Cotton For Senate I wanted to be sure you saw my speech this week calling out 
the NBA's executives and athletes for their defense of the Chinese Communist 
Party. GivenI wanted to be sure you saw my speech this week calling out the 
NBA's executives and athletes for their defense of the Chinese Communist Party. 
Given LeBron James's recent comments covering for China's shameful actions in 
Hong Kong, I think that instead of calling him King James, it's probably more 
accurate to say "Chairman LeBron." 
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John,
 I wanted to be sure you saw my speech this week calling out the NBA's 
executives and athletes for their defense of the Chinese Communist Party. Given 
LeBron James's recent comments covering for China's shameful actions in Hong 
Kong, I think that instead of calling him King James, it's probably more 
accurate to say "Chairman LeBron."
 Instead of shilling for Beijing, the NBA should use its enormous leverage 
with the 500 million basketball fans in China to be a beacon of freedom. We 
can't let them off the hook.
 Thanks for all your support,
 Tom 
   Sen. Tom Cotton — Speech from the Senate Floor
 October 16, 2019
    As we speak, the brave people of Hong Kong are demonstrating to protect 
their freedoms from the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing.
 Chinese state TV has portrayed these millions of demonstrators as violent 
anarchists and separatists.
 But these Hong Kongers are merely insisting that China live up to the 
promises it made to Hong Kong and the United Kingdom—promises China made as 
binding conditions of the transfer of sovereignty from London to Beijing.
 The Chinese government promised that Hong Kong would "enjoy a high degree of 
autonomy," including many of the freedoms that Beijing denies to its more than 
one billion subjects on the mainland.
 But as the world has learned through bitter experience, the Chinese Communist 
Party's promises are worth less than the paper they're written on.
 Slowly but surely, Beijing has chipped away at the independence it promised 
Hong Kong—disappearing citizens guilty of wrongthink, undermining Hong Kong's 
long-standing political and judicial systems, and issuing menacing threats of 
military intervention to crush the demonstrations.
 Most Americans are rightly outraged by China's brutal crackdown in Hong Kong. 
Daryl Morey was one of them. He's the general manager of the Houston Rockets. 
Just a few days ago, he tweeted this simple, justified phrase: "Fight for 
freedom, stand with Hong Kong."
 Morey probably knew his words would offend the Chinese Communist Party. But 
he was also violating a different party line—that of his own league, the NBA.
 For daring to speak up about Hong Kong, Morey was disavowed by his team, his 
fellow executives, and some of the most famous athletes in the NBA. That's 
because he was threatening not only the powers that be in China, but the cash 
cow that China represents for American business, including professional 
basketball.
 China's government may be red, but its money is green—and plenty of people 
are willing to cash its checks, no matter the cost.
 The league's biggest star, LeBron James, said that Morey's support for Hong 
Kong was "misinformed" and "not educated." He reportedly called for Morey to be 
punished. Perhaps it's no coincidence that LeBron stands to make billions of 
dollars from the Chinese market—not only from a higher salary cap, shoe sales, 
and Nike ads, but also from his movie company.
 Often known as King James, perhaps Chairman LeBron would be a better 
honorific today.
 Joe Tsai, owner of the Brooklyn Nets, called the protests in Hong Kong a 
"separatist movement" that was trying to "carve up Chinese territories," like 
colonial powers or Imperial Japan. Perhaps it's no coincidence that Mr. Tsai is 
an executive at Alibaba, a Chinese company that developed a Communist 
propaganda app that hijacked the cellphones of anyone who downloaded it.
 At a Wizards game last week, security confiscated a protest sign that said 
simply, "Google Uighurs"—referring to the native people of western China whose 
culture and religion are being exterminated by the Chinese Communist Party. 
That sign was confiscated not in China, by the secret police, but right here in 
America's national capital.
 Steve Kerr, the head coach of the Golden State Warriors, drew a moral 
equivalence between Communist China and the United States of America. "None of 
us are perfect," he said, "and we all have different issues we need to get to."
