Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Jimmy Lai: China must embrace ‘Western values’
Jimmy Lai: China must embrace ‘Western values’
Dec 30, 2025 1:12 PM

Jimmy Lai, the Hong Kong-based entrepreneur and dissident, says he would gladly be arrested again, because advocating for human freedom is part of his character. And until China respects the freedom embedded in human nature, peace will not return to his formerly free province – or the world.

More than 200 police officers stormed the offices of Lai’s newspaper, Apple Daily on August 10 under the terms of the nation’s draconian new “national security law.” They handcuffed the 71-year-old Christian, who spent the week sleeping on the floor of a prison cell before he was released on $64,500 bail.

“When I was in custody I could not sleep,” Lai said. “I was thinking, if I knew that was going to happen to me now, [with] even more hardship [coming], would I have done the same thing?”

“I would not have [done things] another way. This is my character,” he declared. “Character is my destiny.”

Lai believes that character will dictate China’s future, as well.

“Without assimilating into Western values, there won’t be peace in international trade, politics and diplomacy,” Lai said. “If we don’t change [China], the world will not have peace.”

The West long defined itself by mitment to Judeo-Christian values and such God-given rights as freedom of religion and speech, equality before the law, and the economic liberty implicit in the unalienable right of the “pursuit of happiness.” However, e even as the Western intelligentsia has abandoned or watered down the concept and definition of transatlantic values.

Lai hopes he lives to see the People’s Republic of China import the values that U.S.-based protesters and rioters wish to eradicate. “I want people to have the right to keep the rule of law and freedom of speech we have,” he said.

“Without the rule of law, the international financial center will be finished,” Lai said.“Without freedom you have nothing left.”

The Chinese Communist Party, however, came to diametrically opposed conclusions about the future of the special administrative region. The CCP organ People’s Daily said Lai will not be able to “escape from precise punishment” under the law. The government’s Hong Kong and Macao Affairs Office added, “People who colluded with foreign forces to endanger national security should be sternly punished under the law.”

“Hong Kong will not have stability if this danger is not removed,” it concluded.

Lai said punishment will not dissuade him or the millions of Hong Kongers, often waving American flags, assembling for freedom. But they will need to exploit new tactics. “We can no long have two million people walk on the street,” he said. “I think in the future there will be innovation.” All resistance must be non-violent, like that offered by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. “Violence is a game we had no right to play,” especially since “the CCP … have guns and tanks.”

Lai’s godfather, Wall Street Journal editorial board member William McGurn, said the eyes of the West remain fixed on Hong Kong.

“This is a billionaire who’swilling to trade in fortof a billionaire’s life for apossible prison sentence as adissident,” he said.

Lai could have easily used his passports to the UK or Taiwan to flee his home island, McGurn and Paul Gigot noted on Fox News Channel this weekend. “He has a home in Paris,” McGurn said. “He could live anywhere in the world. … And the corollary to that is, Hong Kong people are saying if a billionaire isn’t safe, what about me?”

Lai, a devout Roman Catholic, said he places another traditional value ahead of his fort: laying down his life for his friends. “There is always a price to pay,” he said. “It’s a time to get ready for sacrifice.”

As WSJ tells the story of his heroism and China’s persecution on its network television program, the Acton Institute is spreading the word to an ever-expanding audience around the world.

Acton’s Religion & Liberty Transatlantic website has posted a French translation of Communications Director Eric Kohn’s article, “Pro-democracy media entrepreneur Jimmy Lai arrested in Hong Kong.” The heart of his post is a statement by Acton Institute Co-founder Rev. Robert A. Sirico. His words have now been translated by Benoît H. Perrin into French, the language of 275 million people worldwide, as part of Acton’s French-language translation project. Rev. Sirico’s statement in French reads in full:

Comme prévu, l’entrepreneur des médias de Hong Kong et militant pro-démocratie Jimmy Lai a été arrêté lundi matin par la police de Hong Kong sous le couvert d’une loi dite « de sécurité nationale », récemment adoptée. La salle de presse et les bureaux de son journal Apple Daily, ont également fait l’objet d’une descente de police.

J’ai le plaisir de connaître M. Lai et sa famille depuis plus de vingt ans. Son histoire fascinante est retracée dans le film The Call of the Entrepreneur. Il raconte son voyage de la Chine continentale à Hong Kong à l’âge de 12 ment il y a appris l’anglais ment il a fini par y créer l’une des plus importantes entreprises de médias d’Asie.

Le sens des affaires et l’intelligence de M. Lai ont pu s’épanouir sous le règne de la liberté à Hong Kong. Cette réalité est fatalement une menace pour un régime me le muniste chinois. Un tel pouvoir redoute la liberté humaine et sa créativité, qui va à l’encontre du contrôle centralisé sur le cœur et l’esprit des gens.

Je suis convaincu, connaissant M. me je le connais, que ces tactiques ne l’intimideront pas le moins du monde.

Lorsque je me suis entretenu avec lui en juin dernier pour Acton University, il s’attendait à ce que cela se produise et il était prêt à payer le prix qu’il faudrait au nom de la liberté.

