Furthermore, The Sanity Inspector claims:
What sort of technology would the Chinese need to clean their nassty coal-fired plants? Well, we use scrubbers, amongst other technologies. But the best solution would be, if the fucking hippies would let us, to drop coal and use nuclear plants. China will start to roll out nuclear plants soon, on a massive scale. From the Yahoo article The U.S. has made it clear that China must be part of a new climate package, and that without China there s no deal.
Before going any further, Christopher Logan wants to get this straight:
CBS, Helen Thomas Turn on Robert Gibbs~Video U.S. to Block Iran Sanctions at G8 Summit Happy 4Th of July! 1500 Shiite Muslims Gather in Dearborn
Nicole Symmonds is absolutely sure that:
If the Vatican had chosen to seek support from other diverse religious authorities and groups there might have been a chance for this whole thing to move from comedy to political thriller. But they expect everyone to cower when they roar, even if the voice is weary and weak.
Still being unsure, Glenn Reynolds asks:
Mike Silverman Milt Rosenberg MinuteMan (Maguire) Misha Mitch Berg Moira Breen Mudville Gazette N.Z. Bear NanoDot
In response, Christopher Logan claims:
Seytoff also read a brief statement from Kadeer: "The real cause of the problem lies with the Chinese government's policies toward the Uighurs. It's not alleged instigation by me or some outside forces."
While it may be true, Robert Blumen thinks:
Ovidiu: I never realized that so many English teachers are interested in Mises theories.... Nice to have you... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
Jim Newell remembers that:
Hard to Believe the Lovable Uighurs Could Be Involved in Terrorism [NRO/The Corner] Read More: Bermuda Uighurs Are Lazy Welfare Queens British Royal Empire Simply Does Not Care For... More Uighurs Sent To Another Fun Spot: Bermud... National Review's Andy McCarthy Has Theory Ab... Remainders: Leaps and Bounds 1:14 PM on Wed July 8 2009 By Jim Newell 4986 Views Tagged: andy mccarthy , bermuda , china , hu jintao , national review , we blame the uighurs , racism , uighurs
But Jim Newell says that's not all:
Hard to Believe the Lovable Uighurs Could Be Involved in Terrorism [NRO/The Corner] Read More: Bermuda Uighurs Are Lazy Welfare Queens British Royal Empire Simply Does Not Care For... More Uighurs Sent To Another Fun Spot: Bermud... National Review's Andy McCarthy Has Theory Ab... Remainders: Leaps and Bounds 1:14 PM on Wed July 8 2009 By Jim Newell 4986 Views Tagged: andy mccarthy , bermuda , china , hu jintao , national review , we blame the uighurs , racism , uighurs
WorldChanging Team intervenes and adds:
This huge employment potential has been seized on by Chinese advocates of a âgreen new dealâ, among them Jiang Gaoming, an environmental scientist and columnist for chinadialogue.net. Heâs researched the possibility of using locally generated renewable electricity to power rural vehicles, such as farm tractors and flatbed trucks. Most of the trips made by such vehicles are short, so well within the limits of battery ranges. Jiang calculates that making the switch would not only save carbon and reduce the countryâs pervasive air pollution, but could create literally millions of jobs.
The Huffington Post News Editors also takes into account the following fact:
Read More: China , Guangdong , Shaoguan , Uighur , Uighur China , Uighurs , Uyghurs , Xingiang Uighurs , Xinjiang Province , World News
bw considers that:
pathway peak oil performance enhancement personal aviation personalized medicine petabyte petaflop petaflops petawatt petrobank photonic propulsion
For this purpose, Stephen Greenwood suggests:
Topics Airline Reviews Airlines Airports Blogs Books Budget Travel Business Consumer Activism Cruises Ecotourism Festivals and Events Food and Drink Gadling Gear Review Gadling's Daily Deal Gadling's Most-Read Gear Hotels and Accommodations Internet Tools News Nightlife Photos Podcasts Stories Sunday Travel Sections Transportation Travel Deals Travel Health Travel Trivia Video What's in Your Pack? Women's Travel
Room for Debate intervenes and adds:
After the riot, something needs to be done and hope CCP leaders can get the message and get on with it.
In other words, Gabriel Madway puts it this way:
We ve heard reports of access issues and the service does appear to be running slowly. We re looking into the matter, a Facebook spokesman said via email, without elaborating.
