Miscellaneous News

Gatekeeper

Brigadier
Registered Member
Yellow Peril. Throw them into the concentration camps..

I won't rule out internment camp if a war broke out between China and the US.

Indeed, what is it with anglos and concentration camps; it does seem like a cultural trait alongside piracy and genocide.

In any case, the hypocritical anglo led west has decided to sanction Belarus

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Cause they invented it ?

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And used it so every often

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The Anglos like to project all their atrocities to China to deflect from all the atrocities they have committed. All the genocide, concentration camp, human rights violation, suppression, religious prosecution are crimes they have blatantly committed.

All these imaginary projection are intentional to deflect from their own criminal record.

Of course, we shouldn't put it past them. Nearly all western countries have had concentration camp in one form or the other.

U.S. Japanese internment camp. (Just ask George Takei. And of course Guantanamo bay.
UK in South Africa
We all know about Germany
France in Algeria
Oz and its local aborigines

And least we forget this racist act by the U.S.

FB_IMG_1621832661780.jpg

So they lock up people on the ground of race. But they have other subtle ways of removing people of different races and doing it quietly.

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The secret deportations: how Britain betrayed the Chinese men who served the country in the war​

Dan Hancox

3 hrs ago

On 19 October 1945, 13 men gathered in Whitehall for a secret meeting. It was chaired by Courtenay Denis Carew Robinson, a senior Home Office official, and he was joined by representatives of the Foreign Office, the Ministry of War Transport, and the Liverpool police and immigration inspectorate. After the meeting, the Home Office’s aliens department opened a new file, designated HO/213/926. Its contents were not to be discussed in the House of Commons or the Lords, or with the press, or acknowledged to the public. It was titled “Compulsory repatriation of undesirable Chinese seamen”.

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Nobaron

Junior Member
Registered Member
The Americans and Israelis are the only nuclear powers mental enough to launch a first strike. They are that insane!
Sorry, but i couldn't disagree more with this.

If America & Israel was mental enough to launch a first strike, they would have done it long ago instead of whining about others going nuclear. They are trying to survive. There is only one group of earth, quite possibly in the entire universe, are crazy enough to launch a nuclear war knowing what will be the consequence. People who america & israel long feared, people who believe they are gonna go to heaven by annihilating the so called non believers.

Isnt it strange this "report" has come out when America is trying to play tough with china?

America is trying to send a tough message. All china needs to do is to speak the kim jong un language "Whenever you are ready".
You will see how the narrative of "Amrikka first strikeee Chyyynnaa" changes to "Chyynnaa the maniac trying to destroy the whole world". ;)
 

hashtagpls

Senior Member
Registered Member
Cause they invented it ?

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And used it so every often

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You get a gold start for correctly pointing out my allusion.

In other news, there is now not only black and white fungus but also yellow fungus that is now infesting india

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The entire subcontinent is quite the petri dish of diseases which is strange since we were told that being a vegetarian ought to have prevented pandemic type diseases.
 

spring2017

New Member
Registered Member
Indeed, what is it with anglos and concentration camps; it does seem like a cultural trait alongside piracy and genocide.
No, it is not a cultural trait. It is a class trait. What oppressive classes in human history, from slave owners to kings and capitalists, do not have concentration camps, prisons, war of conquests and genocide? No matter white or yellow.

Blaming those horrific actions on race and culture is how racists frame the world. Either done by the oppressive ruling class to fool the masses, or those fooled by such misinformation, miseducation and mistreatment by the ruling class.
 
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plawolf

Lieutenant General
really?, it has got nothing to do with China

That’s the unacknowledged reality with all out nuclear war that makes it stupid and pointless to focus only on the nuclear arsenals of those directly involved - once a certain threshold is reach, ie MAD, nuclear powers like America and Russia will launch against everyone irrespective of whether they are actually involved or not. Basically it’s, the ‘if I’m going down, I’m taking everyone else with me and we can all start again from the Stone Age’ mentality that is ugly but a reality.

As such, this is something all nuclear powers need to bear in mind when forecasting likely outcomes from nuclear exchanges. It’s not just whether you can survive the XXX number of numbers from your direct opponent, it’s whether you can live with the new world order after your top XXX cities and most of your conventional military strength as been erased. Especially since nuclear weapons will be a priority target in any such engagement, so you will be facing a real, use them or loose them dilemma.

