Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘Little England’ comes to Hong Kong’s rescue
‘Little England’ comes to Hong Kong’s rescue
Dec 8, 2025 5:09 AM

As U.S. cities seek to rebuild from chaos, Hong Kong continues to resist the imposition of order—a draconian order emanating from Beijing that will crush freedom of thought and expression. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has intervened with an historic proposal: He would allow nearly half the citizens of Hong Kong to immigrate to the UK.

The es after the National People’s Congress approved a security law that would allow thePeople’s Republic of China to establish security teams in Hong Kong and punish acts of “secession, subversion or terrorism.”Hong Kong’s legislature signaled the shape of things e on June 4, as it rubber-stamped a law punishing anyone who disrespects the Chinese national anthem with three years in prison and a fine of 50,000 Hong Kong dollars ($6,450 U.S.).

Should the security law take effect, Johnson warned, “Britain could not in good conscience shrug our shoulders and walk away; instead we will honour our obligations and provide an alternative.”

The prime minister sketched out the details in an op-ed published simultaneously in the Times and the South China Morning Post:

Today,about 350,000 of the territory’s people hold British National Overseas passportsand another 2.5 million would be eligible to apply for them. At present, these passports allow visa-free access to the United Kingdom for up to six months.

If China imposes its national security law,the British government will change our immigration rulesand allow any holder of these passports from Hong Kong e to the UK for a renewable period of 12 months and be given further immigration rights, including the right to work, which could place them on a route to citizenship.

This would amount to one of the biggest changes in our visa system in British history. If it proves necessary, the British government will take this step and take it willingly.

By offering British citizenship to 3 million of Hong Kong’s 7.5 million citizens, Johnson’s proposal would virtually empty the island. The population is braced to leave their homeland, which the UK relinquished to Beijing in 1997.

Applications for immigration documents increased 60% in December 2019 over the previous year. Emigration specialists say they’ve seen a spike of Hong Kong residents ready to invest any amount of money to gain legal residence in Taiwan or Australia, as long as they can flee the island “super fast.”

Beijing moved quickly to scuttle the offer. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian accused Johnson of suffering from a “Cold War and colonialist mentality.” Such loaded charges have ping-ponged back and forth from China to the Western Left, although it’s unclear who is echoing whom.

This Conservative prime minister would offer citizenship to as many immigrants as Labour granted residence during its 13 years in power. Experts insisted such a turn of events would be impossible because of Brexit. In 2017, The Daily Beast derided Leave voters as the stormtroopers of a “hateful Little England.” These “hijackers” of the Tories are “a noisome and virulent strain of nativism” that despises London’s “social diversity, its cultural exoticism … and most of all its un-Englishness.”

The author named their ringleader as “the man who more than any other politician was responsible for the Brexit campaign’s narrow win in the July [June 23, 2016] referendum: Boris Johnson.”

Remainers have insisted for almost four years that Brexit coasted across the electoral finish line on the fumes of racism. Leavers have suffered the full brunt of their own society’s moral opprobrium ever since. This was a shallow and self-serving analysis that did not reflect the diverse concerns motivating the British majority and a particularly slanderous reading of Johnson, who was conspicuously more favorable toward immigration than his predecessor, Theresa May. Inviting 40% of population of an Asian province to settle in the UK seems like a peculiar form of nativism, indeed.

The emigration of Hong Kong’s banking elite would cement the City of London as the world’s leading provider of financial services. Hong Kong has fallen to the world’s sixth largest financial services hub since the Chinese crackdown. Even partial consolidation with London would overwhelm Wall Street.

Hong Kong refugees could also reorient British politics and foreign policy. As Cuban exiles have e Florida’s most dependable, and most conservative voting bloc, Hong Kongers’ personal testimony could make the UK more critical of Chinese human rights abuses—and those who overlook them, including the EU.

By contrast, what has the supranationalists’ favorite institution, the European Union, done? It postponed a summit with China—citing the coronavirus rather than political oppression. The EU’s top diplomat, Josep Borrell, has ruled out further confrontation on the member states’ behalf. The Schengen Area, which Angela Merkel gladly threw open for Syrian migrants, remains closed to Chinese dissidents. It has fallen to the newly independent UK to provide an escape hatch. Why is that? What makes the UK different?

The UK shows the reality that pursuing liberty anywhere advances liberty everywhere. The UK freed itself from the undemocratic structure and stultifying regulations of the EU; it seeks to spare Hong Kong a worse fate. As a nation properly recognizes the anthropology of humanity, which is “made for freedom,” its leaders begin to respect the inestimable, God-given human dignity of every person. National policy begins to reflect this eternal truth. Aristotle explained how habit ingrains itself into character, which holds true for a nation, as well.

