This week, we saw the release of the official government “Report on the Recent Community and Political Situation in Hong Kong.” It concluded: "It is the common aspiration of the Central Authorities [in Beijing], the [Hong Kong Special... They are not looking for someone else to bring into implementation those promises. They are saying “we are the generation which has grown up after the handover in 1997.” Some of them were only a few years old, but they are looking to a future and they say, “the future belongs to us. Things have not been going very well, democracy has been put off again and again, and we are now going to fight for our future and our own way.” So, for me, it is a very exciting thing, the old generation going out and the new generation coming in with a very strong sense of a Hong Kong identity, with a sense that Hong Kong has core values, which need to be preserved so that they can have the kind of future they want in that community. And I see them in the Umbrella Movement itself trying to practice group discussion, taking into account different points of view, informal discussions, and reaching decisions. Their decisions are not always correct and sometimes they make mistakes, but I see the resilience in them when they can look at their mistakes, call it a mistake, and say “let’s move on” from that point. So after the Occupy part of the Umbrella Movement, they are now thinking about going into the community to deepen the movement, to engage the community, and to see how they can find a new kind of organization which would bring Hong Kong to the next stage of the fight for democracy. What triggered it off was the NPC Standing Committee’s decision on the 31st of August to say that Hong Kong could have one-person, one-vote for the election of the chief executive, but that has to be under China’s control, and the nomination committee, which would be dominated by Beijing loyalists, would get to choose the candidates. I don’t think that is real universal suffrage, I think that the current generation doesn’t buy this, and that they prefer not to have phony democracy, and I think they’re right. But they are on a very difficult journey, and I think that everyone should pay attention and give them the kind of concern that they deserve.