Monday, August 31, 2009

HTC Qilin, Ponsel CDMA Terbaru

Dari semua pembicaraan mengenai China Mobile dan Android dengan adanya implementasi Ophone, kini China Mobile, carrier kuat tersebut ikut meng-cover handset bersistem Windows Mobile terbaru dari HTC. HTC baru mengumumkan adanya ponsel tipe Qilin, yang hampir sama dengan HTC WhiteStone dari Verizon, dan dijual dengan nama brand cabang Dopod. Sementara menurut CEO Dopod, Dennis Chen, handset HTC Qilin merupakan handset pertama yang mendapatkan subsidi sebesar $7 juta dari China Mobile untuk mendukung pengembangan handset TD-SCDMA. Sementara Dopod memiliki investasi tenaga dan dana untuk research and development TD-SCDMA dan akan merilis beberapa handset TD-SCDMA high-end di tahun mendatang. Handset HTC Qilin ini diperkirakan akan hadir di bulan Desember mendatang.

Spesifikasi handphooen HTC Qilin (Dopod T8388) :

- Type: PPC (keyboard non-QWERTY)

- Platform: Windows Mobile 6.5

- CPU: TI OMAP 3430 600MHz (sama dengan Palm Pre dan iPhone 3GS)

- ROM: 512MB

- RAM: 256MB

- Display: 3.6 inch tipe WVGA (480×800 piksel)

- Frequency: GSM, GPRS, EDGE, TD-SCDMA

- Network: Wi-Fi 802.11g

- GPS: SiRF (GPS / AGPS)

- Camera: 5 megapiksel, fitur auto-focus camera, camera VGA di bagian depan

- Fitur : gravity sensors, light sensor, proximity sensor, CMMB mobile TV

(h_n)

[Via http://yukiblogger.wordpress.com]

Pudong Shangri-la: "The 'Shangheight' Of Luxury"

Pudong Shangri-La Still Enthralls Guests And Sets The Standard For “Luxury With Chinese Characteristics”

The Pudong Shangri-La in Shanghai offers stunning views of the waterfront

The five-star Pudong Shangri-La, one of the crown jewels of Shanghai’s skyline, continues to draw accolades from seasoned global travelers, who are consistently struck by the hotel’s extravagance as well as its unique story. Having begun construction when Shanghai’s Pudong section was scarcely more than a marshland, the Shangri-La quickly established itself as one of East Asia’s finest luxury hotels. With the newest extension (finished in 2005) adding even more opulence to the striking building, travelers have even more reasons to make this coastal city a stop on their next Asian business or tourism jaunt.

Today, Robert La Bue makes the Pudong Shangri-La the target of his “Mr. e-Traveler” column, writing, “It’s always a pleasure to return to a hotel that feels like home. The fact that a 948-room property can pull this off is a credit to Pudong Shangri-la.”

As La Bue goes on to note, the hotel’s unique international and Chinese appointments set it apart, even among other world-class five-star luxury hotels:

Maybe I just like the idea of home being a double-towered complex linked by a marble walkway lined with delightful goods in the shops and delectable foods in the mouth courtesy of the fine eateries that make Pudong Shangri-la a popular destination for locals as well as visitors. The River Wing was the first five-star hotel on the Pudong side of Shanghai’s Huangpu River; though today dwarfed by the megaliths that have risen over the past decade, including the stylish glass structure of the hotel’s own Grand Tower to which it is connected, the River Wing remains a favourite thanks to the classic atmosphere and attentive service for which Shangri-la is well known—and the views of Shanghai’s architectural treasures along The Bund are right out the windows (the hotel thoughtfully provides high-powered binoculars in its rooms to allow for enjoyment of the Bund’s Deco-rations from a lofty position). The newly renovated rooms in the River Wing recall an era of Old World European opulence with chandeliers and plush carpets, while the Grand Tower is more contemporary in style and attitude. People thought Mr. Kwok was crazy to open a hotel on the Pudong side back when it was little more than marshland; thanks to the Shangri-la Group’s canny owner, the Pudong Shangri-la sits on a prime piece of real estate today.

With some of the most spacious rooms in town, Pudong Shangri-la is well positioned for next year’s World Expo, to be held on the enormous grounds just a few kilometres away. As various nations prepare their pavilions for the big event, which will take place from May to October 2010, Pudong, long regarded as Shanghai’s business district, will flourish as a cultural destination as well. Not that it is devoid of cultural attractions under normal circumstances; the magnificent Shanghai Oriental Arts Center, a performing arts venue designed by renowned architect Jean Nouvel, is just down the road.