But Robert Blumen has a different opinion:
Robert Blumen: bandsma: The Chinese government is well aware of their predicament. The one way they can deal with t... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
Furthermore, The Editors claims:
A group of Carlsbadistan s Pacific Ridge School ninth grade students are getting a little longer tour of China than they expected after 35 students and seven faculty members were quarantined in China while being tested for swine flu, according to a story in the North County Times . The group was in China for a 13-day educational tour that began June 2 when some of the students developed mild symptoms, including upset stomach and sniffles, according to school head Eileen Mullady . . . . On Thursday, in compliance with the Chinese government and World Health Organization protocols, the group was quarantined in its hotel. Parents are hoping to have the kids home sometime next week. [Link: North County Times ]
In contrast, Eric Kleefeld replies:
More of this, please. Soon. Really - where are the Democratic Party's spokespeople? Why do they cede the public sphere to the Republicans? Call pressers every time some Republican nutbag (redundant, I know) speaks to more than three people. And please hire someone to come up with catchy, "sticky" lines to sprinkle liberally through the presser. Trust me on this, it's useful. Posted by The Old Grouch June 11, 2009 2:32 PM | Reply | Permalink
Sources:
The Sanity Inspector Christopher Logan Nicole Symmonds Glenn Reynolds Robert Blumen Jim Newell WorldChanging Team The Huffington Post News Editors bw Stephen Greenwood Room for Debate Gabriel Madway The Editors Eric Kleefeld
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Saturday, August 15, 2009
China From: The Sanity Inspector Christopher Logan Nicole Symmonds Glenn Reynolds Robert Blumen Jim Newell WorldChanging Team The Huffington Post News Editors Bw Stephen Greenwood Room For Debate Gabriel Madway The Editors Eric Kleefeld /26707275
Friday, August 14, 2009
China From: Robert Percival DealBook Eric Savitz Christopher Logan Christine Steve Hynd Admin China Briefing Kris Colby Stendhal Room For Debate HDS Greenway Dummidumbwit Kirth Gerson Evan Osnos Jon Slattery /26690191
As a result of that, Robert Percival belives:
But I did perceive that there is greater awareness in China of the problem of climate change than there was last year when I was teaching in China as a Fulbright scholar. I gave guest lectures then at universities in several Chinese cities and found remarkably little understanding or concern about the problem among Chinese audiences. Climate change has not been high on the agenda of Chinese environmentalists in large part because the country has so many other immense environmental problems, including severe air and water pollution that pose basic threats to public health.
DealBook gives a bit of an idea about it:
Go to Article from Dow Jones Newswires »
While it may be true, Eric Savitz thinks:
Comments Report offensive comments to techtraderdaily@barrons.com it takes an investment banker to discuss how efficient business operations are, especially in a field in which he s probably never played. Lets see Wall St fix their own problems first. Comment by Anonymous - June 26, 2009 at 4:56 pm
Christopher Logan brings some great news:
China Arrests 1,434 After Deadly Muslim Riots Israeli Made South Park Like Cartoon of Islamic Te...
Christine notices:
Thunderbird is a vibrant ruby red with softer red shimmer. It applied easily and without a fuss. It s just such a rich shade of red that made me go ooh!
Steve Hynd objects:
New Arrivals*Gift Cards Subscribe To Newshoggers AF/PAK Feed Subscribe To AF/PAK Torture Feed Subscribe To Torture Feed
For this reason, admin says:
Future doctors start journey this week at Paul L. Foster School of - El Paso Times Health officials: Look out for home-prepared foods in Logan - Salt Lake Tribune
But admin says that's not all:
Health officials issue warning about unauthorized food vendors - Deseret News Traditional Chinese veterinary medicine can help seizures - Deseret News
China Briefing brings a word of caution:
Shanghai & Shenzhen Market Indexes
For this reason, Kris Colby says:
What should you be doing to protect your brand and supply chain from similar risks? Supplier Selection Process . Include detailed questions about safety practices, certifications, labor relations and other potential risks in the RFI. Your expectations should also be clearly documented for potential suppliers, so they know from the very beginning, how they ll be expected to conduct themselves if they want to earn and retain your business. It is now a common practice to introduce formal Risk Management / Supplier Performance Management programs in RFIs and RFPs.
