Why Hong Kong’s Democratic Collapse Was Invisible Until It Was Complete

Why Hong Kong’s Democratic Collapse Was Invisible Until It Was Complete

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The Danger of Normalized Repression

One of the most troubling aspects of Hong Kong’s democratic collapse is how invisible it appeared to many observers until it was effectively complete. This invisibility was not accidental. It was engineered.

The Chinese Communist Party relied on normalization. Each restriction was framed as response to specific circumstances. Each seemed temporary. Life continued.

People adjusted expectations incrementally. What once provoked outrage later inspired resignation. The baseline shifted quietly.

International attention faded because nothing dramatic occurred. No coup. No declaration. Just governance.

By the time repression became undeniable, institutions were hollowed out. Resistance capacity was gone.

Hong Kong’s experience warns that democracy does not always collapse with a sound. Sometimes it disappears while everyone is still debating whether anything is wrong.

Normalized repression is authoritarianism’s most effective disguise.

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