With another Shangri-la hotel under construction in Puxi’s Jing An district on the other side of the river, Shanghai will be one of the few cities in the world with two Shangri-la properties. How lucky for visitors to Shanghai.

[Via http://chinaluxculturebiz.wordpress.com]

Sunday, August 30, 2009

and away we go

Usually I don’t think of the act of travel as an ordeal. I like the liminal state of being in an aircraft. The change in timezones, the weird sleep you get over an ocean, it’s all fine. For some reason though, I feel like the next 37 hours I spend getting to Nanchong might be a long ride. But it will be worth it. I hear there’ll be cheesecake waiting at the other end.

I won’t be super diligent about posting while I’m gone (as if I have been lately anyway). Don’t expect immediate responses to emails either. One thing I like about the whole travel thing is treating it like an (intentional) internet fast. Which is much better than just having your internet go down. There should be the occasional Twitter update. If my international texting works the way it’s supposed to.

See you later.

[Via http://thedubiousmonk.net]

Incidence of Death

Although it is natural to focus on the case fatality rate when considering the risk of a new virus like pandemic H1N1, comparing countries with this metric has become increasingly difficult given the variations in testing procedures. Some countries continue to publicise new cases of infection, some do not.

Although most countries report deaths, the absolute number of deaths is less informative than the numbers of death adjusted for population. One way to compare the effect of the new H1N1 virus on different countries is to calculate the number of deaths per 100,000 people.

Here is the list of the top 20 countries and the incidence of death per 100,000 people:

  1. Saint Kitts and Nevis – 1.9
  2. Cayman Islands – 1.8
  3. Argentina – 1.2
  4. Samoa – 1.1
  5. Tonga – 1.0
  6. Uruguay – 1.0
  7. Chile – 0.8
  8. Costa Rica – 0.7
  9. Australia – 0.7
  10. Paraguay – 0.6
  11. New Zealand – 0.4
  12. Mauritius – 0.4
  13. Brazil – 0.3
  14. El Salvador – 0.3
  15. Peru – 0.3
  16. Singapore – 0.3
  17. Malaysia – 0.3
  18. Ecuador – 0.3
  19. Brunei – 0.2
  20. Malta – 0.2

With the exception of Malta, all the top 20 countries are either in tropical islands, Central America or the Southern Hemisphere.

The absence of the United States, Canada and the UK from this list supports the idea that weather is a significant variable in incidence of death from the pandemic virus. Countries in their winter and in the tropics are clearly being hit harder than countries experiencing summer.

Although much has been made of the fact that there have been many more cases in Argentina than in Chile, when countries are compared on the basis of incidence of death per 100,000, the difference between Australia and New Zealand is nearly as great.

A number of countries are much lower on the list than one would expect based on the incidence of death in neighboring countries. For example, Malaysia reports an incidence of death per 100,000 of 0.3, while Indonesia’s number is 0.003, a 100 fold difference. Singapore reports an incidence of death per 100,000 of 0.3 while China reports 0.0003, a 1000 fold difference. These numbers strain credibility and suggest that Indonesia and China are not reporting many of their deaths.

We are just in the early months of what is likely to be a multi-year pandemic. The numbers reported here will likely increase dramatically in the coming months. What will be the final incidence of death?

That will depend in large part on what we do.

[Via http://monotreme1000.wordpress.com]

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Battle Between Burmese Army And Kokang Intensifies

Written by KNG

Saturday, 29 August 2009 15:43

The battle between Burmese troops and ethnic Kokang rebels is becoming fiercer and intensifying in the rebel territories along the Sino-Burma border in northeast Shan State, said frontline sources.

Nearly 30,000 refugees, especially a Chinese clan Kokang have fled to different areas in Chinese territory by crossing the border since the escalation of military tension between the Burmese Army and the rebels on August 8, said border sources.

Chinese authorities have opened seven refugee camps in its territory bordering Kokang and are supplying food, drinking water, first aid and providing huts. The Chinese are also dropping food from military aircraft to Kokang refugees outside refugee camps in different areas, said border sources.