 Nobody's perfect. That's what he says of an authoritarian regime that 
starved, shot, or beat to death 50 million of its own people in a forced march 
to modernity. A regime that runs a network of concentration camps in its 
western provinces and harvests the organs of political prisoners for its own 
pampered elite. "Nobody's perfect," indeed.
 This is craven and greedy behavior, and it stands in stark contrast to how 
America has historically used sports to promote our interests and aspirations, 
from the triumph of black Olympians in Hitler's Germany to the Miracle on Ice 
against the Soviet Union. Even our diplomatic opening to China happened through 
sports, with "Ping-Pong diplomacy."
 Today, the tables have turned. China is using sports to export its 
authoritarian model to our soil. So far, it has found too many willing 
enforcers in the NBA.
 But it doesn't have to be this way. Commissioner Adam Silver, after a slow 
start, admirably defended Daryl Morey's right to speak his mind about Hong 
Kong. He said free expression is "what you guys stand for."
 American companies kowtow to China not because they love its government but 
because of the tremendous pressure that government can exert on their 
operations. But the NBA is in a unique position.
 Beijing can ban an airline or it can ban a hotel that lists Taiwan as a 
country in its online dropdown menu—and the Chinese people can use a different 
airline or hotel. But there's only one NBA. Beijing can't create another one.
 And here's the rub. There are more than 500 million basketball fans in China. 
More people in China follow the NBA than there are people in the United States.
 So no doubt Beijing has some leverage over the NBA, as it does over all 
businesses—but the NBA has a lot of leverage over Beijing.
 Is the NBA really going to ban the entire league, as they've done for the 
Houston Rockets, at the risk of alienating over 500 million people who follow 
the league—and the resultant public backlash that could create?
 So instead of acting as a bullhorn for communist propaganda in America, the 
NBA could be a beacon of freedom to China. It could dare China to shut them out.
 So let me urge all the NBA executives and athletes who claim to care about 
"social justice": Don't just speak out when the stakes are low for you 
personally, or when the cause is popular among your friends. Speak out now, 
when the stakes are deadly high for millions of Hong Kongers and more than a 
billion Chinese—including many of your fans.
 LeBron James, you tweeted not long ago that "Injustice anywhere is a threat 
to justice everywhere." Live out that principle consistently. There are a 
million Uighurs in concentration camps yearning to hear a champion who speaks 
out on their behalf—particularly because the NBA runs an elite training 
facility in proximity to those camps.
 Steve Kerr, you've never held back on expressing your opinion about our 
president. That's fine. That's your right as an American. But how about some 
outrage for the authoritarian regime in Beijing?
 Joe Tsai, you were born in Taiwan. Your fellow Taiwanese live in constant 
fear of meddling, attack, and subjugation by the mainland. Are they 
separatists, for wanting to maintain their way of life? Speak out proudly on 
behalf of your homeland about the true nature of the government in Beijing.
 I realize this is a hard thing to ask any person. No doubt this is a harder 
path than the path many in the NBA is traveling at present. It would require 
sacrifice, and it would certainly invite the wrath of the Chinese Communist 
Party. But if the league used its unique leverage for freedom, millions of 
ordinary Chinese would surely notice, despite an army of Chinese Communist 
censors arrayed against them.
 The NBA didn't pick this fight. It probably prefers to avoid this fight. But 
the Chinese Communist Party wants this fight. So the choice isn't to fight or 
not, it's to win or lose.
 Perhaps alone among American businesses, the NBA has a shot to win against 
Beijing. In any fight against communists, there can be only one strategy, one 
policy: Victory.
   ### 
   Senator Cotton was honorably discharged from the U.S. Army.
 Images do not imply endorsement by the Department of Defense or any service 
branch.
 PO Box 7504
 Little Rock, AR 72217-7504 
   
PAID FOR BY COTTON FOR SENATE 
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