Miscellaneous News

FairAndUnbiased

Brigadier
Registered Member
So he's unhappy with China today because 40 years ago it was poor despite being advertised as socialist.
Does he hold any other country to this standard? South Korea was as poor as China 50 years ago. How about India today compared to how it advertises itself?

The reasons why China was poor was the same reason Hong Kong wasn't, western imperialism. He wasn't looking for idealism, he was a champagne socialist who didn't want to get out of his comfort zone.

Now he's just a stubborn old man who refuses to admit he was wrong.
By his logic, if he went to the city with the highest GDP, in the country with the highest living standards in the world - NYC, USA, he should find 0 homeless people or poor people, otherwise liberal democracy is a sham. Does he wanna take this bet?

"During the stone age, nobody was homeless, yet a modern system cannot deliver what even stone age tribes could?"
 

Strangelove

Colonel
Registered Member
The overreaction is indicative of how Aust beef exports still rely on the China market... aussies are starting to realize that cow-worshipping JaiHindistan and poverty-stricken Japan can't replace China.


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

GT Voice: Australia’s overreaction to rumor on imports reflects guilty conscience

By Global Times Published: Aug 17, 2022 08:45 PM

An online rumor about an impending Chinese ban on agricultural imports, particularly meat, from Australia and New Zealand due to concerns about foot and mouth disease posted by a Chinese social media account has sparked widespread concerns in Australia - a clear reflection of Australia's guilty conscience over its mistake in undermining China-Australia ties.

The rumor, which first surfaced late Sunday, attracted lots of attention from Australian media outlets as Australian beef exporters are reportedly on high alert. Even Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Tuesday that China had no basis for using foot and mouth disease to suspend beef imports.

Judging from the information from all sides, there is a clear overreaction to a mere market rumor from the Australian side. Chinese customs authorities haven't issued any formal notification. Shipments of meat from both Australia and New Zealand are currently being cleared as normal. Even the Chinese WeChat account that posted the rumor said on Monday that the customs clearance for Australian farm goods, including meat and dairy, was back to normal.

Indeed, the source of the rumor itself is an unofficial report and has never been verified by any Chinese official. To a certain extent, the irrational attention and hype over mere hearsay is reflective of the lingering market anxiety about China-Australia economic and trade relationship, which has been under the shadow of the political tension between the two countries for some time.

With China-Australia relations recently showing certain positive signs of thawing, bilateral economic and trade ties are at a sensitive stage. At this juncture, while market uncertainties and concerns are understandable, relevant business communities and market players are advised to wait for official information or seek confirmation from official sources instead of being easily swayed by unreliable rumors to avoid unnecessary market panic.

It should be noted that Albanese on Tuesday also took the opportunity to call on China to withdraw existing trade restrictions on Australian commodities, including wine, coal and barley. While it may reflect Australia's eagerness to see the so-called trade restrictions lifted by China, from another perspective it also indicates the lack of political willingness to address fundamental issues impacting China-Australia economic and trade relations. Since taking office, Albanese has been setting the preconditions for improved bilateral relations, saying the so-called Chinese economic sanctions must be lifted.

Yet, the difficulties facing the current China-Australia economic and trade relations are the result of political tensions. It is Australia's former Morrison administration that has joined the US-led containment campaign against China and taken the initiative to adopt policies showing its hostility toward China. Given Canberra's diplomatic strategy that framed China as a hostile target, how can bilateral economic relations remain smooth and unaffected?

This is also why the market has been so easily stirred up by a rumor about trade ban this time. The root cause lies in politics, not economics. In fact, it is the complementary nature of the two economies as well as their trade exchanges over the years that have still steered bilateral trade from being derailed despite the freeze in bilateral political relations.

But if Australia doesn't change its China policy starting from political and diplomatic levels, anxieties and concerns will continue to haunt the market.

We hope the Australian side can take concrete actions to improve bilateral relations, instead of trying to shirk responsibility and put pressure on China, which is not the right way for any improvement in bilateral trade ties.
 

tygyg1111

Major
Registered Member
What losing the mandate of heaven looks like:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

More than two decades of well below average rainfall have left the river - the lifeblood of the western US - at critical levels, as human-caused climate change worsens the natural drought cycle.

Despite years of warnings and a deadline imposed by Washington, states that depend on the river have not managed to agree on a plan to cut their usage, and on Tuesday, the federal government said it was stepping in.

"In order to avoid a catastrophic collapse of the Colorado River System and a future of uncertainty and conflict, water use in the Basin must be reduced," said Tanya Trujillo, assistant secretary for water and science at the US Interior Department.

Arizona's allocation from the river will fall by 21 percent in 2023, while Nevada will get 8 percent less. Mexico's allotment will drop by 7 percent.

In other news:
1660791670960.png
 

solarz

Brigadier

The U.S. accused a Chinese MIT professor of spying. Now cleared, he helped discover what may be the ‘best semiconductor material ever found’​


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Is incredible that this guy still want to keep contributing after being treated like a second class citizen in the U.S.

Nobody make discoveries on their own. Advanced scientific research needs a highly talented team, and discoveries benefit everyone. Science has no borders.
 

NiuBiDaRen

Brigadier
Registered Member
I think China should still watch out when reciprocating investment to EU though. The nations friendlier to China should get bulk of the investments.
- Serbia
- Hungary
- Ireland
- Sweden (complicated)
- Italy
- Spain
- Greece
- Portugal
- Poland (complicated, plus low quality noobs)
- Croatia

This is how you upset the balance of EU. F*** the Northwestern European economic dominance.
 

FriedButter

Brigadier
Registered Member
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Savings from unplugging fridge not worth food poisoning – UK health authorities​

Turning the refrigerator off to save on electric bills “creates the risk of infection in food,” the UK Health Security Agency warned budget-conscious Brits on Wednesday as energy bills soar. Food poisoning is the result, with sudden-onset stomach cramps, diarrhea, and vomiting that can be potentially life-threatening in the elderly or infirm.

The man-made threat of food poisoning adds to the already formidable “triple threat” that Health Secretary Steve Barclay sees looming on the horizon: the soaring cost of living, another wave of Covid-19 cases, and the return of the flu, which vanished completely last year due to the use of hand sanitizer and masks, according to Public Health England.

While people shouldn’t scrimp on refrigeration, nor should they attempt to save money by turning off their heaters during winter, Health Security Agency chief Dame Jenny Harries warned, noting that having sufficient heat “is an essential part of their health.” People should heat their homes to at least 18 degrees Celsius in winter and make up the difference in warm clothing if necessary

Upcoming Winter may be beneficial. Just leave the food outside to freeze into a popsicle. Saves money on electricity which will go into heating to prevent you from becoming a human popsicle.
 
Top