-
If you have the privilege to choose
what you eat and who you buy it from,
-
your dollars are political capital.
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Do you know who your choices
are supporting?
-
Small businesses
or meat packing plants?
-
Local producers or factory farmers?
-
People in Hong Kong are thinking about
the political power of their food
-
and their banding together
around one urgent cause.
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PROTEST FOOD
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(Laurel) What are you making now?
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(Mandy) A Japanese cheese omelet.
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We need eggs, sweet corn, and cheese.
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So add oil in first.
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(Laurel) Wow, that's a lot of oil.
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(Mandy) Yes, but don't worry.
It won't be oily afterward.
-
(Laurel) Oh, so you've got to roll it.
-
(Mandy) Yes.
-
(Laurel) Amber Foods
is a little hole-in-the-wall restaurant
-
that opened on an infamous day
-
in the history of Hong Kong's
pro-democracy movement--
-
The anniversary of
the first big police crackdown.
-
- Then we add another layer.
- It really smells good.
-
Yes.
-
Hot!
-
- Mmmm.
- Okay?
-
It's really good!
-
It's very creamy like a--
-
It's kind of sweet--
Did you put sugar in there?
-
- Yes.
- Okay.
-
It's very light and airy,
-
and the cheese adds a nice bit of umami.
-
Everyone who works here is a protester,
-
including Mandy.
-
She's a chef-in-training
and didn't even know how to cook
-
before she started here.
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(Mandy) My family and I have
different political views
-
because of the democracy movement.
-
We don't have a good relationship,
and I wouldn't ask them for money.
-
Sometimes I'd go home after
a day [of protesting] on the streets,
-
[my dad would] keep yelling at me,
so I'd just hide in my room.
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(Laurel) In Hong Kong,
yellow is the chosen color
-
of the pro-democracy movement.
-
Last year, protesters hoisted
yellow umbrellas
-
and don yellow hard hats
-
to protect themselves
against pepper spray and tear gas shells.
-
Yellow has now become shorthand
-
for whether an individual or
establishment supports the protests.
-
Blue stands for the other side.
-
The police who crackdown
-
and of course, China,
-
which passed
a National Security Law this year (2020)
-
that basically criminalized dissent.
-
Between Covid-19
and the sweeping new law,
-
street protests have become scarce.
-
(Lauren) The drink name in English
is "Stand With Hong Kong"
-
but ka you
literally means "add oil",
-
but in Cantonese, it's sort of this cheer
that is very commonly heard
-
and throughout the protest
it's become a rallying cry.
-
By having a drink called that,
-
they're giving people the excuse
to actually say it multiple times a day.
-
Amber Foods
isn't the only protest restaurant.
-
It's part of the so-called
The Yellow Economic Circle,
-
a network of businesses that consider
every bite and every dollar spent
-
an opportunity to resist.
-
Growing the yellow economy
is all about linking up
-
yellow customers with yellow shops.
-
That's where Matt Lau steps in.
-
The pickeat.hk app
lets customers order
-
from yellow restaurants
in other districts of the city.
-
Lau delivers for free.
-
(Lau) Step one is to log on
to this website
-
to choose and order your food.
-
Then, you'll have to decide
the pick-up spot.
-
Who are your customers?
-
Surprisingly, they're mostly
40 to 50 years old.
-
(Laurel) Lau's business
is his form of protest
-
and he's betting that
other Hong Kongers will help it grow.
-
But for now, his service
is helping yellow restaurants
-
more than his own bottom line.
-
(Lau) In my opinion,
-
the neutral [restaurants]
are siding with the government.
-
The reason is that those shops
would like to have revenue
-
from both political sides.
-
Even though I'm losing money,
I'm willing to help.
-
I believe there are still voices
that call me stupid or dumb.
-
On the contrary, I think I'm being smart.
-
It's because I'm smart
that I want to help others.
-
Hello!
-
(Laurel) Chinese government would prefer
businesses care about profits.
-
The city is in a historic recession
-
and China has accused yellow businesses
of trying to quote, "kidnap its economy."
-
But Hong Kong relies on China
for its food.
-
90% of Hong Kong's food is imported
-
and most of that comes from the mainland.
-
Less than 5% of the territory
is devoted to farming.
-
One of the few farms
is run by Wong Yu Wing.
-
(Wong) Do you want to pick
some together just a little?
-
(Laurel) Sure.
-
(Wong) So just use your hands
to snap it like this.
-
You see the big ones,
just snap it like this.
-
Yes, should be enough for a meal.
-
(Laurel) Demand for Wong's organic produce
-
has gone through the roof
since the protests
-
and a pandemic that's raised
the price of food from China.
-
Why are young people saying,
-
"If you want to support Hong Kong,
then support this farm?"
-
Primarily because,
deep down in their hearts,
-
Hong Kongers view Hong Kong
and mainland China
-
as two distinct entities.
-
If your fresh water and food
are being controlled,
-
how many days can you last?
-
(Laurel) Tours from the city
even come help out on Saturdays
-
when the other workers get a day off.
-
Pretty clever having your paying customers
do your weeding for you, I must say.
-
The water is boiling.
-
Let me put the vegetables in.
-
The freshest taste.
-
When we eat vegetables here are the farm,
-
we just pick them straight from the fields
and try them here.
-
We don't put salt and oil on them,
so they're very light.
-
They're ready after
about two to three minutes.
-
(Laurel) Though his small organic farm
-
may seem removed
from the city and its problems,
-
to him it's all connected.
-
(Laurel) Do you think Hong Kong
is a good environment now?
-
(Wong) Now it's like a messy farm
full of weeds and infestation.
-
You need to use so much effort
to take care of it
-
and slowly sort everything out.
-
You have to rectify it,
in order to continue producing,
-
in order to have
a sustainable agricultural industry.