The Troublemaker - How Jimmy Lai Became a Billionaire, Hong Kong's Greatest Dissident, and China's Most Feared Critic by Mark L. Clifford

郵費 Postage:
Free Shipping
出版社 Publisher:
Free Press
作者 Author:
Mark L. Clifford
版次 Edition:
第一版 1st edition
出版年份 Publication year:
2024
國際書號 ISBN:
9781668027691
頁數 Pages:
288
語言 Language:
英文 English
書籍分享者 Book Sharer:
匿名 Anonymous
借書期 Book Borrowing Period:
一個月 One month
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The astonishing story of the billionaire businessman Jimmy Lai who became one of Hong Kong’s leading activists for democracy and is today China’s most famous political prisoner.

Jimmy Lai escaped mainland China when he was twelve years old, at the height of a famine that killed tens of millions. In Hong Kong, he hustled; no work was beneath him, and he often slept on a table in a clothing factory where he did odd jobs. At twenty-one, he was running a factory. By his mid-twenties, he owned one and was supplying sweaters and shirts to some of the biggest brands in the United States, from Polo to The Limited. His ideas about retail led him to create Giordano in 1981, and with it “fast fashion.” A restless entrepreneur, as Giordano prepared to go public, he was thinking about a dining concept that would disrupt Hong Kong’s fast-food industry. But then came the Tiananmen Square democracy protest and the massacre of 1989.

His reaction to the violence was to enter the media business to push China toward more freedoms. He started a magazine, Next, to advocate for democracy in Hong Kong. Then, just two years before the city was to return to Chinese control, he founded the Apple Daily newspaper. Its mix of bold graphics, gossip, local news, and opposition to the Chinese Communist Party was an immediate hit. For more than two decades, Lai used Apple and Next as part of a personal push for democracy—in weekly columns, at rallies and marches, and, memorably, sitting in front of a tent during the 2014 Occupy Central movement.

Lai took his activism abroad, traveling frequently to Washington, where he was well known in Congress and in political circles. China reacted with fury in 2019 when he met with Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. A draconian new security law came into effect in Hong Kong in mid-2020, effectively making free speech a crime and censorship a fact. Lai was its most important target. Apple Daily was raided on August 10, 2020. He was arrested and held without bail before being convicted of trumped-up charges ranging from lighting a candle (“incitement to riot”) to violating a clause in his company’s lease (“fraud”). At the end of 2023, a lengthy trial began alleging “collusion with foreign forces” and printing seditious materials. China’s most famous political prisoner has been in jail for more than 1,100 days and could spend the rest of his life there. The Troublemaker is his story.

Table of Contents
Forward by Natan Sharansky
Chronology
Prologue: The Troublemaker
Chapter 1: "Food is Freedom"
Chapter 2: "What's Your Magic?"
Chapter 3: The Father of Fast Fashion
Chapter 4: "Like My Mother Calling"
Chapter 5: "Turtle Egg"
Chapter 6: The Bulldozer
Chapter 7: "God Suffers with Me"
Chapter 8: "Crazy Hype and Arrogance"
Chapter 9: "I Want to Be Taiwanese"
Chapter 10: Umbrellas and Tear Gas
Chapter 11: "We Just Have to Eat Their Meal"
Chapter 12: "Making the Law the Tool of a Ruler"
Chapter 13: Prison
Chapter 14: "Living in Complete Freedom"
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Notes

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