Stendhal shows how it is done:
This resentment doesn t come without the HANS THINKING that THEY are the third-class citizens, seeing the Uighurs getting off scot-free every time. Except that since these are internal matters , the West doesn t get to hear about it.
In contrast, Room for Debate replies:
My relatives mostly see âoutside forcesâ as the main reason for the latest as well as other riots in Xinjiang in recent years.
While it may be true, HDS Greenway thinks:
Essay: The flight from Tehran Cameron Abadi - Worldview - June 29, 2009 19:42 ET A GlobalPost correspondent reflects on why Iran will never be the same.
As a result of that, dummidumbwit belives:
Convair B-58 Hustler This is Big Palin emotes and if she does it right Logic is irrelevant Absolutely Fabulous: Edina & Patsy in Court
As Stendhal says:
Horton wrote his article in response to Andy McCarthy at the National Review, who has labeled the Uighurs as terrorists. The sooner we begin seeing the bogeyman everywhere, the more rare our friends become.
As Kirth Gerson says:
One of the problems is that recently the Chinese government has been rolling back some of those things. For one thing, they are cutting back on local language education, and for another they are tearing down old homes, etc. I think the idea of tearing down a house that's been lived in by the same family for 500 years or whatever is kind of tragic.
Evan Osnos brings a word of caution:
The New Yorker Online Only IN THIS ISSUE Table of Contents for July 6 13, 2009. Digital Edition: Browse the issue online. MOST POPULAR Atul Gawande: McAllen, Texas, and costly health care. The Book Bench: The thousand-year novel. Laura Secor: Silence in Tehran. CARTOONS Slide Show from the current issue. Ten-second animations of classic cartoons.
Having that in mind, Room for Debate wonders:
Tibetans and Uighurs think that their nations, though officially viewed as part of China, should rightfully be independent.
While it may be true, Jon Slattery thinks:
Don t leave Strand News stranded How not to miss a scoop the morning after EU countries failing to respect journalists righ...
Sources:
Robert Percival DealBook Eric Savitz Christopher Logan Christine Steve Hynd admin China Briefing Kris Colby Stendhal Room for Debate HDS Greenway dummidumbwit Kirth Gerson Evan Osnos Jon Slattery
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
But I did perceive that there is greater awareness in China of the problem of climate change than there was last year when I was teaching in China as a Fulbright scholar. I gave guest lectures then at universities in several Chinese cities and found remarkably little understanding or concern about the problem among Chinese audiences. Climate change has not been high on the agenda of Chinese environmentalists in large part because the country has so many other immense environmental problems, including severe air and water pollution that pose basic threats to public health.
DealBook gives a bit of an idea about it:
Go to Article from Dow Jones Newswires »
While it may be true, Eric Savitz thinks:
Comments Report offensive comments to techtraderdaily@barrons.com it takes an investment banker to discuss how efficient business operations are, especially in a field in which he s probably never played. Lets see Wall St fix their own problems first. Comment by Anonymous - June 26, 2009 at 4:56 pm
Christopher Logan brings some great news:
China Arrests 1,434 After Deadly Muslim Riots Israeli Made South Park Like Cartoon of Islamic Te...
Christine notices:
Thunderbird is a vibrant ruby red with softer red shimmer. It applied easily and without a fuss. It s just such a rich shade of red that made me go ooh!
Steve Hynd objects:
New Arrivals*Gift Cards Subscribe To Newshoggers AF/PAK Feed Subscribe To AF/PAK Torture Feed Subscribe To Torture Feed
For this reason, admin says:
Future doctors start journey this week at Paul L. Foster School of - El Paso Times Health officials: Look out for home-prepared foods in Logan - Salt Lake Tribune
But admin says that's not all:
Health officials issue warning about unauthorized food vendors - Deseret News Traditional Chinese veterinary medicine can help seizures - Deseret News
China Briefing brings a word of caution:
Shanghai & Shenzhen Market Indexes
For this reason, Kris Colby says:
What should you be doing to protect your brand and supply chain from similar risks? Supplier Selection Process . Include detailed questions about safety practices, certifications, labor relations and other potential risks in the RFI. Your expectations should also be clearly documented for potential suppliers, so they know from the very beginning, how they ll be expected to conduct themselves if they want to earn and retain your business. It is now a common practice to introduce formal Risk Management / Supplier Performance Management programs in RFIs and RFPs.