Such an example may be seen in Estonian leader Mari-Ann Kelam, who led the global movement to win Estonia’s independence from the Soviet Union—but who also supported every anti-Communist liberation movement (and still does). Mari-Ann told me in an interview for the Acton Institute’s podcast that she engaged in decades of tireless activism, in the phrase of former Czech statesman Václav Havel, “for your freedom and ours.”

However one might question the practicality or advisability of Boris Johnson’s proposal to swell the UK’s population by 5% in one fell swoop, it is a nod in the same direction.

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
Text of the Obamacare Ruling
For those wanting to read the recently released decision, the Alliance Defense Fund has a copy of the Supreme Court decision on Obamacare. ...
Standing Up to Rousseau: Remarks at a Fortnight for Freedom
I had the opportunity to speak at the Fortnight for Freedom event held by the Church of the Incarnation in Collierville, Tennessee, on June 21. The venue and the crowd were among the best I’ve ever encountered. Below, you can read my excerpted remarks: On the Question of Religious Liberty If I understand correctly, this is the beginning of the Fortnight for Freedom here at the Church of the Incarnation and around the nation. The need for this special fortnight...
Growing Detroit
Renaissance Center (GM building). Creative Commons: paul (dex) bica via Compfight Some time back I argued that urban farming and the entrepreneurial spirit in Detroit was something that should be embraced rather than dismissed. Detroit mayor Dave Bing has given verbal support for urban munity farms in the past, but in many cases some regulatory hurdles remained and he was somewhat skeptical at times about the importance of large scale urban agriculture projects. But that ambivalence seems to be history,...
Lessons in Liberty from a Little House on the Prairie
We could learn a lot about liberty from our pioneer forebears, argues Meghan Clyne. And an exemplar of this model of freedom and self-reliance can be found on our children’s bookshelves, in the Little House books of Laura Ingalls Wilder: Who in America’s past, then, can show us the way to a mature, sustainable democratic life — one defined not by the rebellious seizure of liberty, but by the consistent and wise exercise of it through a dedication to self-reliance?...
Rev. Robert Sirico: Reply to America Magazine
Anytime I can get a progressive/dissenting Catholic magazine/blog like the Jesuit-run America simultaneously to quote papal documents, defend the Magisterium of the Catholic Church, embrace the Natural Law and even yearn for a theological investigation “by those charged with oversight for the Church’s doctrine” of a writer suspected of heresy, I consider that I have had a good day. And to think that all this was prompted by two sentences of mine quoted in a New York Times story on...
‘Defending the Free Market’ on C-SPAN
On C-Span2’s BookTV, Rev. Sirico talks about his new book, ‘Defending the Free Market: The Moral Case for a Free Economy’, and argues that moral people should embrace capitalism and the free market. This talk was hosted by the Catholic Information Center in Washington, DC.The next scheduled air times are Saturday, June 30th at 7pm ET and Sunday, July 1st at 6:15am ET. ...
The Religious Left’s Hunger for Big Government
“I was Hungry and You . . . Called your Congressman” is a good report from Kristin Rudolph over at the IRD blog. The article covers Bread for the World president David ments to a group of “emergent Christians” in Washington D.C. From the piece: Beckmann lamented that “very little progress has been made against poverty and hunger” in the US over the past few decades. This, he explained, is because ”we haven’t had a president who’s made the effort”...
Vocation Infusion Learning Community
This week, 40 pastors and church leaders are gathered to discuss important ideas of integrating faith, work, and vocation into our daily lives. Vocation is integral, not incidental to the missio Dei, the work that God has called us to do each day. The pastors and church leaders represent a diversity of evangelical traditions and geographic locations in the US. Over the next year, this group will meet for face-to-face retreats, field trips and a few webinars with the goal...
Two reviews of ‘Defending the Free Market’
Father Peter Preble, pastor of St. Michael Orthodox Church, and Stephen Kokx, adjunct professor of political science and columnist, both recently reviewed Rev. Robert Sirico’s new book Defending the Free Market: The Moral Case for a Free Economy. Fr. Preble says the book changed his outlook on how to treat the poor. He refers to the third chapter and highlights the book’s emphasis on asking new questions: The most striking of the chapters has to be chapter three, Want to...
Richard Vedder on ‘Federal Student Aid and the Law of Unintended Consequences’
Dr. Richard Vedder, the Edwin and Ruth Kennedy Distinguished Professor of Economics at Ohio University and the director of the Center for College Affordability and Productivity, recently addressed the topic of federal aid and the cost of higher education, an issue that has received some attention on the PowerBlog as of late.Vedder critiques federal aid initiatives like the Pell Grant, which today helps the middle class more than the poor, but saw a twofold size increase from 2007 to 2010....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved