Free, but biased, half-truth-telling-with-exaggeration media = Non-governmental brainwashing propaganda

Joined November 2011
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It is largely a myth that cheap credit from the state-owned banking system drives Chinese tech sectors. If you read annual reports of Chinese EV makers, you’ll find that most rely on equity financing or alternative forms of financing (like delayed repayment to suppliers).
OECD's Subsidy-Centric Narrative of China’s Emerging Industries Is Increasingly Flawed & Outdated: CF40 Zhu He & Guo Kai examine over 5,300 A-share companies & argue they are increasingly driven by internal cash flow, equity financing, $ profitability rather than cheap credit
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My colleagues and I just published a new report on U.S.-China AI competition, taking a holistic view of AI leadership. We argue that the competition is about more than who has the best models and chips. It's a contest of energy, data, talent, capital, industrial capacity, diffusion, and national resilience. The U.S. remains ahead in frontier model development and advanced compute deployment, but China's deep bench of AI engineers, low-cost models, control over critical nodes in the hardware supply chain, vast energy infrastructure, and aggressive push to diffuse AI make it a formidable competitor.
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So, you want to talk about human rights in China? I am a US citizen living in China, and I've never felt more free than I do in China. In China, we are: Free from street crime Free from fear at night Freedom from endless student debt Freedom from ubiquitous credit card debt Freedom from tax on one's home Freedom from homelessness In the US one can say irresponsible things; that's it. China does Human Rights right. 👇
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Kenneth Roth type of guys only care about Chinese ppl in so much as they are individuals who can trip up the development of China. Those are the only individuals he wants to empower. Chinamaxxers at least have respect for what the ppl of China achieved in the aggregate even if they can be vague on the details. Most actual Chinese ppl are happy to meet Chinamaxxers halfway. But this is not the libbed out 90s anymore. Most Chinese ppl are proud to be Chinese and no longer look up to Americans with awe.
In the superficial view of “China” held by Chinamaxxers, there are no social movements, no debates, no counterparts for the politically active American to engage. This is not meaningful "solidarity." It doesn't view Chinese as genuine people. trib.al/1YqrbWV
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LMFAO
Replying to @opinion @HalBrands
On sale at Amazon. Heard this lamp is very popular in Japan.
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Neoliberalism: free trade for all — until the wrong countries win.
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Most democracies are poor
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China has completely stopped tungsten export to Japan. Japan's tungsten dependence on China is even worse than rare earth. Japan's industry is doomed. lol x.com/SinaMin_CN/status/2061…
Nikkei reported that Japan’s tungsten imports from China fell by 50%. That is technically true. But it misses the critical number. Tungsten export to Japan have effectively stopped. Zero shipments since the overnight ban. But... Japan’s import data can still capture cargo that had already left China before the restriction fully hit. Material at sea does not disappear from customs data just because the policy changed at the Chinese border. The Jan. 6 measure was effective immediately. If suppliers had cargo ready to clear, there was every incentive to push it through before the window closed. Anyone who has dealt with China-side customs timing will understand how quickly that behaviour can happen around a sudden policy change. But once the control had landed, no Chinese exporter was going to risk jail time just to sell Japan a few extra tonnes of tungsten. So from Japan’s side, imports look like they are falling. From China’s side, the flow has already stopped. That is the real story. And the impact on Japan’s tungsten industry is not theoretical. China exported only 2 tonnes of APT, which 0 went to Japan in 26Q1. Japan is now trying to work around the shortage by importing tungsten scrap from other countries. Imports of tungsten scrap from the US jumped by around 1,000%. That is emergency substitution in desperation. The pressure is already hitting Japanese manufacturers. Mitsubishi Materials has announced price increases of more than 3x for some tungsten materials from June orders. Sumitomo Electric says procurement from China has stopped. Around 30% of its cutting-tool raw material previously came from China. NS Tool says tungsten prices have risen around 7x over the past year, making earnings forecasts difficult. OSG is increasing imports from Europe and warning that cost pass-through is unavoidable. One Osaka carbide toolmaker is reportedly considering production cuts of around 20%. Japan can recycle more scraps. It can pay more for US, European and Southeast Asian material. It can stretch inventories. But it's not sustainable. Recycling cannot instantly replace a Chinese supply chain that took decades to build. The market intelligence I have seen suggests some Japanese users may only have enough tungsten to last until around late June. If that is even roughly correct, the next few weeks matter. This is why tungsten should be watched closely. It is not just a niche metal. It is critical for carbide cutting tools, automotive and aerospace machining, semiconductors, electronics and defence applications. China spent decades controlling the upstream supply and the licensing channel. Multiple laws & regulations have been revised to tighten their control. A 50% fall in imports sounds manageable. Zero China-side exports is the warning signal.