Rebel sources said most refugees fled to China as of August 24 (Thursday), the night when Burmese soldiers wearing police uniforms overran the rebel’s headquarters Laogai without a single shot being fired. From dawn yesterday, rebel troops led by Peng Jiasheng and Burmese troops exchanged heavy mortar fire in Laogai, Chinshwehaw and Wanchansu in the rebel territories in northeast Shan State bordering China’s Yunnan province, said Kokang sources.

The rebel military bases are located mainly on the high mountains and they fired 75 mm and 120 mm mortar shells randomly at Burmese troops, said frontline sources.

According to sources close to rebels, more than 240 bodies of Burmese soldiers including those of 20 policemen were found in three battle zones in yesterday’s clashes. Dozens of Burmese soldiers have been captured by the rebels.

On the Kokang side, over a dozen soldiers died and dozens were injured in yesterday’s battle, said sources close to the rebels.

Many Burmese soldiers are abandoning their arms and fleeing to Monggo and Muse areas near the war zones, said residents in these areas.

Yesterday, over 2000 United Wa State Army (UWSA) troops, an ally of the Kokang rebel, launched a swift offensive against Burmese troops in Chinshwehaw, another Kokang base and recaptured it from the Burmese troops. Chinshwehaw is now with UWSA. It was captured from the rebels early this week by Burmese troops, said sources close to UWSA.

Over 4,000 Burmese troops have arrived as reinforcements from Meiktila in Mandalay Division to the Teinni (Hsenwi in Shan and Sinli in Kachin) on Mandalay-Muse border trade route yesterday, according to local eyewitnesses.

The junta is also ordering policemen in every town in northeast Shan State to join the war with Kokang rebels, said Muse-based police station sources.

A resident of Kutkai on Mandalay-Muse border trade route told KNG today that Burmese soldiers are forcibly using civilians as porters for carrying military rations and weapons since yesterday morning.

There are also civilian casualties in the three-day battle between the Burmese troops and rebels but exact numbers cannot be stated, said rebel sources.

At the same time, another ally of Kokang, Kachin Independence Army (KIA) is on high alert in Kachin State and Northeast Shan State. They are authorized to shoot all Burmese troops who intrude to the KIA’s territories without waiting for the first shoot policy from Burmese soldiers, said KIA officials in Laiza headquarters in Kachin State.

The KIA’s 4th brigade and three battalions under the brigade base in northeast Shan State, the Loikang-based brigade command is connecting with the northern territories of Kokang territory separated by the Salween River (Sap Hkung Hka in Kachin) and the KIA is now in a standby position to defend itself from the offensive of intruding Burmese soldiers, said KIA officials in Laiza headquarters.

Chinese security agents are closely watching the battle between the Kokang rebel and the Burmese troops, said border sources.

Border based ethnic armed groups’ sources said, China views Burma’s ruling junta being responsible for the current battle with the Kokang because the war was started following dishonestly capturing the rebel’s headquarters Laogai on Monday.

Earlier, China warned both ethnic armed groups along with its border and the junta to avoid conflicts, said border sources.

Kachin News

[Via http://democracyforburma.wordpress.com]

Paul Kennedy's Schizophrenic Editorial About The Dollar's Future

I was immensely annoyed to read today’s Professor Paul Kennedy’s editorial in the NYT.  He wrote a great book about the decline and fall of empires and then proceeds to ignore his own research to pen a ridiculous article about how the US dollar will sail on and on for some time because….well, because it should.  And yet, at the end of his own article, he talks about how he doesn’t want to be paid in dollars only, JUST IN CASE.  He wants other currencies if the dollar is destroyed by the Chinese.

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Op-Ed Contributor – The Dollar’s Fate – NYTimes.com —an editorial by Paul Kennedy

Kennedy was born in Wallsend, Tyne And Wear, and attended St. Cuthbert’s Grammar School in Newcastle upon Tyne. Subsequently, he graduated with first class honours in history fromNewcastle University and obtained his doctorate from St. Antony’s College, Oxford. He was a member of the History Department at the University of East Anglia between 1970 and 1983. He is aFellow of the Royal Historical Society, a former Visiting Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, United States and of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation inGermany. In 2007-8, Kennedy was the Phillipe Roman Professor of History and International Affairs at the London School of Economics.

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He is the J. Richardson Dilworth professor of British history at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. He is also the Director of International Security Studies and along withJohn Lewis Gaddis and Charles Hill, teaches the Studies in Grand Strategy course there.

