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FriedButter

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Israelis wear yellow stars at UN​

Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations (UN), Gilad Erdan, has said that he and his team will wear yellow stars at Security Council sessions until it issues a full condemnation of the “atrocities” Hamas committed on October 7, as he accused the international body of inaction over the attack on the Jewish state.

“Some of you have learned nothing in the past 80 years,” Erdan said in an impassioned speech to the council on Monday, while wearing a yellow star bearing the words ‘never again.’

“So I will remind you,” he continued. “From this day on, each time you look at me you will remember what staying silent in the face of evil means. Just like my grandparents, and the grandparents of millions of Jews, from now on my team and I will wear yellow stars.”

Erdan added: “We will wear this star until you wake up and condemn the atrocities of Hamas.”

The 15-member council has yet to adopt a single resolution amid the renewed conflict between Israel and the Palestinian militant group.

In several episodes throughout history, Jewish people have been ordered to wear a yellow star or badge to identify them as a religious or ethnic outsider - including by Nazi Germany during World War II, up to and throughout the Holocaust.

“Instead of shouting ‘Sieg Heil,’ these radical Nazi Islamists scream, ‘Death to Israel! Death to America! Death to England!’” Erdan said, adding that Israel was attacked by “Hamas Nazis” on October 7. Israeli officials say that 1,400 people, most of whom were civilians, died in the assault.

Last week, Erdan called for the resignation of UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres following a statement he made in which he said that the Hamas incursion into Israel “did not happen in a vacuum” and that the retaliation launched by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government had included “clear violations of international humanitarian law.”

Israel has unleashed an unprecedented bombardment of Gaza in response to the Hamas attack several weeks ago. On Monday, Gaza’s health ministry said that the death toll in the besieged coastal enclave has surpassed 8,300.

Erdan’s pledge to wear the yellow star at UN sessions was swiftly condemned by Yad Vashem, Israel’s official memorial to victims of the Holocaust, whose director Dani Dayan wrote on social media that it “dishonors both the victims of the Holocaust and the State of Israel.”

“The yellow patch symbolizes the helplessness of the Jewish people and being at the mercy of others,”
Dayan wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “Today we have an independent country and a strong army.”
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About as effective as the US strategy to force the global south against Russia. You are not going to convince anyone outside of your group by trying to guilt trip them. More likely going to create more negative opinion against you.
 

coolgod

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Russia’s Putin, Hong Kong’s Lee Almost Certain to be Absent from APEC Summit​


State Department —
The United States has invited all members of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) to participate in upcoming leaders’ meetings in California, but “appropriate representation” for certain leaders who are under U.S. sanctions is being worked out, according to a senior State Department official.
Murray said the Biden administration will abide by U.S. “laws and regulations” when asked if the U.S. is inviting Putin and Lee to attend APEC leaders’ meetings.

The U.S. official on APEC also said Washington and Beijing are “working towards” a face-to-face meeting between Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the margins of APEC, but details are still being worked on.

Dear President Xi, please don't visit SF.
 

coolgod

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Paul Chan to attend APEC summit as John Lee to be absent due to 'scheduling issues'​

The SAR government announced Tuesday evening that Financial Secretary Paul Chan Mo-po would attend the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Economic Leaders' Meeting - which will be held in San Francisco, United States - on behalf of the Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu.

The government said Hong Kong has received the invitation from the host to attend the summit from November 15 to 17, according to convention. As Lee would not be able to participate in the meeting "due to scheduling issues," the government had replied that Chan would represent Hong Kong at the meeting in person.
The announcement came after the U.S. State Department senior official for APEC Matt Murray revealed on Monday that the States is working out to make sure certain leaders who are under U.S. sanctions - including John Lee and Russian President Vladimir Putin - would have “appropriate representation” to attend the summit in San Francisco.
:(
 

horse

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This opinion piece published on Asian Nikkei somewhat correlates to what @AssassinsMace posited with his posts on why America and the west are in desperate mode to thwart China's burgeoning A.I. @AssassinsMace take a read of this piece.

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OPINION
Too late now for U.S. to hold back China in global AI race
Government and public embrace smart tech for efficiency and reduced corruption


Zhou Xin
October 24, 2023 05:00 JST

Baidu staff promote AI chatbot Ernie Bot at the Wave Summit in Beijing in August: More major tech companies in China than in the U.S. are offering their own advanced chatbots. © AP
Zhou Xin is senior vice president for public affairs at artificial intelligence-driven molecular imaging company Evomics Medical in Shanghai and executive chief editor of AI community platform The Yuan.