Les personnes qui aiment la liberté et qui sont engagées dans la défense des droits de l’homme devraient s’élever avec force contre cette attaque flagrante et extrême, non seulement contre M. Lai et sa famille, mais aussi contre la dignité humaine fondamentale et la liberté que cette dignité humaine exige.

Jimmy Lai est un homme d’une foi, d’une conviction et d’une force extraordinaires. Lui, sa famille et son Hong Kong bien-aimé ont besoin de nos prières maintenant.

You can read the full translation here.

Press.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
DCI John Luther: Secular Authority
John Luther is pierced for Jenny's transgressions.An essay of mine on the wonderful and difficult BBC series “Luther” is up over at the Comment magazine website, “Get Your Hands Dirty: The Vocational Theology of Luther.” In this piece I reflect on DCI John Luther’s “overriding need to protect other people from injustice and harm, and even sometimes the consequences of their own sin and guilt,” and how that fits in with the Christian (and particularly Lutheran) doctrine of vocation. Indeed,...
Samuel Gregg: Unions and the Path to Irrelevancy
On National Review Online, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg demolishes the left’s knee-jerk explanation for labor union decline, which blames “the machinations of conservative intellectuals, free-market-inclined governments, and businesses who, over time, have successfully worked to diminish organized labor, thereby crushing the proverbial ‘little guy.'” Gregg writes: “The truth, however, is rather plex. One factor at work is economic globalization. Businesses fed up with unions who think that their industry should be immune petition are now in a position to...
Report: Dire situation for Syrian Christians
A roundup at Notes on Arab Orthodoxy paints a grim picture for Christians — and clashing Islamic sects — in Syria. It’s a gut-wrenching account of kidnappings, torture and beheadings. One report begins with this line: “Over 40 young men (including a couple of doctors) from the Wadi area, were killed by the bearded men who are eager to give us democracy.” The article also links to a report in Agenzia Fides, which interviewed a Greek-Catholic bishop: The picture for...
Samuel Gregg: Why Austerity Isn’t Enough
Writing on The American Spectator website, Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg looks at the strange notion of European fiscal “austerity” even as more old continent economies veer toward the abyss. Is America far behind? Needless to say, Greece is Europe’s poster child for reform-failure. Throughout 2011, the Greek parliament passed reforms that diminished regulations that applied to many professions in the economy’s service sector. But as two Wall Street Journal journalists demonstrated one year later, “despite the change in the...
Mindmaps and Kuyper’s Wisdom and Wonder
This week we feature a post by Steve Bishop who is involved in full-time Christian ministry as a husband, father and in teaching mathematics and forensic science to post-16s. He blogs at and maintains the neo-Calvinist/Kuyperian website www.allofliferedeemed.co.uk Follow him on twitter @stevebishopuk Mind maps have in recent years been associated with Tony Buzan. However, they go back as far as the third century and were – or so it is alleged – first used by Porphyry of Tyros. Mind...
Samuel Gregg: A Necessary Symbiosis
Acton Research Director Samuel Gregg reviews America’s Spiritual Capital by Nicholas Capaldi and T. R. Malloch (St Augustine’s Press, 2012) for The University Bookman. … Capaldi and Malloch are—refreshingly—unabashed American exceptionalists. One of this book’s strengths is the way that it brings to light a critical element of that exceptionalism through the medium of spiritual capital. Part of the American experiment is mitment to modernity—but a modernity several times removed from that pioneered by the likes of the French revolutionaries,...
North Dakotans Vote on Religious Liberty
Citizens of North Dakota will be voting today on an amendment to the state’s constitution that supporters say will guarantee religious freedom: Measure 3 is worded this way: “Government may not burden a person’s or religious organization’s religious liberty.” Its supporters call it the Religious Liberty Restoration amendment; they say it’s needed because of a 22-year-old U.S. Supreme Court decision they believe has put limits on religious freedom. “What this amendment is attempting to do is to restore that level...
How Junk Bonds Killed the Three Martini Lunch
A recent editorial in the New York Times claims that during the 1980s leveraged buyouts “contributed significantly to the growth of the e gap, moving wealth from the middle class to the top end.” First Things editor R.R. Reno explains why the real story is plicated, more interesting, and explains much more than e inequality: The upper middle class world responded to the leveraged buyout revolution by upping mitments to education and economically oriented self-discipline. The old white-collar social contract...
25 Years Later: ‘Tear Down This Wall!’
Today marks the 25th anniversary of Ronald Reagan’s stirring speech in front of Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate. Against the advice of the State Department, the National Security Council and the ranking U.S. diplomat in Berlin, the President challenged Mikhail Gorbachev, General Secretary of the Communist Party, to take his glasnost policy one step further with the demolition of the Berlin Wall. The speech, which forecasted the wall’s 1989 destruction, remains one of the most iconic moments of Reagan’s presidency and a...
Wong and Rae on How and When to Fire Someone
Donald Trump's tagline: "You're fired."Last week I raised the question of whether being a Christian businessperson means you do some things differently, and particularly whether some of these things that are done differently have to do with terminating an employee. Here’s a snip of what Kenman Wong and Scott Rae say in their recent book, Business for the Common Good: Although panies may take on certain employees as an act of benevolence, it is not the norm. Employees are bound...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved