A book review of the 2019 Hong Kong riots – exposing a US engineered “color revolution.” Here’s a review of the book, “The Other Side of the Story: A Secret War in Hong Kong,” by Nury Vittachi, from a Western professor also living in Hong Kong, who was present during that time.
The professor, Michael Edesess, also describes his own experience living in Hong Kong during that time:
https://www.advisorperspectives.com/articles/2022/01/11/the-other-side-of-the-story-in-hong-kong
The professor’s bio: “Economist and mathematician Michael Edesess is adjunct associate professor and visiting faculty at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, managing partner and special advisor at M1K LLC, and a research associate of the Edhec-Risk Institute.” He also gives his own personal analysis and views of the riots from a Western perspective.
Here’s a link to the book itself, “The Other Side of the Story: A Secret War in Hong Kong,” by Nury Vittachi:
Nury Vittachi is a Sri Lankan journalist living in Hong Kong, and he goes day by day through the 2019 protests, the tactics used by the protesters and the police, the violence the protesting rioters used, how it eventually came to light that they were trained, manipulated, and funded by the United States, and how the Hong Kong and Beijing governments eventually defeated them. It’s an excellent detailed account of a US engineered “color revolution” and the whole process of how it works and a case example of how it was finally stopped, but still caused substantial damage both politically and physically. Everything he describes in the book is consistent with what my friends from Hong Kong have told me, and consistent with what happened in the US engineered “color revolution” against Nicaragua in 2018 and other US engineered “color revolutions” before and since.
