Commentary
Support for Falun Gong and Others
Support for Falun Gong is a litmus test of sorts for being tough on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Falun Gong has tens of millions of members around the world and has been an unrelenting critic of the CCP since the latter banned the spiritual practice in 1999. The CCP’s policies range from territorial aggression against neighboring countries to genocide against Chinese people, which are the opposite of the three main principles espoused by Falun Gong: truthfulness, compassion, and forbearance.
A High School Teacher in China
Communist China is a controversial place, and the controversy started for Walz before he even arrived on his first trip there. After his undergraduate degree, he left for Guangdong Province, where he would teach English to Chinese students for a year between 1989 and 1990. But he first transited through Hong Kong. While there, the CCP committed the Tiananmen massacre. Some of his colleagues turned around, including for moral reasons. This was a reasonable choice. All of America should have turned around after that massacre.
Walz is criticized for his guidance to the students prior to the trip. “While the point of the trip is to see how China differs from the United States, Walz has told his students to downplay their American-ness,” according to the Star-Herald article. “He wants to avoid stereotypes the Chinese have that every American is rich.”
Walz should not have asked Americans to downplay their Americanness. But, to be fair to Walz, “when in Rome, do as the Romans” is a standard strategy for travelers who seek to blend in and fully experience a culture. American tourists sometimes leave behind expensive belongings and claim to be Canadian, for example, so as not to get targeted by thieves or anti-American sentiment.
Offramp From Conflict
In 2016, Walz said that the United States and China need not be in an “adversarial relationship.” He got in some trouble over this comment. There has been so much scientific and economic cooperation with China that Beijing now exceeds U.S. power by some metrics. However, that same year, he told Congress that China did not open up socially or improve its human rights through business engagement.
Walz might just be the kind of guy who can use friendliness with an adversary as the first step toward a massive strategic win for the United States: the democratization of China. But if Reagan is the template, Walz better support more military spending than he has in the past. The iron fist of power is, unfortunately, necessary to make the velvet glove of diplomacy truly effective.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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