Stendhal shows how it is done:
This resentment doesn t come without the HANS THINKING that THEY are the third-class citizens, seeing the Uighurs getting off scot-free every time. Except that since these are internal matters , the West doesn t get to hear about it.
In contrast, Room for Debate replies:
My relatives mostly see âoutside forcesâ as the main reason for the latest as well as other riots in Xinjiang in recent years.
While it may be true, HDS Greenway thinks:
Essay: The flight from Tehran Cameron Abadi - Worldview - June 29, 2009 19:42 ET A GlobalPost correspondent reflects on why Iran will never be the same.
As a result of that, dummidumbwit belives:
Convair B-58 Hustler This is Big Palin emotes and if she does it right Logic is irrelevant Absolutely Fabulous: Edina & Patsy in Court
As Stendhal says:
Horton wrote his article in response to Andy McCarthy at the National Review, who has labeled the Uighurs as terrorists. The sooner we begin seeing the bogeyman everywhere, the more rare our friends become.
As Kirth Gerson says:
One of the problems is that recently the Chinese government has been rolling back some of those things. For one thing, they are cutting back on local language education, and for another they are tearing down old homes, etc. I think the idea of tearing down a house that's been lived in by the same family for 500 years or whatever is kind of tragic.
Evan Osnos brings a word of caution:
The New Yorker Online Only IN THIS ISSUE Table of Contents for July 6 13, 2009. Digital Edition: Browse the issue online. MOST POPULAR Atul Gawande: McAllen, Texas, and costly health care. The Book Bench: The thousand-year novel. Laura Secor: Silence in Tehran. CARTOONS Slide Show from the current issue. Ten-second animations of classic cartoons.
Having that in mind, Room for Debate wonders:
Tibetans and Uighurs think that their nations, though officially viewed as part of China, should rightfully be independent.
While it may be true, Jon Slattery thinks:
Don t leave Strand News stranded How not to miss a scoop the morning after EU countries failing to respect journalists righ...
Sources:
Robert Percival DealBook Eric Savitz Christopher Logan Christine Steve Hynd admin China Briefing Kris Colby Stendhal Room for Debate HDS Greenway dummidumbwit Kirth Gerson Evan Osnos Jon Slattery
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Thursday, August 13, 2009
China From: David Sirota WorldChanging Team Robert Blumen Carter Wood Lei TANG Bob Johnson Bw Derek Markham Admin China Briefing Madeline Earp/Asia Research Associate Glenn Reynolds John Reese Robert Mahoney/Deputy Director Jaclyn Belczyk Brent Csutoras /26653666
David Sirota explains:
What a huge trip! ( 0.00 / 0 ) Thanks for these stories. One knows that the sky is big, but sitting under it some dark night and seeing more suns than you can count gives one pause. Experiencing the size of China, and the mass of people is different from knowing its a big country with a lot of people. Change "We must break up the banks and never again let them get so big that they distort our politics and take down the economy. by: HousesofProgress @ Tue Jul 14, 2009 at 10:09:19 AM CDT
WorldChanging Team is absolutely sure that:
Mark ToveyMatthew WaxmanMicki KrimmelMike MillikinMindy LubberMorgan GreensethNancy ScolaNicole-Anne Boyer
Robert Blumen says it all comes down to this:
Journals Libertarian Papers Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics Journal of Libertarian Studies Mises Review Free Market Austrian Economics Newsletter Left & Right Review of Austrian Economics
Robert Blumen has another idea:
Published: July 12, 2009 5:54 PM Robert Blumen Sorry for all the proofreading errors. I think that I've fixed most of them now.
Carter Wood does a quick recap:
BizCentral.orgBlogTrackBlogWrite for CEOsBluey BlogBOB -- Business Opportunities BlogBoingBoingBusiness Pundit
Lei TANG scans the other's answers and reply:
Recent Comments Dan Butterfield on Unicom Starts 3G Commercial Trials, No Timetable for iPhone Danica on MIIT Announces Q1, '08 Internet Stats Lisa on Taking The Bus With Handset Mobile Payment Dan Butterfield on Taking The Bus With Handset Mobile Payment Lisa on Unicom Speeds 3G Release, iPhone Contract Dan Butterfield on Unicom Speeds 3G Release, iPhone Contract myspace design on The Killer Application for 3G Justin Springham on Selon un Analyst: 1M illegal iPhones on China Mobile Network Dan Butterfield on China Mobile Opens Second TD-SCDMA Tender Dan Butterfield on Chinese Telecom Operators Announce November Statistics
Bob Johnson is rather skeptical:
June 25, 2009 3:19 PM Bob Johnson said... Lol Anna, I liked Bruce Lee as well. I m hoping I won t get lost too soon, I like to wander off, we shall see what happens,lol.
