The Wall Street Journal - 21.08.2019

(Axel Boer) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Wednesday, August 21, 2019 |A


T

he Hong Kong crisis is
something the world has
seen time and again: au-
thoritarian rulers seeking
to repress the innate hu-
man desire for freedom, self-expres-
sion and self-government. The scenes
remind us of Budapest in 1956 and
the Prague Spring of 1968, of Tianan-
men Square in 1989 and Moscow in
recent weeks. The next chapter is un-
folding today as the Chinese Commu-
nist Party terrorizes the people of
Hong Kong.
An estimated two million Hong
Kongers—about one-fourth of the
population—are demonstrating for
the freedoms and autonomy that
have made their city a global success.
They are protesting the government
in Beijing and its determination, in
violation of its promises, to chip
away at those freedoms.
The protestors want their liberties
preserved, the territory’s autonomy re-
spected, and justice for those the secu-
rity services have detained, brutalized
or murdered. Contrary to Communist


propaganda, this citizens’ uprising is
no foreign conspiracy. If anything, the
world’s leading democratic nations
have been slow to respond. Only one
capital is responsible for what is un-
folding in Hong Kong: Beijing. The
demonstrators are responding to its
efforts to exert ever more influence
and control over what is supposed to
be an autonomous region.
It is crucial to recognize that the
dynamics that led to this crisis didn’t
begin in Hong Kong and won’t end
there. The turmoil is the result of
Beijing’s systematic ratcheting up of
its domestic oppression and its pur-
suit of hegemony abroad.


Sooner or later, the rest of


the world will have to do


what the protesters are


doing—confront Beijing.


We Stand With Hong Kong


Years ago, it was reasonable to
think that China’s rapid development
and integration into the global econ-
omy might lead it to embrace prevail-
ing international rules, that success
would give Beijing a stake in the sys-
tems that uphold peace and prosper-
ity. Now it is clear the Communist
Party wants to write its own rules and
impose them on others.
For evidence of China’s hunger for
power, consider the fate of its other
supposedly autonomous regions. In
Tibet, Beijing’s brutal response to un-
rest in 1959 drove tens of thousands
into exile and killed tens of thou-
sands more. In Xinjiang, a mostly
Muslim province, the state has dis-
placed ethnic Uighur minorities
through population transfers and es-
tablished an elaborate architecture of
social and political surveillance, in-
cluding ethnic prison camps. Xinjiang
is no autonomous region; it is a mod-
ern gulag. In both cases, Beijing spent
decades methodically tightening its
grip.
Beijing has sought to write a sim-
ilar story in Hong Kong, albeit more
subtly. But Hong Kongers are not cut
off from the truth by China’s “Great
Firewall.” They recognized a bill to
allow extradition to the mainland as
a significant threat to their legal and

political autonomy. So China’s lead-
ers now face a choice. Will they in-
tensify pressure on Hong Kong,
gambling that the rest of the world
will look the other way? Or will Bei-
jing conclude that further repression
in Hong Kong would bring further
consequences?
China’s trading partners, including
the U.S., should make it clear that
any crackdown would have real and
painful costs. I wrote the Hong Kong
Policy Act of 1992, which extended
special privileges to the region be-
cause of its unique status. This spe-
cial access to the U.S. and other na-
tions helped drive the investment
and modernization that have en-
riched Hong Kong, and Beijing by ex-
tension. Beijing must know the Sen-
ate will reconsider that special
relationship, among other steps, if
Hong Kong’s autonomy is eroded.
I support extending and expanding
the law’s reporting requirements to
illuminate Beijing’s interference in
Hong Kong. And the Senate will do
more. I have asked Jim Risch, chair-
man of the Foreign Relations Com-
mittee, to examine Beijing’s actions
in Hong Kong and its efforts to ex-
pand the Communist Party’s influ-
ence and surveillance across China
and beyond. I am working with Lind-

sey Graham, chairman of the Appro-
priations Subcommittee for State and
Foreign Operations, to fund democ-
racy and human-rights programs
across Asia. I will maintain our
strong focus on rebuilding and mod-
ernizing the military, continuing the
huge strides of the past 2½ years, so
that our ability to project power and
defend American interests keeps pace
with this major competitor.
But it is not America’s task alone
to address these threats. The world is
awakening to China’s abusive and ag-
gressive practices, from unfair trade
actions to intellectual-property theft
to offshore expansion. Now Hong
Kong has plastered front pages with
yet another cautionary tale about
how the Chinese regime treats those
within its envisioned sphere of influ-
ence and disregards international
agreements that govern them.
Every trading nation and democ-
racy that values individual liberty and
privacy has a stake here. Their choice
is not between the U.S. and China but
between a free, fair international sys-
tem and the internal oppression, sur-
veillance and modern vassal system
China seeks to impose.
The U.S., for its own interests,
seeks international peace, a good re-
lationship with China, and a mutually
prosperous future for our peoples.
Hong Kong is only one piece of the
complex set of interests that makes
up the U.S.-China relationship. But
China’s treatment of the people of
Hong Kong will shape how the U.S.
approaches other key aspects of our
relationship.
As Beijing grapples with growing
domestic unrest and slowing eco-
nomic growth, it should pause before
threatening a key engine of its
growth and provoking the interna-
tional community. Beijing can step
back from chaos to pursue freer and
fairer trade and greater respect for
sovereignty and human rights. These
basic steps can ensure a more pros-
perous and peaceful future for all of
our citizens.

Mr. McConnell, a Kentucky Repub-
lican, is U.S. Senate majority leader.

By Mitch McConnell


ROMAN PILIPEY/EPA-EFE/SHUTTERSTOCK
Protesters outside Hong Kong’s Central Government Offices, Aug. 18.

OPINION


Recession


Fears Are


Overblown


By Andy Puzder
And Jon Hartley

T


he yield curve is upside down,
leading to worry about reces-
sion. Stocks declined last week
after the 10-year Treasury yield fell
below the two-year Treasury yield.
Yet while an inversion of the yield
curve has preceded all postwar reces-
sions, not all inversions signal immi-
nent recession. The curve was flat for
most of the 1990s, and even inverted
briefly in 1998, without a recession.
Today, given the economy’s underly-
ing strength, fears of immediate re-
cession are overblown.
U.S. gross domestic product grew
2.1% in the second quarter, and the
Atlanta Federal Reserve forecasts
2.2% annualized third-quarter growth.
The generally accepted definition of a
recession is two consecutive quarters
of negative GDP growth. GDP consists
of four components: consumption,
government spending, net exports
and business investment.

Consumption looks strong.
Through July, retail sales have in-
creased this year, consumer confi-
dence has rebounded, and productiv-
ity—output per hour worked—has
experienced some of the largest in-
creases in decades. When a recession
occurs, weekly unemployment claims
are first to tick up. They aren’t rising,
and there are more openings than un-
employed people. Given this labor-
market strength, an increase in con-
sumer spending—which accounted
for 68% of GDP in 2018—is far likelier
than a decrease.
Government spending accounted
for 18% of GDP in 2018 and grew 3%
during the first half of 2019 amid
growing deficits. Net exports reduced
last year’s GDP by 3.3%, down to 3.1%
so far this year.
That leaves business investment,
which represented 18% of 2018’s GDP.
Concerns about the impact of a trade
war with China on costs and supply
chains combined with slowing global
growth have dampened business in-
vestment. It declined 0.6% (season-
ally adjusted) in the second quarter
despite a 2018 surge following the
2017 corporate tax cuts.
Yet the trade war has not as yet put
the U.S. economy at risk. Any dramatic
impact remains far off as the Trump
administration announced a further
delay—until December—on a tariff
hike to 25% on $200 billion of Chinese
imports. Even with reduced business
investment, the data don’t signal a
significant economic decline.
So should an inverted yield curve
put us on recession alert? Maybe not.
There’s reason to believe it is an un-
reliable recession indicator. The post-
Great Recession era has seen unprec-
edented distortions in the Treasury
market. The Fed’s trillion-dollar bal-
ance sheet following its long-term as-
set purchases, known as “quantitative
easing,” has put downward pressure
on the long end of the yield curve.
Fed researchers estimate that quanti-
tative easing may be pushing down
the 10-year Treasury yield by as much
as 0.7 percentage point in 2019.
In addition to quantitative easing,
$16 trillion in sovereign bonds with a
negative yield are weighing down
longer-term Treasury yields, as even
low-yield U.S. bonds are a more desir-
able option for foreign investors.
Moreover, the Treasury has
elected to fund the rapidly increasing
U.S. debt by issuing a high volume of
short-term Treasury bills, putting
significant upward pressure on the
short end of the yield curve.
This combination of downward
pressure on long-term rates and up-
ward pressure on short-term rates is
distorting the yield curve, wholly
apart from the strength of the under-
lying economy, rendering it an unreli-
able harbinger of recession.
It’s also important to remember
that there have been two primary
causes of recessions in the postwar
period: financial imbalances (like
bubbles in the technology or housing
market) and aggressively tight mone-
tary policy. It’s hard to identify any
major imbalances (apart perhaps
from nonfinancial corporate debt),
and the Fed is reducing rates.
At this point, without materially
worsening data from the real econ-
omy, an inverted yield curve should
not be causing the exaggerated reac-
tion we’re seeing in the stock and
bond markets. Someday we’ll have a
recession, but not soon.

