higgsboson {L_WROTE}:
That's not true; as an American I have more rights than most - but only while I'm in America.
So, are only American Citizens protected by American law and the U.S. Constitution within the United states? I don't think so - I think any person inside the U.S. , of any nationality, can appeal to protection under the constitution.
higgsboson {L_WROTE}:
In China, I don't expect to have the same right as a Chinese person. For example, I don't expect the right to break some silly ass zoning law in the name of making a profit. But if I was Chinese I'd expect that right. Especially if the only people I was bothering were (by and large) environmentally minded expats.
Why do you characterise zoning laws as 'silly assed'? Have you considered the necessities of town planning considerations?
You are entitled to a great many rights here in Hong Kong, even if you do not consider yourself to have any significant commitment to the betterment of the place. Just because you may, it seems, consider yourself to be an 'expat' who is living away from home - please don't consider that any-and-all other non-Chinese feel the same way about their residence here in Hong kong. Many have spent their whole lives here. This is their home. They have raised their families here and they have just as strongly a vested interest in the strength of its civil society and the health of its environment as does someone who can trace their lineage here back ten generations.
higgsboson {L_WROTE}:
I can sympathize with whoever owns this land. Maybe it was an investment he now wants to cash in on.
I see your point here. If I was a land owner (or as close as one could be said to come to that as is possible in HK) I would feel quite offended if others told me I could not do with my land, within the restrictions of local law, as I pleased. Of course there are many cases in many countries throughout the world where landowners rights were overridden by the rights of the common wheel - as in the common practice of expropriation of private land for the building of public facilities or for the creation of parks.
There are other ways to protect land that do not involve the violation of private property rights, specifically the creation of Land Trusts, whereby a no-profit organisation raises money to purchase private land and place it in a protected legal state or 'trust'
http://www.possibility.com/LandTrust/
It's because of this consideration that I feel that our primary focus should be upon the protection of the stream and not in trying to prevent the building of houses all together. Don't get me wrong, I would very much like for the valley to be preserved as an agricultural area and certain parts, in their natural state.