kaepernick, is stepping down in January but will remain the executive chairman. The firm will now relinquish his role to former eBay CEO John Donahoe. Parker made the announcement on Tuesday via a Nike press release. Nike’s sales have been up as it attempts to sell its sneakers online and via its apps, but the Oregon-based company has come under fire in recent years. Three weeks ago, renowned track coach Alberto Salazar was banned from the sport for four years by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency for running experiments with supplements and testosterone that were bankrolled and supported by Nike, along with possessing and trafficking testosterone. Nike announced that it was shutting down its elite Oregon Project track and field…