Miscellaneous News

horse

Major
Registered Member
With the right foreign policy I think it'll get better.

Improving relations with Russia will help break down the barriers with a lot of of those countries. Prime example, Vietnam. Vietnamese for some reason still love Russia even though they are now capitalist.

Even countries like the Philippines used to be considered American colonies are now creating their own independent policy.

Yeah, I agree with what you are saying or implying.

Like, all this? Big hairy deal, eh. Light beer, man!


NATO ... is turning itself into the British Commonwealth.

Like, who actually gives a bleep.


That guy Roger Stone, that evil mastermind of the Republican Party, he said it best in some documentary about him.

He said, "The media is both lazy and evil. Once you figure that out, you can do anything you want."

Even the Global Times discusses the talking points from the NATO summit. Bunch idiots, being tricked by another bunch of idiots. And we actually read about it.

:D:oops:
 
Last edited:

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
@pmc Could you do a defense of Germanic Engineering ™ for us?

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

China is steadily wiping out German industry​

National strategy that defined Angela Merkel era has run its course
https%253A%252F%252Fs3-ap-northeast-1.amazonaws.com%252Fpsh-ex-ftnikkei-3937bb4%252Fimages%252F_aliases%252Fauthor_thumbnail%252F2%252F0%252F9%252F9%252F36119902-1-eng-GB%252F20210827-Diana-Choyleva-144x80.png
Diana Choyleva
June 30, 2022 17:00 JST

Diana Choyleva is chief economist of Enodo Economics, a macroeconomic and political forecasting company in London.

If there was ever a symbiosis between Germany and China, that time has passed. Germany is slowly but surely realizing that a national industrial strategy based on synergy with China is headed toward a dead-end.
The partnership that defined Angela Merkel's years as chancellor will not outlive her administration by long. In fact, the partnership is already in its death throes. What remains now is for German business leaders and politicians to define what will replace it.
For almost two decades, the synergy between China and Germany worked. China contributed low wages and input costs. Germans contributed technical know-how and the fruits of decades of engineering breakthroughs and research. Young Chinese workers got jobs. Aging German investors got profits.
But in the end, Germany has lost out to China's manufacturing prowess. China's auto industry is surpassing Germany's, certainly in size and soon, perhaps, in quality. China's relentless focus on digitalization and other emerging technologies is reducing its dependence on a rival whose manufacturing and engineering heyday was in the 1970s.
Original analysis by Enodo Economics shows that Beijing's "Made in China 2025" industrial policy has done exactly what critics warned it would. It has empowered new niche players with the potential to displace the mid-size specialty manufacturers that are the heart and soul of the German economy.
Over a decade ago, the sudden emergence of Chinese competitors wiped out Germany's advanced solar power industry. Now, that experience is likely to repeat across a broad spectrum of industries.
Meanwhile, China is moving relentlessly into the new strategic technologies of the future artificial intelligence, electric vehicles and the digitization of the economy. We do not know yet whether Beijing's top-down model of statist industrial policy will achieve all of its goals, but we do know that in these fields, China has no need to look to Germany for investment or technology.
The hollowing out of German industry might paradoxically have led to a greater focus on China, as German companies squeezed the remaining profits out of their biggest market. That, in turn, would have kept Europe as a balancing player in the growing divergence between the U.S. and China. But the Russian invasion of Ukraine earlier this year has changed the calculation by ensuring that Germany stays within the U.S. sphere of influence during the great decoupling.
Strategically, Germany can no longer afford to mollify an expansionist Russia. Economically, it can no longer afford to muddle along in a partnership with China which will inevitably sap its own industrial strength. The lines of what it cannot do are increasingly clear; it remains to define what it will do.
A Germany that aligns itself with the U.S. will have to disentangle from two fatal dependencies: dependency on its Russian energy imports and dependency on its China joint ventures. Chancellor Olof Schulz has already taken some steps to detach from Russia, thanks to the war in Ukraine.
As for corporate decoupling, there are models out there. Every industrial country has had its China epiphany during the past decade, the moment when its businesses realize that they cannot afford to put all their eggs in the China basket.
State-backed nationalist protests in China persuaded Japanese and South Korean companies that they needed a "China plus one" strategy; the result was new production centers in Southeast Asia.
Taiwanese businesses began investing elsewhere as soon as labor costs tipped up in China. The Trump tariffs pushed American industry, kicking and screaming, into seriously considering supply chain diversification.
French and British companies have tried diversifying markets rather than production. Their "third country" approach involves selling products manufactured at their China-based joint ventures into developing countries, in effect, using the China cost structure to access new projects and deals in new markets.
German companies came late to their epiphany. Disruptions caused by the COVID lockdowns of 2020 and 2022 forced the first real rethink.
A second shock came last month when Berlin refused to renew investment guarantees for Volkswagen's controversial assembly plant in Xinjiang, where about one million people, mostly Uighurs, have been forced into "re-education" camps. Volkswagen says there is no forced labor at its factory near Urumqi, the capital of the Xinjiang region, and no one has produced evidence of any.