Believing that artificial intelligence could make China a greater strategic threat, the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden has set its sights on holding back its rival's AI development.

Recent measures have included restricting U.S. investors from putting money into Chinese AI companies, downgrading scholarly exchanges and cutting off supplies of specialized computer chips. Officials are also discussing limiting access by Chinese companies to U.S. cloud computing services that might provide indirect access to AI technologies.

Washington is working to extend its "great firewall" against the Chinese AI threat to allies such as Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, which previously focused more on doing business with Beijing than on geopolitics. Indeed, at their three-way summit with Biden at Camp David in August, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol affirmed they would stand with Washington.

Can Washington really stop Chinese AI development? This is highly doubtful. China created its industrial AI policy seven years ago, long before the U.S. government came up with any kind of AI overview.

While the ChatGPT platform from U.S. company OpenAI has been a focus of global attention regarding generative AI over the past year, Chinese software developers have been hard at work too.

In August, Beijing authorized the public release of new generative AI services from Tencent, Baidu, Huawei Technologies, Alibaba Group, JD.com, ByteDance, iFlytek and Kuaishou Technology. Overnight, there are now more major technology companies in China offering their own advanced chatbots than in the U.S.

More importantly, Beijing is already engaged in embedding AI throughout China's social infrastructure. Chatbots now generate calls from public service centers. Public parking lots are managed by smart systems without a need for human attendants. Hospital and other public facilities have their own AI systems to deal with the public.


Chinese President Xi Jinping may not understand machine learning or the technology behind AI but he has an in-depth understanding of what Chinese people hate and need
.

Until now, China's bureaucracy was infamous for its inefficiency. To cope with the burden of serving what was until this year the world's largest population, China's leaders since ancient times have relied on a pyramidlike model of governance that implicitly tolerated a certain degree of official corruption.

When officials recognized that dilatory handling of public requests might elicit offers of bribes, they often just became even greedier and slower about their work. While the public could, to some extent, put up with greasing palms to get problems addressed more quickly, they would eventually reach a breaking point and rise up against their corrupt overseers.

AI has not just increased the efficiency of public services, but it has also put officials under technological supervision, undermining their leeway to seek bribes. This is already proving to be a better check against corruption than long-standing Communist Party calls for integrity or centuries of Confucian precepts.

Many Chinese are quite happy with swapping the old system of corruption-plagued public services for AI-driven alternatives, even if the new versions rely on the use of facial recognition scans and other biometric systems that would undoubtedly spur privacy complaints in Western nations.

The U.S. will clearly not take the same path nor embrace dictatorship even if it would bring greater efficiency. But Chinese President Xi Jinping is attuned to what his country's citizens value, in part due to his diverse experiences growing up, first as a child of elite privilege and then as a rural peasant when his family was exiled from Beijing amid the Cultural Revolution. Xi does not understand machine learning or the technology behind AI, to be sure, but has an in-depth understanding of what Chinese people hate and need.

For the American people, the equation is different. If Biden tried to adopt AI as a governance tool, that would likely cripple the technology's effectiveness. Systems like ChatGPT would come under great strain if pulled into America's bureaucracy. Labor unions, legislators, gay rights activists, racists, anti-racists and other special interests will never trust AI systems to protect the values they hold dear.

But no matter how tight U.S. export controls get in the future, AI is already taking over in China. It is transforming Asia's largest economy despite the Biden administration's best efforts. If the U.S. does not want to fall behind China in the AI race, it is America that will have to change.

Then this practice of using AI in government will be export to those who want it in other parts of the world.
 

H2O

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Something something Darwin Bombing.
What kind of strategy is this? You strength your defence by pulling back troops by several thousand kilometres?

We all know it has nothing to do with defense. Japan have been looking to relive their good old days prior to their loss in WW2. The funny thing is they don't have the resources to make it happen.


So the judge is a democrat donor… overseeing the case to remove Trump from the 2024 president ballot.
What could go wrong?

The coming year will be a wild ride for everyone.


There's a covid inquiry going on, and this just came out today:

Reminds me of a Japanese minister several years ago that complained their own people live too long. o_O This inquiry will add more fuel for conspiracy theorists.
 
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