So, would the same Americans who couldn’t live with China taking over Taiwan be able to live with their nuclear arsenal depleted, conventional military destroyed, and most major cities erased while Russia remains as it is today and becomes the new default global dominant power with an unassailable lead in everything? Or will be launch against Russia once they feel they haven’t got much left to loose?

That’s the true threshold for global MAD, and it’s much much lower than true MAD against America. So while China might not have the warheads to glass every square inch of American territory, it doesn’t need it because the Americans will launch against the Russians long before it comes to anything close to that, and the Russians&Americans will finish the job and also glass the EU and Indian and pretty much everyone else just so no one comes out of this with a massive unassailable lead in tech, industry or population. At best it will be a global reset of a couple millennia, at worst we go the way of the dinosaurs and the cockroach people use our petrified bodies in their cars in a few million years.
 

liamban

Junior Member
Registered Member
You get a gold start for correctly pointing out my allusion.

In other news, there is now not only black and white fungus but also yellow fungus that is now infesting india

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

The entire subcontinent is quite the petri dish of diseases which is strange since we were told that being a vegetarian ought to have prevented pandemic type diseases.
freepressjournal%2F2021-05%2F962f3830-1640-4059-8029-992f03f539e8%2Fezgif_com_gif_maker__1_.gif
 

hashtagpls

Senior Member
Registered Member
No, it is not a cultural trait. It is a class trait. What oppressive classes in human history, from slave owners to kings and capitalists, do not have concentration camps, prisons, war of conquests and genocide? No matter white or yellow.

Blaming those horrific actions on race and culture is how racists frame the world. Either done by the oppressive ruling class to fool the masses, or those fooled by such misinformation, miseducation and mistreatment by the ruling class.
Incorrect, you failed to note that all classes of the anglosphere were complicit in the many race wars and genocide campaigns in the americas and australia. It was low class anglo whites and irish who formed a coalition to push for the China Exclusion Act, as it was australian white laity who eagerly embraced the White Fleet and notions of white supremacism after Federation.

This is the very essence of the "whole of society" race war response that the anglosphere conducts on a regular basis, and which has only now ramped up in an attempt to forestall China's rise.

Witness now, the misinformation of the anglo propaganda machine:


Not to worry though, Sino-Rus coordination and working hand in hand to contain the anglos:

 

Strangelove

Colonel
Registered Member
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Industrial commodity prices extended sharp losses on Monday both in China and abroad, after officials in China, the world's factory floor and largest consumer of raw materials, intensified a top-down campaign to rein in runaway prices that have already exerted pressure on factories and businesses and further threaten to derail China's hard-fought economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The latest effort by Chinese officials to further step up the crackdown on what they call excessive speculation in the commodity markets came after repeated warnings and actions by local governments and industry bodies over the past several weeks failed to bring prices down to a "reasonable" range, and risks posed by the soaring prices for the Chinese economy continue to emerge, analysts noted. In a rare step, five Chinese agencies on Sunday warned leading companies not to engage in price gouging.

Further highlighting China's commitment to tackling soaring commodity prices, Premier Li Keqiang on Monday inspected a major port in Ningbo, East China's Zhejiang Province on Monday and heard reports on trend in global commodity prices.

During the tour, Li also highlighted the impact of high commodity prices on factories and asked the port to improve import and storage operations, according to an official statement.

While China's efforts are aimed at stabilizing the domestic commodity markets to stave off potential risks, they could also help end a months-long rally in global commodity prices, analysts said. Major suppliers, particularly Australia - which has enjoyed record-high prices for its main export to China, iron ore, despite losses in other trade--could feel the pain, they added. Australia's days of "profiteering" may be marked, an expert said.

China crackdown

Global and domestic commodity markets already took a cue from China's broadening crackdown. On Monday, prices for most commodity futures fell sharply in China, led by an over 5 percent drop for iron ore. Prices of several other commodity futures, including hot-rolled coil, declined by over 3 percent. Global industrial metal prices also declined on Monday, with three-month copper prices on London's metal exchange were down 0.3 percent and aluminum dropping 2.3 percent, according to Reuters.

The extended losses on Monday followed the latest signal from Chinese officials that they are stepping up efforts to rein in soaring commodity prices. On Sunday, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the top economic planner, along with four other departments held a meeting with industry leaders and vowed to severely punish excessive speculation, price gouging and other violations that helped lift prices.

Regulators would adopt a "zero tolerance" toward illegal activities and strengthen regulation of abnormal transactions and malicious speculation, the NDRC said in a statement.

The move came after the State Council, China cabinet, paid special attention to rising commodity prices in two back-to-back executive meetings, calling for effective measures to stabilize commodity markets. The intensified efforts also followed earlier warnings and efforts by some local authorities and industry bodies which failed to bring down prices, leading to intensified efforts from higher authorities.

"With the world's largest manufacturing sector, China has been bearing the brunt of soaring raw material prices. The impact on the real economy is very significant, with companies and consumers set to be hurt," Liu Xuezhi, a senior macroeconomic analyst at Bank of Communications, told the Global Times on Monday, adding that nothing less than China's hard-fought economic recovery from the COVID-19 is at stake.

Soaring raw material prices have already dramatically pushed up costs for many factories, particularly small and medium-sized businesses. There have also been increasing signs that rising raw material prices could push up consumer prices, as some companies raised prices for a wide range of products, including refrigerators, washers and bicycles, citing rising costs.

In April, factory-gate prices in the country surged 6.8 percent year-on-year, the fastest pace in over three years, raising concerns that high raw material prices could dampen the economic recovery and push up consumer prices.

That rising raw material prices threaten China's main growth drivers and pose serious risks to economic recovery spurred a series of efforts by top officials, experts noted. Warning signs of global inflation, particularly from the US, which could also seriously impact China's economic operations, also added urgency to Chinese officials to act swiftly, the experts added.

"Rising commodity prices have affected many aspects of people's daily life," Ren Zeping, dean of the Evergrande Research Institute, said in an interview, noting that while a global economic recovery has pushed up demand for commodities and in turn lifted prices, the main reason behind the price surge lies on the supply side and market speculation. For example, COVID-19 pandemic in major suppliers such as Brazil and India also squeezed supplies, Ren noted.

While commodity prices are set by the global market, as the world's largest consumer, China's crackdown on speculations and other market manipulation could also send chilling waves across the globe, experts said.

"Certainly, China's actions will have a significant impact on global commodity prices," particularly exports that rely heavily on China's demand, Liu said.

Australia's pain

Among the most affected could be iron ore exports from Australia, which has benefited massively from the sky-high prices in its main export - emboldening officials in Canberra to continue on their relentless provocation against China.

"Due to unreasonable global iron ore prices, Australia's iron ore exporters have profited greatly. However, such profiteering will not last very long," Chen Hong, a professor and director of the Australian Studies Center at East China Normal University, told the Global Times on Monday.

Australia is the world's largest iron ore producer and the largest supplier of China. In the first four months of the year, China imported 229 million tons of iron ore from Australia, or nearly 60 percent of its total imports, according to Wang Guoqing, research director at the Beijing Lange Steel Information Research Center.

That has singlehandedly helped save Australia's trade amid tense relations with China that has impacted trade in many areas, according to experts and media reports. In April, for example, China's imports from Australia rose by over 49.3 percent, mainly because of high iron ore prices.

While China's reliance on Australian iron ore will likely continue in the foreseeable future, despite its efforts to diversify sources, sharp drops in iron ore prices would mean heavy losses in export revenue for Australia, which is already seeing declining trade with China in areas such as wine and seafood, experts noted.

For example, iron ore prices fell by about $9.25 per ton last week following the State Council meeting; that could translate into a loss of over $2 billion in extra revenue for Australia based on the amount of exports to China in the first four months of 2021. If prices fell from about $200 per ton last week to about $60 per ton during the same time last year, losses in revenue could have been over $32 billion.

Reflecting the potential impact on Australian iron ore exports to China, shares prices of main Australian iron ore producers fell on Monday following China's latest efforts to rein in prices. Shares of Rio Tinto in Australia fell by 1.46 percent on Monday, while BHP Group's shares dropped by 1 percent.

In addition to the impact from declining prices, China's reliance on Australian iron ore will decline over time, as the country moves to expand sources of supplies, experts said.

"China's diversifying import system will have the key impact on the reduction of China's imports of Australian iron ore," Wang told the Global Times on Monday, noting Australia iron ore's proportion of China's total import is already declining slightly.

Australia's proportion of China's iron ore imports dropped below 60 percent for the first time in the first four months of 2021 and as China continues to diversify supplies, this could further drop to below 50 percent in the next few years, experts said.
 
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