bw intervenes and adds:
A similar plant, also based on domestic CPR-1000 pressurized water reactors, is being built at Ningde in Fujian province. The first two units there had first concrete in February and November 2008, the second two are set for 15 November this year and July 2010.
Derek Markham comes with a new idea:
Due to the impact of global financial crisis, people are all talking about green and sustainable development. Enterprises and government at all levels are showing more enthusiasm for the development of solar for power generation, and the Chinese government is now considering rolling out more stimulus policies for the development of solar power. Zhang
In other words, admin puts it this way:
Also, bear in mind that the US has had to beg the Russians to allow them to transport military cargo via Russia(announced just days ago), explicitly because the Pakistan route is too hot, too dangerous.
China Briefing intervenes and adds:
The agreement was formalized last Monday by Hong Kong Monetary Authority Chief Executive Joseph Yam and the Peopleâs Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan.
Before going any further, Madeline Earp/Asia Research Associate wants to get this straight:
If you think this is reminiscent of Tibet , you aren't the only one. Separatism, the catchall government explanation for unrest in Xinjiang as well as Tibet , gains currency from anti-terror rhetoric when used with reminders of the Uighur community's Muslim identity. And the most depressingly familiar aspect of the media coverage so far is the rhetoric wheeled out by Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily today, under the title "Unveiled Rebiya Kadeer: a Uighur Dalai Lama."
bw considers that:
materials meat factories mechanical nanotechnology media equivalence medicine memristor MEMS metagenomics metamaterials metananocircuitry methane methylome
But Glenn Reynolds has a different opinion:
Hit and Run Howard Kurtz Hugh Hewitt Indian Country Inside Higher Ed. Jim Geraghty Josh Marshall
John Reese is absolutely sure that:
Whatever you think of Soros' politics, his investing track record is impressive (his hedge fund even gained 8% in last year's horrific climate). Given that track record and the fact that 2009 growth estimates for China are rising -- the World Bank expects 7.2% growth; others project even more -- I decided to run a bunch of Chinese stocks through my
Robert Mahoney/Deputy Director brings a word of caution:
Whatever the answers to these questions, concerted opposition means that the 40 million PCs sold each year in China won't come with a spy inside.
In other words, Jaclyn Belczyk puts it this way:
not properly registered [AP report]. A lawyer for Gongmeng said that the research center was part of Gongmeng, which is properly registered. A statement from Gongmeng called the Civil Affairs Bureau's actions "illegal." Also this week, the Chinese government
Brent Csutoras brings some great news:
Jake Rocheleau on July 12th, 2009 9:38 pm Is there a proxy anyone knows that goes through a Chinese IP? I want to see this error page that requires a password
Sources:
David Sirota WorldChanging Team Robert Blumen Carter Wood Lei TANG Bob Johnson bw Derek Markham admin China Briefing Madeline Earp/Asia Research Associate Glenn Reynolds John Reese Robert Mahoney/Deputy Director Jaclyn Belczyk Brent Csutoras
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
What a huge trip! ( 0.00 / 0 ) Thanks for these stories. One knows that the sky is big, but sitting under it some dark night and seeing more suns than you can count gives one pause. Experiencing the size of China, and the mass of people is different from knowing its a big country with a lot of people. Change "We must break up the banks and never again let them get so big that they distort our politics and take down the economy. by: HousesofProgress @ Tue Jul 14, 2009 at 10:09:19 AM CDT
WorldChanging Team is absolutely sure that:
Mark ToveyMatthew WaxmanMicki KrimmelMike MillikinMindy LubberMorgan GreensethNancy ScolaNicole-Anne Boyer
Robert Blumen says it all comes down to this:
Journals Libertarian Papers Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics Journal of Libertarian Studies Mises Review Free Market Austrian Economics Newsletter Left & Right Review of Austrian Economics
Robert Blumen has another idea:
Published: July 12, 2009 5:54 PM Robert Blumen Sorry for all the proofreading errors. I think that I've fixed most of them now.
