The first thing they need to do is accept that those risks exist and then draw the consequences. It's not politically or economically realistic to think that all these business connections are just going to go away. That's not going to happen. But it should be more apparent to business leaders and chambers of commerce, who have been very bad about this, to make it clear that what's happening in Hong Kong now is a real signal of problems ahead if it doesn't change.
I'm not saying this should necessarily be done in public, but this is what every senior official of a government or a corporation or an investment firm or a bank should be telling people in China: If you keep doing what you're doing, this will increase the risk for us. It will make it more and more difficult for us to have the kind of economic relationships that we've had in the past.
That is, I think, the reality. It's the thing that people don't want to talk about but need to talk about.