Berlin's broader point is that it will no longer write blank checks for German companies to invest in the rival that is eroding German strength and supporting Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
I have argued for some time that investors need to prepare for the great decoupling and Europe's coming divergence with China on every front: political, economic and strategic. This is true for Germany more than anywhere.
It is not enough to say enough about industrial strategies that no longer serve Germany well; a new strategy is needed. German industry is unlikely to fully adopt either the China plus one or the third country models.
Instead, the first step should be to invest in the technologies and modern practices that would allow German companies to once again confidently occupy the vanguard of their fields. Investors will reward those who succeed.
The only epiphany was for China seeing Europe was obeying the US especially under Trump. Europe hated Trump yet they obeyed like a puppy. Look at how they're saying Western countries are closer than ever. Who are they kidding? Like the countries of the West were independent from one another...? Why do they use the term Western values that they use to separate themselves from the rest? The big losers of the future are going to be all the countries that follow the US. The US likes its followers to be dependent on them meaning they are nothing without the US. The West is an alliance of the most aggressive invaders in history. Like I've said before, it's no coincidence that the most aggressive invaders originally come from countries with little natural resources of their own. The rise of China... Russia's war with Ukraine... exposes the weakness of Western economies when they don't have command of other people's resources through imperialism. They can't beat China in negotiation for those resources they need and Russia's war shows what happens when they're denied them. Look at how weak the hand they have that they're relegated to needing China to pressure Russia to stop. And they're threatening to do to China what they're doing to Russia...? The blowback on their countries will only be worse.
 

emblem21

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


Guess Germany is resorting to stealing shit to solve their fuel crisis.
Man these people are lowering themselves even further then usual. I have to admit, the fact that Russia or China hasn’t sent a hypersonic missile on their ass really should grant them saint hood or maybe they will wait until winter to give them a real ass kicking when these silly drunkards have no ammo, oil, gas and food, so that by then, people will be more or less happy to finally toss these leaders to the Russians to have them cool off in the Siberian gulag like these walking liabilities deserve
 

Strangelove

Colonel
Registered Member
LOL...

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Fury after Australia gifted Pacific nations faulty boats​

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
Political correspondent

Jul 1, 2022 – 5.00am

Several major design and construction flaws have been identified among a fleet of patrol boats gifted to Pacific nations by Australia, including poisonous carbon monoxide being pumped into the ship, forcing limits on their operation.

The faults have triggered an urgent dash to Pacific nations by Defence Department officials and engineers from shipbuilder Austal to assess the boats and come up with repairs.

The $2.1 billion program to gift 22 Guardian class patrol boats to Pacific nations was a key plank of the Coalition government’s Pacific Step Up initiative to build security ties with the region and counter China’s efforts to grow influence.

5532ca190f548dfe6cdfe43ca2e3e2505e5888b6

Cook Island sailors smash the ceremonial wine bottle during the Guardian Class Patrol Boat handover ceremony in Perth in June. Defence

The Albanese government is furious over what it sees as neglect by the Coalition, with Defence Industry and Pacific Minister Pat Conroy only learning about the issues a week and a half ago. Austal and Defence had been working on repairs before that.

“Former defence minister Peter Dutton talked a big game on national security but has left yet another mess in defence capabilities for the new government to clean up,” Mr Conroy said.

“We understand how important these vessels are for Australia and our partners in the Pacific. The Guardian class patrol boats play a critical role in maritime surveillance activities, as well as detecting and deterring illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.”

The first problem was identified in February last year, with cracking in the coupling linking the engine and gearbox. In May this year, it was found that the sick bays were not properly ventilated, with air being recycled instead of fresh air coming in.

Also in May, a defect with the exhaust system was discovered, with carbon monoxide entering a compartment usually uncrewed. Not all boats have been affected, but engineering advice is the faults could afflict the fleet without being addressed
ASX-listed shipbuilder Austal, which builds the boats in Perth, has accepted the three are latent defects and has accepted full responsibility for fixing them at no cost to the taxpayer. Austal’s share price closed slightly lower at $1.80 on Thursday.

Austal and Defence representatives will travel to the Pacific in coming days to inspect all the vessels and provide advice on how to minimise risk until long-term fixes found. It will be up to each nation to decide whether to continue operating their vessels or pause operations.

The government is considering how to work with Pacific nations to ensure there is no impact on their surveillance activities.

Fifteen boats have been delivered so far, with the latest boat handed over just three weeks ago to the Cook Islands at a ceremony in Perth attended by Defence Personnel Minister Matthew Keogh.

There have been a series of issues with the Guardian class, some because of operator error. A boat gifted to Samoa was written off after it ran aground on a reef in 2021, with the officer in charge later found guilty of negligence by a police tribunal.

Austal’s vessels have a chequered history. The Armidale class patrol boats suffered bad cracking from being overworked to intercept asylum seekers, while
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
, six new Cape Class vessels, have been delayed after they were built with poor quality aluminium from China.

Austal’s littoral combat ships built in Alabama for the US Navy have also
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
s, with a speed limit of 15 knots imposed.
 

emblem21

Major
Registered Member
Top