NPR85%

Hong Kong passes a new security law that toughens punishment of dissent 89%

By Emily Feng0%

3/19/2024, 1:29:00 PM

BS Summary: This article contains 21 faulty reasoning types, including Biased Writer Voice, Appeal to Authority, and Confirmation Bias, with Negativity Bias as the most egregious example at 48.1% saturation with 272 hits. Analysis detected 1,256 faulty-reasoning hits from 565 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 83.1% and a BS Rank of 89% (1,884 of 16,813 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 88.80% of the article peer group.

Hong Kong lawmakers have passed new national security legislation that carries severe punishment for a broad range of offenses, including life imprisonment for acts deemed to be insurrection. 
The legislation, called the Safeguarding National Security Bill, will toughen up the already stringent national security law Beijing implemented in 2020 following major pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong. 
Hong Kong's lawmakers first tried to pass security legislation in 2003 but shelved it after mass protests against what residents feared was overreach from Beijing. 
This time around, Hong Kong lawmakers fast-tracked it for approval within two weeks of reading a full draft. 
The bill is linked to Article 23 of Hong Kong's mini-constitution called the Basic Law, which requires the city to enact its own laws "to prohibit any act of treason, secession, sedition, subversion" against the government, as well as bar foreign political organizations from conducting political activities there, among other provisions. 
Since China imposed the national security law in 2020, many prominent Hong Kong activists have been jailed or gone into exile. 
But Hong Kong's pro-Beijing lawmakers argued that new legislation was needed to fill loopholes left by the sweeping 2020 law. 
"Now we would have had the offense of secession and subversion, overthrow of government, which means that if the rioters started waving pro-independence banners, we could have prosecuted them, which means that it would not have been necessary for Beijing to step in and introduce its own national security law," Regina Ip, a Hong Kong politician said on a Hong Kong talk show this year. 
Ip was the city's security minister back in 2003 who championed the idea of pushing through Article 23 provisions. 
However, the bill passed Tuesday is more aggressive than the version Ip proposed in 2003. 
It can deny people arrested access to a lawyer at first or to one of their choice. 
It also creates new types of offenses  updated to reflect new technologies  including the crime of "unauthorized acts related to a computer or electronic systems," which can be punished by up to a life sentence. 
International human rights groups say the new legislation is overly broad, with vaguely defined legal concepts like "external interference," threatening to increase punishment for people over various acts deemed as dissent against Hong Kong authorities or the Chinese government in Beijing. 
"The new security law will usher Hong Kong into a new era of authoritarianism. 
Now even possessing a book critical of the Chinese government can violate national security and mean years in prison in Hong Kong," Maya Wang, acting China director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement Tuesday. 
The vagueness of how terms like "national security" and "state secrets" are used in the new bill is alarming to legal experts like Alvin Cheung, an affiliate scholar at the U.S. 
Asia Law Institute at New York University. 
"It's clear that the current bill much more closely tracks the mainland's all-embracing concept of national security," Cheung told NPR. 
Thomas Kellogg, executive director of the Center for Asian Law at Georgetown University, told NPR earlier this year that Hong Kong's government has been trying to target organizations of its citizens in exile in the United States, the United Kingdom and elsewhere. 
"It seems that they want to use this new law to also tackle these overseas activists," he said. 
Confirmation Bias
18.9%
Anchoring Bias
0%
Availability Heuristic
15.9%
Representativeness Heuristic
0%
Hindsight Bias
2.7%
Overconfidence Bias
3.5%
Framing Effect
7.1%
Loss Aversion
0%
Status Quo Bias
0%
Sunk Cost Effect
0%
Optimism Bias
0%
Pessimism Bias
12%
Negativity Bias
48.1%
Self-Serving Bias
0%
Fundamental Attribution Error
0%
Actor-Observer Bias
4.4%
In-Group Bias
3.5%
Out-Group Homogeneity Bias
0%
Halo Effect
0%
Horn Effect
0%
Dunning-Kruger Effect
0%
Recency Bias
3.2%
Primacy Effect
0%
Blind-Spot Bias
0%
Ad Hominem
0%
Straw Man
0%
Appeal to Authority
19.6%
False Dilemma
11.5%
Slippery Slope
0%
Circular Reasoning
0%
Hasty Generalization
3.7%
Red Herring
0%
Bandwagon
0%
Appeal to Emotion
6.4%
Begging the Question
0%
Post Hoc (False Cause)
5%
Tu Quoque
0%
Burden of Proof
0%
Appeal to Nature
0%
Composition/Division
0%
Anecdotal
7.4%
No True Scotsman
0%
Ambiguity (Equivocation)
5.8%
Gambler’s Fallacy
0%
Middle Ground
0%
Personal Incredulity
0%
Special Pleading
0%
Genetic Fallacy
0%
Unattributed Quote
3.2%
Quote-first Misdirection
14%
Biased Writer Voice
23.7%
Indoctrination
2.5%
Politically Left Leaning Bias
0%
Politically Right Leaning Bias
0%
Attempt to Sell a Product or Service
0%

565 words analyzed.

Analysis

Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.