Mr. Puzder is a former CEO of CKE
Restaurants and author of “The Capi-
talist Comeback: The Trump Boom
and the Left’s Plot to Stop It.” Mr.
Hartley is pursuing a master’s degree
at Harvard’s Kennedy School.

The yield curve is no
longer a reliable predictor,
and other economic
indicators are strong.

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Why Conservatives Don’t Trust Facebook


F


rom the Ivy League to Holly-
wood and the mainstream me-
dia, Americans with traditional
morals or conservative politics have
often felt excluded from the country’s
elite, culture-creating institutions.
Facebook offered an alternative: a
place to express views and share
news that you couldn’t find in the
New York Times.
Over time, however, many conser-
vatives lost trust in Facebook, believ-
ing it discriminated against them.
The increasing scale and complexity
of Facebook’s content-moderation
practices made matters worse. In
2016 Facebook employees were ac-
cused of suppressing conservative ar-
ticles in the news feed’s now-discon-
tinued “trending” section. In April
2018 Congress grilled Facebook chief
executive Mark Zuckerberg about
anticonservative bias, from blocked
content to suspended accounts.
In response to mounting criticism,
Facebook asked me to conduct a sur-
vey to hear from conservatives di-
rectly. Following substantial public
interest in the project and in light of
policy changes Facebook has recently
made, we have decided to share our
findings at this time.
Facebook placed no restrictions on
how I could conduct the work. My
team at the law firm Covington &
Burling LLP began conducting inter-
views in May 2018. We cast a wide
net to include as many aspects of
conservatism as possible—from or-
ganizations focused on Christian val-
ues or protecting free expression to
those focused on tax policy and small
government. We identified individu-
als, groups and lawmakers who either
use, study or could potentially regu-
late Facebook, and interviewed 133 of
them. To encourage them to speak
freely, we told interviewees we
wouldn’t publish their identities. We
presented our preliminary findings to


Facebook in early August 2018 and
have been discussing them with the
company ever since.
We found conservatives’ concerns
generally fall within the following six
buckets:


  • Content distribution and algo-
    rithms.
    Conservatives have expressed
    concern that bias against their view-
    points may be “baked in” to Face-
    book’s algorithms. In addition, inter-
    viewees argued that Facebook
    shouldn’t be in the business of sepa-
    rating fact from fiction in the news.

  • Content policies. Facebook’s
    community standards prohibit hate
    speech, graphic violence, adult nu-
    dity, sexual activity and cruel and in-
    sensitive content. Several interview-
    ees pointed to the highly subjective,
    ever-evolving nature of some of these
    standards, in particular the term
    “hate speech.”

  • Content enforcement. Interview-
    ees were concerned that the biases of
    Facebook employees who enforce the
    rules may result in disproportionate
    censoring of conservatives. Some
    midsize and grass-roots organiza-
    tions also believe their appeals are
    not taken as seriously as those of
    larger organizations.

  • Ad policies. In the wake of strong
    evidence from the U.S. intelligence
    community that Russia attempted to
    interfere in the 2016 presidential
    election with fake social-media ac-
    counts and inflammatory content,
    Facebook required advertisers to reg-
    ister as “political” organizations in
    order to post ads with a political or
    policy focus. Some conservative in-


terviewees said this new rule jeopar-
dized their status as nonprofits under
Section 501(c)(3) of the tax code.


  • Ad enforcement. As a result of
    Facebook’s new, more stringent ad
    policies, interviewees said the ad-ap-
    proval process has slowed signifi-
    cantly. Some fear that the new pro-
    cess may be designed to disadvantage
    conservative ads in the wake of the
    Trump campaign’s successful use of
    social media in 2016.

