ABSTRACT

This conclusion presents some closing thoughts on the key concepts discussed in the preceding chapters of this book. The book shows that the Chinese Communist Party appreciated the commercial calm of the Hong Kong during the first half of the 1950s, and pursued an anti-capitalist purge policy on home soil at the same time. It suggests that the colonial anatomy maintained equal business opportunity existed for communists and Kuomintang (KMT) figures if they abided by the laws of the colony. The book presents the case of Leung Tong as an example of how the denial of ordinary compensation claims formed part of a ruse to allocate guilt as a non-political criminality of bystanders and communists and to compensate big KMT losses in the riot opaquely. It examines the anatomies of Chinese communist, bourgeois Chinese and colonial nationalism each made a structural conclusion about the relationship of orthodox thinking within its tradition and the proper distribution of modernity’s advantages.