bladerunner
Banned Idiot
Whats Obama's "Pointman" in China ambassador Gary Locke achieved?
Whats Obama's "Pointman" in China ambassador Gary Locke achieved?
Gary Faye Locke (born January 21, 1950) is an American politician and the current United States Ambassador to China.
Locke was the 21st Governor of Washington, serving from 1997 to 2005. He was the first governor of a state in the Continental United States of Asian descent, and is the only Chinese American ever to serve as a governor.He was then appointed by President Barack Obama as United States Secretary of Commerce which he served as until August 1, 2011, when President Obama appointed Locke Ambassador to China.
Experience: King County deputy prosecutor, 1976-80; Washington state lawmaker, 1982-93; King County executive, 1994-97; Washington state governor, 1997-2005; partner, Davis Wright Tremaine law firm, 2005-2009; secretary of commerce, 2009-present
Education: Bachelor's degree, Yale University, 1972; law degree, Boston University, 1975
Family: Wife, Mona Lee Locke; three children
Timeline
1982: Elected to state House from Seattle's 37th District; for five years, chaired appropriations committee, a job that involves writing and negotiating state budget
1993: Elected King County executive, defeating incumbent Tim Hill; cut budget, expanded transit services, developed nationally acclaimed growth-management plan
1996: Elected governor, defeating Republican Ellen Craswell and becoming nation's first Chinese-American governor
1998: Leads opposition to voter-approved Initiative 200, which prohibited race-based preferences in state hiring, contracting and college admissions; opposes voter-approved Referendum 49, which cut vehicle taxes and pumped $2.4 billion into road construction by shifting money out of general fund
2000: Voters approve two ballot initiatives, to boost teacher salaries and reduce class sizes by hiring more teachers; pushes through Legislature an economic-development package for rural communities; re-elected to second term by defeating Republican John Carlson
2001: Legislature and Locke fail to pass transportation plan; Boeing announces headquarters will move to Chicago, prompting criticism that the governor failed to heed business concerns; creates Washington Competitiveness Council to keep companies
2002: Voters reject Referendum 51, a $7.8 billion roads package, prompting criticism that Locke showed no leadership by pushing for referendum to be placed on ballot.
2003: Delivers Democratic response to President Bush's State of the Union address; favors cuts over tax increases to deal with projected $2.6 billion budget deficit; proposes $3 billion incentive package to Boeing for 7E7 Dreamliner program
2005: Becomes partner in Davis Wright Tremaine law firm in Seattle
2006: Works to bring Chinese President Hu Jintao to Seattle to meet with state and business leaders
2008: Runs leg of Olympic torch relay in China before Beijing Olympics
2009: Nominated by President Obama to lead Commerce Department (sworn in March 26)
2011: Nominated by Obama for ambassadorship to China
On February 25, 2009, Locke was announced as President Barack Obama's choice for Secretary of Commerce. His nomination was confirmed by the United States Senate by unanimous consent on March 24, 2009. Locke was sworn in March 26, 2009, by District judge Richard A. Jones. He was sworn in by President Obama on May 1, 2009. He is the first Chinese American appointed as Secretary of Commerce, and one of three Asian Americans in Obama's cabinet, joining Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Veteran Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki, the most of any administration. Politico has reported Locke has been a popular cabinet member among both businesses and the executive branch. A declaration of assets made in March 2011 showed Locke to be the sixth-richest official in the US executive branch.
Following the resignation of Jon Huntsman, Jr., Locke was nominated by President Obama to serve as U.S. Ambassador to the People's Republic of China. The Senate confirmed him by unanimous consent on July 27, 2011. On August 1, 2011, Locke resigned as Commerce Secretary and took up his new post. A photo of Locke carrying his own backpack and ordering his own coffee at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport went viral on the Sina Weibo social network.
At his first news conference after arrival in Beijing, Locke pledged to promote bilateral cooperation and understanding between the two countries.
Early in Locke's ambassadorship, Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng escaped from house arrest and sought refuge in the US Embassy in Beijing in April 2012. On May 2, China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs demanded an apology from the US for its role in the Chen incident. In an editorial on May 4, Beijing Daily questioned Locke's motives by taking in Chen, and described Chen as "a tool and a pawn for American politicians to blacken China
Uh...I do not believe in the Presidential portion of this race so far that Romney has held a candle to the negativity coming from the Obama camp. It's like that is all they have...and in many ways, due to the failed policies of Obama with respect to the economy...it is.I hate negative campaigning and Romney is doing a lot of that. So my view on him is getting worse by the day.
And as for Gary Locke is being the ambassador to China a step up for him than being the commerce secretary ?