  • Workforce viewpoint diversity.
    Several interviewees noted the over-
    all lack of viewpoint diversity
    throughout Facebook’s workforce and
    senior management.
    Facebook has made several
    changes that are responsive to our
    findings, and we understand more
    are being considered. For now,
    changes include:

  • Oversight board. Facebook an-
    nounced plans last month for an
    oversight board to hear appeals of
    some more-difficult content-removal
    decisions. If structured to reflect ac-
    curately the diverse ideological and
    religious views of Facebook’s user
    base, the board may help ensure con-
    tent decisions are made thoughtfully
    and free from inappropriate bias.

  • Explanations of news-feed rank-
    ings.
    To foster user trust in the algo-
    rithms that influence content place-
    ment, Facebook has launched
    transparency tools that explain to us-
    ers why they see certain content on
    their news feeds.

  • Page transparency. Facebook has
    enabled page managers to see when
    their content has been removed for
    violating community standards, or


when distribution of a post has been
reduced because a fact-checker gave
it a “false” rating.


  • Staffing.^ Facebook has hired four
    additional people devoted exclusively
    to working with smaller organiza-
    tions to resolve questions and com-
    plaints about content decisions.

  • Ad labeling requirements. To
    avoid incorrectly branding ads as
    “political,” Facebook renamed its ads
    library and now refers instead to ads
    “about social issues, elections or poli-
    tics.”

  • Ad policies. Facebook has
    changed its ad policies that prohibit
    images of patients with medical
    tubes as “shocking and sensational
    content.” This will make it easier to
    promote certain pro-life ads.
    We believe these and other mea-
    sures described in our interim report
    are steps in the right direction. Yet
    these are complicated issues, some of
    which involve conflicting opinions
    even among conservatives. For that
    reason, restoring trust fully may re-
    main an elusive goal. Conservatives
    no doubt will, and should, continue to
    press Facebook to address the con-
    cerns that arose in our survey.
    As Facebook considers additional
    changes, we will continue to help it
    understand conservative perspec-
    tives. To live up to its vision as a
    platform for all ideas, I believe Face-
    book understands it must do all it can
    to regain the trust of conservative
    users.


Mr. Kyl, a Republican former U.S.
senator from Arizona, is a senior
counsel at Covington & Burling LLP.

By Jon Kyl


My independent team of
investigators looked into
the complaints, and the
company has taken action.

From “The Social Responsibility of
Business Is to Increase Its Profits” by
Milton Friedman, New York Times
Magazine, Sept. 13, 1970:

In a free-enterprise, private-prop-
erty system, a corporate executive is
an employee of the owners of the
business. He has direct responsibility
to his employers. That responsibility
is to conduct the business in accor-
dance with their desires, which gen-
erally will be to make as much money
as possible while conforming to their
basic rules of the society, both those
embodied in law and those embodied
in ethical custom....
Whether blameworthy or not, the
use of the cloak of social responsibil-
ity, and the nonsense spoken in its
name by influential and prestigious
businessmen, does clearly harm the
foundations of a free society. I have
been impressed time and again by the
schizophrenic character of many busi-
nessmen. They are capable of being
extremely far-sighted and clear-
headed in matters that are internal to
their businesses. They are incredibly
short-sighted and muddle-headed in

matters that are outside their busi-
nesses but affect the possible survival
of business in general. This short-
sightedness is strikingly exemplified
in the calls from many businessmen
for wage and price guidelines or con-
trols or income policies. There is noth-
ing that could do more in a brief pe-
riod to destroy a market system and
replace it by a centrally controlled
system than effective governmental
control of prices and wages.
The short-sightedness is also ex-
emplified in speeches by business-
men on social responsibility. This
may gain them kudos in the short
run. But it helps to strengthen the
already too prevalent view that the
pursuit of profits is wicked and im-
moral and must be curbed and con-
trolledbyexternalforces.Oncethis
view is adopted, the external forces
that curb the market will not be the
social consciences, however highly
developed, of the pontificating exec-
utives; it will be the iron fist of Gov-
ernment bureaucrats. Here, as with
price and wage controls, business-
men seem to me to reveal a suicidal
impulse.

Notable & Quotable: Friedman

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