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His most famous book, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, has been translated into 23 languages and assesses the interaction between economics and strategy over the past five centuries. The book was incredibly well received by fellow historians, with A.J.P. Taylor labelling it “An encyclopaedia in itself” and Sir Michael Howard crediting it as “a deeply humane book in the very best sense of the word”.[1][2]

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ΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩΩ

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A generous interpretation of all of this talk is that it actually is rather better for the world to have its monetary exchanges based upon some international “spread” of currencies rather than upon a single one that, if it toppled due to domestic mismanagement, could bring ruin to many innocent players. Had not the great economist John Maynard Keynes proposed this with the creation of the “bancor” in 1944, to head off a dollar-denominated world that would in the end meet its fate of carrying too much on its shoulders?

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As the British Empire floundered and then sank, there was general anxiety concerning how the US would run things. The US was the world’s biggest industrial power as well as the major creditor nation on earth. And it still had the gold standard. The Brits desperately needed to have an easy credit/no gold system. The war spending had to continue for the foreseeable future. Britain needed US credit and for this credit to not be restricted by gold reserves.

. This would have been good for the international community and, actually, good for America. Why should the Weary Titan have to stagger under the too-vast weight of its single-currency burden? But Washington vetoed Keynes’ scheme. It’s nice to feel you are Top Dog. Besides, if you possess the world’s leading foreign currency, you can run enormous trade and current-account deficits without being punished for it.

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What ails Professor Kennedy? I used to respect him. He has garnered tremendous awards and lavished with praise due to his hard-hitting book about the decline and fall of great empires. Here we are, in the midst of such a fall, he he has fallen off his own pedestal. His editorial is lying, first of all. The US did NOT think being the main currency in the world was a wonderful opportunity to run everything in the red. Far, far from it!

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First of all, the US taxed the public at a very harsh rate to pay off the WWI and WWII debts. This kept our credit ratings up. The gold standard was used as a harsh restriction on the creation of world credit and the Federal Reserve as well as other people involved in running the US, worried about inflation. This was thrown away, not all at once but slowly, step by step. And Professor Keynes was cheering this on. He and others of his ilk groused that gold was a straightjacket preventing proper government wealth creation via easy, cheap credit.

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Incidentally, the US trade deficit didn’t begin in ernest until after Nixon cut the gold standard entirely. Before then, the US was worried if the deficit was just one or two billion dollars. After the great severance, the deficit basically expanded exponentially and is now a very grave danger to the very survival of the US as an economic force.

. The nastier interpretation of this move toward ending the dollar’s preeminence is, let there be no doubt, an anti-American one. It seems to be in the nature of things that the leading power in world affairs is always resented by countries further down the totem pole, even when that hegemon is fairly successful at distributing what economists term “public goods.”…

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Professor Kennedy is a Brit. This means, he can’t see clearly why the Chinese plan to teach him and all the invaders of China, a sharp, harsh lesson. The Chinese public fairly seethes with suppressed rage which sometimes focuses on the communist leadership but also is very intent on redressing past wrongs committed by foreigners. Especially, Britain, of course. The ‘hegemon’ has NEVER ‘fairly successfully…distributed….public goods’ to the Chinese. The hegemon has had one goal: to break up China and keep it broken apart and then, exploit the Chinese as labor and creative force.

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The US and UK are one of the major sellers of cheap debts. Both wish to suck down Chinese goods while telling China how to live, do politics and behave in the world. The US and UK merrily invade one country after another, butchering people left and right, at will. While demanding the Chinese not even patrol their own streets to prevent ethnic battles. The US and UK are in the middle of brutalizing barely armed peasants in the poorest countries on earth, while ordering China to stand aside and let peasants riot and burn cities run by China.

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The Chinese control their resentment but are not ignoring this double standard. They are hyper aware of it and will hammer us with it, in the future.

. ….So why not, then, push for a more equitable “basket of currencies” to grease the world’s commercial exchanges or, as a variant of that, try to arrange trade through the medium of the I.M.F.’s special drawing rights? .

It turns out that there all sorts of reasons why those SDRs cannot at present function as a common currency — that is, as something you would price a Toyota car in, or as a wad of bills you could withdraw from a cash machine. Their function is intergovernmental by nature and not at all like, say, Barclay’s foreign-currency departments. .

Maybe Professor Kennedy is going senile.  I can’t imagine why he can’t figure out what he is saying to himself.  The entire nature of using gold as the basis for export currency resolution was to prevent a country from debasing their currency so they could buy stuff, ‘on the cheap’ by handing out money that was fading in value faster than it could be spent!  Namely, governments can destroy their own currency, if they wish.  But they won’t be allowed to use it for trade because NO ONE WiLL ACCEPT IT!  Duh.