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I find the concept of “overcapacity” ridiculous. Does Germany have an overcapacity in cars? France one in wine? Sweden in heavy trucks? Italy in fashion? And don’t tell me that European food exports aren’t subsidized. euobserver.com/218003/china-…
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NO system can prevent corruption (show me a democracy w/o corruption). However, China has this⬇️. How many democracies have it?
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Replying to @AngelicaOung
Why should speech be free while action is not free? Why not the same rule? Why is speech above the law? Free speech is a great fallacy that has deceived everyone. Spreading harmful speech is spreading disinfo, should be punished by law based on its damage to the society
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This clown has been singing the same song for at least 20 years Back in 2004 he was predicting China was going to collapse in the next two decades 🤣
In a sign of Xi Jinping's insecurities, China has expelled an outstanding New York Times correspondent, Vivian Wang, who for years has done tremendous work covering that country. The Times, which has covered China since the 1850s and once had about a dozen correspondents in China, now has just one -- because of visa restrictions. China is a major international power, but it displays a remarkable lack of self-confidence when it bars correspondents like this. It will still be covered but from places like Taiwan in ways that can't do it justice. China has some extraordinary accomplishments in science, in education, in health, in infrastructure; a baby born in Beijing today has a longer life expectancy than a baby born in Washington DC. Yet China fears international coverage in a way that I think reflects a political immaturity and hurts itself. 搬起石头砸自己的脚. nytimes.com/2026/05/29/us/po…
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The professionals pushing Xinjiang propaganda openly support Israel’s genocide in Gaza… This absolute demon wants you to believe he cares about the Uyghurs in China.
The Chinese Communist Party’s persecution of Uyghurs constitutes a “systematic atrocity.” giftarticle.ft.com/giftartic…
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Replying to @AngelicaOung
free press and speech are black/white western indoctrination w the premise that press and speech are never harmful to the society, which is completely wrong as harmful speech and misleading press do exist. As actions are restricted by law, why are press and speech above the law?
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Une semaine après mon arrivée en Chine, mon unpopular opinion du moment, c’est que la cuisine chinoise met une tempête à la cuisine japonaise (je n’ai jamais aussi bien mangé de ma vie)
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People really need to stop hating on China man. Every time I’m in a pickle it’s China saving me. Gas prices too high? I’m riding in the BYD. DRAM costs an arm and a leg? CXMT floods the market. Anthropic and OpenAI fucking me on token costs? Hello my friend Mr. Qwen. The CCP has done more for my cost of living than my own government.
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Think this new diet will catch on?
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Almost the same playbook, minus the "muh democracy vs autocracy" crap
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Trump: don't formally declaring Taiwan independence Taiwan: We formally declare ROC independence If this TW response is not cope, I don't know what is 🤣
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By the same standards, why is CIA not in your profile?
Presenting Zhou Bo as a former senior military officer without further identification is another travesty in how we describe interlocutors in the PRC, @FoxNews @SpecialReport Zhou spent a career military intelligence and foreign-facing "barbarian handler" roles. Interviewing him without explaining his past is misleading. Just because the mistake is common (and sometimes intentional) doesn't make it right.
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