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American agents paid millions for the development and daily maintenance of hi-tech tools to enable protesters to evade detection. But the alliance was unstable, sometimes got things farcically wrong, and eventually spun out of control, with radicals planning a deadly campaign involving terrorist-grade explosives, including chlorine bombs.

It tells how my network and I, mostly people who have been critical of China for decades, gradually realised that American agents were using us and other Hong Kong people for their own ends. The uprising in Hong Kong in was widely reported as a leaderless, spontaneous uprising against a proposed law to deport dissidents to mainland China.

What happened was deeply unfair to both honest, peaceful protesters, and to people who favoured a positive relationship with mainland China. Activists started working with professional revolution consultants in and the BBC even did a live report from one of their Oslo meetings in late , where they admitted the relationship had been going for nearly two years.

All three groups specialize in providing practical tools and strategies for using street protests to over-turn elected or non-elected governments. Training materials were issued for a thousand Hong Kong people, the revolution consultants said. One major focus was branding.

Readers Digest July features a mix of articles and stories that explore themes ranging from personal health, the impact of media, the consequences of.

This would guarantee that media coverage would be biased towards the pro-independence lobby, despite the fact that their campaign went directly against the wishes of the Hong Kong people. The website of the Serbian revolution consultants provided links to the works of Kong Tsung-gan above , who gave numerous quotes to the international media claiming to be a local Hong Kong born voice—but who was eventually exposed as American activist Brian P.

The report first appeared in my column in the Standard, a Hong Kong daily newspaper, in December of At the time, Kern's main promoter, a website called the Hong Kong Free Press, demanded the information be removed from the Internet and threatened to sue the newspaper for revealing it. The main sources of the information in the new book were Hong Kong parents, especially mothers.

I received up to a thousand messages a day from local adults, fed up that only radicalized youngsters and angry politicians were ever quoted by the mainstream media. Journalists simply ignored the vast majority of the Hong Kong community, which is largely apolitical: fewer than half of all adults in the city vote. After the peaceful march on June 9 was turned violent by a group of black-clad agitators, parents attended the protests and kept detailed records.