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So, why do countries accept US dollars?  Easy: they know they can turn around and use this money to suck out all US industries.  Because the US has to constantly drop the price of goods so we have no inflation because we owe more and more money. But the more we owe money, the more we have to import goods from cheaper labor venues so we can prevent inflation and this is a vicious cycle which Asia exploits to the hilt.  Asia knows that the more the US and UK go into debt, the more we have to import to keep prices from reflecting the inflation money printing is causing!  And Asia wins!

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When the US and UK cease taking on debt, this system collapses.  So our Asian rivals have real strategic interests in keeping this cycle going until they finally own all US as well as their own industrial systems.  Then, we are the slaves of the creditor nations that kept the US dollar on artificial respiration.

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This was well explained recently by the financial writer Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar of the Cato Institute, in Washington (see www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=10331). It should be noted that Aiyar is not like certain nationalist American commentators on this topic who seem to regard a reduction in the dollar’s world role as something like a threat to one’s masculinity. .

In fact, Aiyar cold-bloodedly argues that the dollar’s relative fall will much more likely come as a result of the continued growth of China’s G.D.P. and the future arrival of the yuan as a fully convertible currency — and not as a recourse by the governments of the world to some artificial I.M.F. instrument like the special drawing rights. With the yuan joining the euro, the yen and the dollar as the four biggest foreign currencies by far, there will be even less pressure and logic for substitution of the traditional means of money exchange.

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I am just astonished.  HAHAHA.  Good gods!  I keep saying, people can’t see in mirrors for some reason.  And here is proof.  The substitution of the yuan as the currency that resolves world trade deals will happen very suddenly.  Just like the US replaced the British pound.  That is, the old system runs SIMULTANEOUS with the new regime for a limited time.  When the old regime is forced to go bankrupt (the UK had to apply to the IMF to be rescued after less than 20 years of struggle after WWII) the new one rules triumphant.  This is why Nixon could cut the golden Gordian knot right at the same time the Brits gave up entirely on being a solvent empire.

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That is, there was no gold-based major currency to retreat to when the old Empire collapsed for good.  The US is limping along with a tattered dollar tottering on the edge of extinction only because the Chinese are methodological people.  That is, the 50 Year Plan is still operative and going quite well, despite the global collapse.

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This banking/trade collapse showed clearly that the Japanese method of only relying on exports is a total failure since it is aimed mostly at the dying US empire.  And the Chinese method, which imitates a lot of the Japanese system, is superior because the government of China is making China, not the US, grow stronger and spreading the wealth to the populace, not cutting wages like in the US, UK or Japan.  China displayed its power by not shrinking into negative territory during a global depression.  And taking off faster than competitors.  The US hopes for a 1-3% growth rate while China is betting on running a 9-15% growth rate!  The US and UK are rapidly deindustrializing while China is building industries like crazy.

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Not only that, look at this news:

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The Next Global Economy: US Postal service stop using dollar for its international transactions

The U.S. Postal Service is valuing its international transactions no longer in the U.S. dollar but in the accepted “currency” of the International Monetary Fund, Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). China, Russia, Brazil and India are calling for a new world currency due to our rising debt and falling dollar. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev pulled the newly minted gold Euro-dollar (valued at $3,900) from his pocket at the G-8 summit in July declaring it the future world currency.

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So, the SDRs that Kennedy mocks are being used by the US Postal Service?   Benjamin Franklin must be spinning in his grave!  He was very intent on designing a good US currency and a good postal service!  The gold Euro-dollar will be surpassed by a gold yuan that will not be for domestic circulation but for resolving trade issues.  Now, back to Kennedy’s NYT editorial:

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Op-Ed Contributor – The Dollar’s Fate – NYTimes.com

Overall, though, these academic papers make some basic sense. We live in a world right now where one single country, possessing only about 5 percent of the earth’s population, has roughly 20 percent of its G.D.P., spends almost 50 percent of its total defense expenditures, and freely prints bills that account for 65-70 percent of global foreign-currency reserves. .

And these reserves are time bombs.  That is, we no longer control our own currency.  The Japanese carry trade created immense seas of US dollars via moving lending from Japan to offshore British colonies and then into the US banking system.  This money is like damming the Yangtze River: if the dam breaks, this red ink money will flood world markets and the US will drown like a rat.

