Leung's job is to protect our freedom to wave any flag
Keane Shum is proud of city's role in the Chinese experiment in freedom
It is understandable that the population of seven million in Hong Kong share different opinions on the government," Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying said last Thursday.
"But, in any case, they do not need to wave the colonial flag to vent their frustrations."
When I was in university a decade ago, on the other side of the world, I used to hang up a Hong Kong flag in my dorm room or outside my window.
It was a balm to homesickness, its five stars evoking the yearning they were originally intended to, when Zeng Liansong first aligned them in 1949 on his winning design for the flag of the People's Republic of China.
It was also, as flags are, a symbol of pride: I was proud of the incredible city I called home, and proud to represent it at an esteemed institution of higher learning in the United States.
As a history major who would carry Edward Said's under my arm across campus, I was also proud of my flag for one more reason: there was no Union Jack.