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About Nancy Salvato
Nancy Salvato is the President and Director of Education and the
Constitutional Literacy Program for
BasicsProject.org, a
non-profit, non-partisan 501(c)(3) research and educational
project whose mission is to re-introduce the American public to
the basic elements of our constitutional heritage while
providing non-partisan, fact-based information on relevant
socio-political issues important to our country, specifically
the threats of aggressive Islamofascism and the American Fifth
Column. She serves as a Senior Editor for The New Media Journal.
She received her BA in history from Loyola University and her
M.Ed. in Early Childhood Education from National-Louis
University. She is certified to teach in grades K-9 and 6-12
and as a teacher has worked with students in preschool, 1st,
5th, 6th, 7th, 8th,
9th, 11th, and 12th grades. She
has also worked as an adjunct instructor at the graduate school
level. She continues to augment her education and areas of
expertise by taking college courses and participating in a
variety of workshops.
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Nancy Salvato, Senior Editor
Censorship May Open Our Eyes to China
August 8, 2008
Reporters charged with covering the
Olympics are now whining about "not knowing what they will be able to
cover and not knowing how much the Chinese government will censor their
online coverage."
(1)
The fact that the mainstream media is even remotely surprised at a
Communist Government not allowing complete freedom of the press is
laughable, irrespective of the fact that China promised them complete
freedom to report on the events after this one party state was awarded
the honor of hosting the Olympics. Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung is
absolutely right when it reminds folks that the Chinese government is
"only doing what authoritarian and dictatorial regimes always do."
(2)
Those reporters who dominate the mainstream media are finally getting a
small taste of what it feels like to navigate the barriers set up by a
country that limits their liberty to speak their mind. The New Media
writers have been all too aware that the continuing erosion of our own
country’s freedoms in the name of political correctness has been
steadily subsuming our constitutional rights for years now. Many writers
plying their craft in the New Media are used to their message not being
published by agenda driven mainstream papers. A substantial number of
people who rely on the New Media for the news have long recognized that
the sovereignty of our people is being subsumed by the one world agenda
being preached by the socialist left and echoed by the alphabet network
lemmings. The hours spent identifying and exposing the prejudices
embedded in the mainstream coverage of the issues has well honed the
analytical skills of New Media writers.
Political Correctness, which dictates to people what they must feel, so
as not to offend anyone, is only one encroachment on our liberties. Each
time the government spends our hard earned dollars, we give away our
right to choose what we think is best for ourselves. I'd much rather be
given a tax break, to donate my money to a cause that has personal
meaning for me than have to give 33 percent of my paycheck to a Congress
made up of spendthrifts who think nothing of bribing the electorate in
order to retain their power and award their cronies, putting political
opportunity before government. Furthermore, the system of public
education in this country, a system funded by the hard work of our
citizens, reflects a secular agenda, promotes a one world order, and
discourages divergent thinking.
What might it be like to live in a country where people are prevented
the freedom to disagree, to practice their chosen religion, or from
habeas corpus? How would it feel to live in a country where a government
acts with complete disregard for rights the US Constitution was uniquely
designed to protect?
The Olympics might serve to remind people in this country just how truly
lucky we are to be American citizens. These athletic contests might
provide a lesson on the difference between a nationalism based on the
notion of “E Pluribus Unum,” out of many-one, versus a “Rising China”
which means, “A China that is the leader in Asia is a China that will
have the allegiance of its masses.”
(3)
The games are seen by the Communist Party of China (CCP) as a way to
show off their country’s strength, adding legitimacy to their rule. In
the United States, the Olympics are seen as a chance for our country’s
best athlete’s to compete against athletes from other countries for
medals and prestige. If we don’t win the games, it won’t impact our
feelings about our government. For some athletes, it’s about personal
bests, for those watching, enjoyment of a sport. It’s an opportunity for
representatives of our country to interact with those who may not share
our beliefs but have sports in common, to compete against each other
without threatening our sovereignty.
The CCP in China wanted very badly for China to host the games, to
elevate their prestige in the world and with their people. However, "The
construction of facilities for the Olympics in Beijing has directly
resulted in the forced eviction of thousands of citizens in and around
Beijing, often without due process or compensation to ensure access to
new housing."
(4) This is unlike
eminent domain in the United States, where people are compensated based
on the value of their homes should a need arise to build critical
infrastructure on their land According to the Center on Housing Rights
and Evictions (COHRE) "15,000 people are evicted every month in Beijing,
often in poor neighborhoods, in a brutal and arbitrary manner with
inadequate compensation."
(5) The 5th Amendment of
the United States Constitution guarantees that, “No person shall…be
deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor
shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation.”
While many people complain about the political processes in our country,
no one can argue that we have not been afforded the opportunity to vote
our conscience and for the candidate who best represents our beliefs.
This is in direct contrast to China, in which the US Department of State
2006 Country Report on Human Rights Practices counts among their long
list of Human Rights Abuses that citizens are not provided the right to
change their government. A small sample of other abuses include
extrajudicial killings, torture and coerced confessions of prisoners,
and the use of forced labor, including prison labor.
(6) What is produced by
some of this forced labor? Next time you buy something at Walmart,
Target, Cosco or Sam’s Club, look at where the product was manufactured.
It might be very enlightening.
(7)
In China, there is no guarantee of a trial by a jury of our peers, or
that someone arrested will even be able to offer a defense. Exercising
strict political control of courts and judges, the Party and state
maintain “closed trials” and “administrative detention.” A person can be
convicted of a crime and executed all in the same day. A family
violating the single child birth planning law may be subjected to forced
abortion and sterilization. Freedom to assemble, practice religion, and
travel is severely limited.
(8)
All of this information might lead an inquiring mind to question what
makes the Chinese people loyal to their government and express anger
when outsiders want to report their affairs to the rest of the world.
One explanation is that, “China’s nationalism today is shaped by its
pride in its history as well as its century of humiliation at the hands
of the West and Japan.”
(9) When a
U.S. plane “accidentally bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade” and
when “a U.S. EP-3 surveillance plane, in what China says was a violation
of its airspace, collided with a Chinese F-8 jet fighter,” the Chinese
saw these acts as American aggression.
(10)
The Chinese government, stoking the nationalism of their people,
reported these acts as encroachments upon China’s “sovereignty.”
(11) The
Chinese people will not be allowed to see the United States as anything
other than an imperialist country with designs on China. The Chinese
government keeps its people united by promoting ideas like this. If the
CCP can make the country strong militarily, able to defeat a country
like the United States, it legitimizes itself.
In this country, we have access to information, although
private search engines like Google have taken to censoring information
and the mainstream media unfairly portrays those who disagree with their
ideas. People in our country have the freedom to travel abroad, although
it might not be safe in some countries. We can generally count on the
enforcement of laws which are designed to maximize our safety, even
though some might seem to compromise our freedoms. It’s a balancing act.
It has always been a balancing act between what is best for the
individual and what is best for the community. It’s a balancing act
between the federal and state powers. As long as there is a balance of
ideas, most people will have maximum freedom. Vigilance is required by
the people of this country to make sure that one group is not empowered
over another.
Our system
will never be perfect, but that is why we say, “We the people, in order
to form a more perfect union.” Socialism and Communism is based on the
idea that there can someday be a utopia and that the means justifies the
ends. In our country, it’s all about the journey. Let the games begin!