On the one hand, there is indeed tension. As I've mentioned, mainland China uses propaganda to raise nationalism in China, and they need opponents to raise the nationalism of the Chinese people. They treat everyone who points a finger toward the Chinese people as their opponents, and Hong Kong citizens are one of them.
On the other hand, Hong Kong citizens suffered from the influx of Chinese visitors who bought goods daily in their community. The amount of visitors is huge. Basically, Hong Kong cities cannot afford that number of people. It interrupts the daily life of the people, and people are very annoyed about this issue.
So there is indeed tension, but it also reflects why Hong Kong is important to China or to the world. Under one country, two systems, we still have the rule of law and we still have established systems under which we can identify which goods are authentic and which goods are fake. This is why people come to Hong Kong, because in China they cannot recognize which one is fake or which one is authentic. This is unique to Hong Kong. They also reversed some uniqueness toward...China from Hong Kong. That's one of the things we have to preserve in the future and not see deteriorated by intervention from China.