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Freedom

How We Lose It and How We Fight Back

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A timely manifesto on freedom from Hong Kong's leading pro-democracy activist, Nathan Law, a Nobel Prize nominee

In this dispatch from exile, Hong Kong political activist Nathan Law explores the meaning of freedom—and shows how easily freedoms can be eroded or dismantled. Freedom is fragile—it is not a given, and each generation must fight to protect it, whether in emerging democracies or in the Western world, where freedom is too often taken for granted.

Law sets out to prove the value of what we take to be inherently bestowed upon us as human beings, and to expose the Chinese government as it barricades its citizens from enjoying freedom. He lays out how the government controls what people know and are allowed to think, suppresses the truth, and undermines democratic processes by censoring its own members. If freedom is a basic human right, then why were lawyers, journalists, and activists being jailed, and why has Nathan Law been labeled a wanted fugitive?

Rooted in his own experience as a former elected official and student leader of the Umbrella Movement, Law explores not just how important freedom is in principle for human beings to thrive, but how it is put into practice. What does it mean to be able to speak freely, and what happens when the concept collapses? How can the law both protect and abolish our freedoms? And why should we place such importance on free and fair elections? What does it mean to be truly free? Nathan Law has worked tirelessly to apply pressure in order to reshape freedom in Hong Kong, because it is with freedom that we'll live as we're meant to be.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      British narrator Daniel Loh eloquently captures the sense of loss and frustration in this cri de coeur from former Hong Kong student activist and legislator Nathan Law. Loh's well-modulated performance strikes the right balance between outraged indictment and the lasting feelings of loss of the now London-based lawyer. Hong Kong, while never free, was democratically run, open, and vibrant. The authoritarian rule of the Chinese has quashed democracy. This work is part anti-Chinese Communist Party (CCP) screed, part paean to democracy, and part nostalgic remembrance of the author's pre-CCP life. Law has suffered for his apostasy. He led marches and was elected to public office as a critic of the new regime. He will more than likely never return home again. A.D.M. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine

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