IMO Gary Locke was moved out from the Commerce Secretary job because any commerce deal with China that did not have 100% favor for the US was going to be spun as Gary Locke looking out for China's interests and not the US. Look at how Obama announced a few months back that he was going to lessen some restrictions of high tech sales to foreign countries. The Republicans already are attacking him on that. If Gary Locke was still Commerce Secretary, we would've saw him portrayed as an agent for China to be blamed on Obama of course. Look at how former Senator Anthony Weiner's wife who works for Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is being portrayed as a secret Muslim terrorist. I mentioned Matt Fong earlier. After he lost to Barbara Boxer, Bush appointed him to a position outside the White House. I believe it was a position in the Defense Department because Fong was an Air Force veteran. The position still had to go under scrutiny of Congress where a single Republican brought up whether he could be trusted because he was Chinese. No Democrat charged racism because Fong was a Republican and Bush didn't offer any resistance and withdrew Fong's name from the position.
On another note, I just saw on CNN the anti-abortion faction claims that gender selection for babies in some Asian cultures is happening in the US and is for some reason being associated with the Akin "legitimate rape" scandal. I guess that's called a distraction. BTW supposedly male/female birth ratio among Asian-Americans are within normal. Just shows some people will make up crap just so their candidate wins the Presidential election. And watch the Democrats not call it an outright lie but spin it so it doesn't offend the people ignorant enough to want to believe it.
This is a very slow thread for something in principle pretty important. But the talks of and about the candidates seem to avoid important matters. That led me to consider the history of Western superpowers.
In their way the Roman Empire and the Mongol Empire were superpowers but very different from the modern superpowers. I define them in this way: an adequate army, a world wide reaching armed ( merchant ) navy and strong finances to pay for them. There have been six, starting with Spain in the 16th century.
Spain got enough silver out of the New World by 1525 to pay for a strong army. It intervened effectively in Italy and developed its tercios to be the best infantry of Europe. Its sea power was first needed to defend its silver against pirates and, mostly galleys, to fight Turkey. It was strong enough in the Pacific to set up the Philippines colony, named after the king, from Mexico.
Its finances were always a mess and it depended on the Fuggers to finance its operations. Grandees connected with the colonial operations got themselves some ( much? ) of the silver but others could only try to "keep up with the Jones's" by more brutally exploiting their peasants. The average Spaniard got poorer which of course helped recruitment for the army, the navy and the colonies.
Spain nearly succeeded in defeating the Dutch rebellion when the army mutinied in 1576 and nearly the whole of the Dutch possessions were lost. Of course much was won back in succeeding years but Spain had ceased to be a superpower after a mere half century. But it reached its largest extend after 1576 when the Duke of Alba occupied Portugal in 1580 for the Spanish king and so extended his reach also to Brazil and Angola and the Portuguese possessions in the Indian Ocean
The United Provinces were the next superpower. After the twelve year truce with Spain ( 1609-1621 ) it was able to drive the Spanish from roughly the area that is now The Netherlands ( roughly, a few years ago I lived in a village that in the 17th and 18th century had been ruled partly from The Hague, partly from Brussels ). It set up its colony in what is now Indonesia, occupying only a tiny part of the area but making huge profits from the trade in spices and from a lot of trade between Asian countries from which traditional shipping was excluded by the use of armed force. The Netherlands also developed a huge merchant fleet for use in European waters, using little violence, but by using more efficient ships and trading methods. This made it possible to maintain and man a navy that was able, in 1673, to defeat the combined English-French fleet.
In 1689 the town council of Amsterdam concluded that the time of Dutch superiority was over, after less than seventy years. During that Dutch "Golden Century" the ordinary people were less well fed and on average shorter than in the century before.
Then during about 100 years there was no superpower, until about 1790. England and France were balancing each other until after the French Revolution the French navy was disorganized (initially ), while RN got a lot more resources.
Marx and Engels developed their vision of a better future by looking at the miserable condition of working people in superpower Great Britain.
It had lost its superpower status when it had to have its part in WWI financed by the US.
Some thirty years later the US was, quite clearly, the superpower. ( According to my definition the USSR and France never were a superpower ). After the war against Viet Nam the US were formally financially exhausted, but President Nixon moved the world from the indirect gold standard to the dollar standard ( He was one of the best presidents the US ever had. A pity about Watergate ). Now that the financial underpinning of US power has been destroyed by incompetence after Nixon there is not really a superpower in the world.
Btw the poor got poorer and the middle class not richer after Nixon.
Will China be the next superpower? It seems likely to me that there will be too many medium sized powers to have room for a "superpower", especially if there is no large war to let one country grow to that position. That were for Spain the wars in Italy, for the Dutch the eighty years war, for the British the war against revolutionary France, for the US WWII. I read a few years ago that now only two countries really believe in the efficacy of war, the US and Israel. So if the US cannot intervene as easily anywhere in the world anymore and if we accept the principle of the Westphalian Peace Treaties or something like it we can safely reduce armament spending and rebuild the economy in many countries.
Managing the retreat of the US from superpower to great power and cooperating with other countries to do that safely is surely vastly more important than Mr Akin and his bizarre pronouncements. Are the candidates thinking? Are they afraid to talk about important matters?