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If one believes in the economists’ theory of “convergence” — that is, the coming closer together of the product and income of companies, regions and countries — then the conclusion is clear: As China, India, South Korea, Brazil, Mexico and Indonesia all “catch up,” the American share of things will relatively shrink. Sooner or later — and this debate really is about “sooner” or “later,” not about “if” — we are going to witness another major shift in the global balances of power. .

Even in the shorter term, I guess I would be looking a little more keenly at the current distribution of my portfolios, just to ensure that when I had to come to “render my accounts,” I would not look awfully out of date. And, as an international author, I am happy to take my fees and royalties in many currencies, just to be on the safe side.

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After this mishmash mess of an editorial, the professor decides he wants to hold ‘many currencies’ so he won’t be destroyed when the entire thing collapses?  HAHAHA.  Some vote of confidence!  I will note, he doesn’t say he will buy gold.  If I were him, I would.  But I have almost no money to invest in anything right now, so I can only wish.  The global shift in power has already happened.  The US is a deep in debt nation that owes tremendous sums to rival trade powers who have many reasons to hate the US.  We can’t presume they want to make us happy.  They have no reason to presume this.

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Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis: Barney Frank Says Ron Paul’s Audit The Fed Bill Will Pass In October is good news, by the way.  I pray this bill passes intact and really does pry open the doors of the private Federal Reserve.  This is the first step in turning this private banking consortium into a public entity responsible to our leaders, not a free agent to do as it pleases.  Too many things in the US that should be public, are private and the other way around.  Private banks should hold US mortgages, not a government agency which holds over 80% of these things, just for example.

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Private banks should lend money to car buyers, not the US Treasury!  Etc.  And the Pentagon should not pay privateers to run wars, either.  This is a public matter, not a private one.  And above all, Congress should run for office on public money, not private money. This is to keep out corruption and bribery.

Email:

emeinel@fairpoint.net

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[Via http://emsnews.wordpress.com]

Friday, August 28, 2009

WND: Giving China Help With Cyber Warfare

Joseph Farah posted an item on his G2 Bulletin discussing the recent Obama Administration announcement of a review of U.S. export control regulations and the China factor.  Farah states that “[w]hile China plays the economic card, the national security risk to certain technology exports is going virtually unmentioned.”  While the discussion on reforming U.S. export control laws and regulations should be broader than just focusing on China, Farah is correct to point out that

Contrary to [White House Press Secretary] Gibbs’ comments that export controls are “rooted in the Cold War era of over 50 years ago,” they have undergone continuous review and liberalization despite increasing targeting of U.S. technology by such countries as China, Russia, Iran and even some western nations for their military.

The Chinese government uses export control “reform”  as a political and trade bludgeon to lobby Washington lawmakers.  The Validated End User program was not enough for China.  We will never do enough “reform” to mollify central planners in Beijing.

And, as the latest Annual Report to Congress on Foreign Economic Collection and Industrial Espionage states, it is not just China causing trouble. Folks in town should keep that in mind when waving, once again, the export reform talisman.

Read the complete Farah post, here.

[Via http://jasonpoblete.com]

Thursday, August 27, 2009

From a land without blogging....

Ok, so China would not allow me to publish my blogs, so this was saved from ‘the road.’

Apologies to my lack of updates of late, as you see I am currently in China, a land where  blogging is frowned upon, as is Facebook.  Thankfully, I have found a small window of opportunity into the land of WordPress, so I thought I would share with you some of my words to tide you all over until I return to the magnificence of Korea!!

So far, my travels have included 2 cases of the squirts, a stolen bicycle, a 5 hour bus trip hounded by squealing children playing ‘lets get a rise out of the foreigner,’ many incidences of locals wanting to ‘practise their English,’ being awoken in a hostel dorm at the crack of dawn by a gaggle of chattering old women, some of the worst airline food known to man, discovered possibly THE ugliest beaches in the world, and have been attacked by a million mosquitos.  The joys of travel.

On the upside, I spent my birthday wandering a 10 km stretch of the Great Wall, visited the extraordinary Terracotta Warriors, stood in Tianamen Square, enjoyed way too many beers with my fabulous friend Matt, met some delightful locals, and simply enjoyed being out and about in a strange land with not a care in the world.  Will post more in detail next week, but until then, greetings from the massive expanse of China.

[Via http://wrangsdoesasia.wordpress.com]