Carter Wood does a quick recap:
BizCentral.orgBlogTrackBlogWrite for CEOsBluey BlogBOB -- Business Opportunities BlogBoingBoingBusiness Pundit
Lei TANG scans the other's answers and reply:
Recent Comments Dan Butterfield on Unicom Starts 3G Commercial Trials, No Timetable for iPhone Danica on MIIT Announces Q1, '08 Internet Stats Lisa on Taking The Bus With Handset Mobile Payment Dan Butterfield on Taking The Bus With Handset Mobile Payment Lisa on Unicom Speeds 3G Release, iPhone Contract Dan Butterfield on Unicom Speeds 3G Release, iPhone Contract myspace design on The Killer Application for 3G Justin Springham on Selon un Analyst: 1M illegal iPhones on China Mobile Network Dan Butterfield on China Mobile Opens Second TD-SCDMA Tender Dan Butterfield on Chinese Telecom Operators Announce November Statistics
Bob Johnson is rather skeptical:
June 25, 2009 3:19 PM Bob Johnson said... Lol Anna, I liked Bruce Lee as well. I m hoping I won t get lost too soon, I like to wander off, we shall see what happens,lol.
bw intervenes and adds:
A similar plant, also based on domestic CPR-1000 pressurized water reactors, is being built at Ningde in Fujian province. The first two units there had first concrete in February and November 2008, the second two are set for 15 November this year and July 2010.
Derek Markham comes with a new idea:
Due to the impact of global financial crisis, people are all talking about green and sustainable development. Enterprises and government at all levels are showing more enthusiasm for the development of solar for power generation, and the Chinese government is now considering rolling out more stimulus policies for the development of solar power. Zhang
In other words, admin puts it this way:
Also, bear in mind that the US has had to beg the Russians to allow them to transport military cargo via Russia(announced just days ago), explicitly because the Pakistan route is too hot, too dangerous.
China Briefing intervenes and adds:
The agreement was formalized last Monday by Hong Kong Monetary Authority Chief Executive Joseph Yam and the Peopleâs Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan.
Before going any further, Madeline Earp/Asia Research Associate wants to get this straight:
If you think this is reminiscent of Tibet , you aren't the only one. Separatism, the catchall government explanation for unrest in Xinjiang as well as Tibet , gains currency from anti-terror rhetoric when used with reminders of the Uighur community's Muslim identity. And the most depressingly familiar aspect of the media coverage so far is the rhetoric wheeled out by Communist Party mouthpiece People's Daily today, under the title "Unveiled Rebiya Kadeer: a Uighur Dalai Lama."
bw considers that:
materials meat factories mechanical nanotechnology media equivalence medicine memristor MEMS metagenomics metamaterials metananocircuitry methane methylome
But Glenn Reynolds has a different opinion:
Hit and Run Howard Kurtz Hugh Hewitt Indian Country Inside Higher Ed. Jim Geraghty Josh Marshall
John Reese is absolutely sure that:
Whatever you think of Soros' politics, his investing track record is impressive (his hedge fund even gained 8% in last year's horrific climate). Given that track record and the fact that 2009 growth estimates for China are rising -- the World Bank expects 7.2% growth; others project even more -- I decided to run a bunch of Chinese stocks through my
Robert Mahoney/Deputy Director brings a word of caution:
Whatever the answers to these questions, concerted opposition means that the 40 million PCs sold each year in China won't come with a spy inside.
In other words, Jaclyn Belczyk puts it this way:
not properly registered [AP report]. A lawyer for Gongmeng said that the research center was part of Gongmeng, which is properly registered. A statement from Gongmeng called the Civil Affairs Bureau's actions "illegal." Also this week, the Chinese government
Brent Csutoras brings some great news:
Jake Rocheleau on July 12th, 2009 9:38 pm Is there a proxy anyone knows that goes through a Chinese IP? I want to see this error page that requires a password
Sources:
David Sirota WorldChanging Team Robert Blumen Carter Wood Lei TANG Bob Johnson bw Derek Markham admin China Briefing Madeline Earp/Asia Research Associate Glenn Reynolds John Reese Robert Mahoney/Deputy Director Jaclyn Belczyk Brent Csutoras
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
China From: Thortrollhammer@gmail.com Brad DeLong Jim Newell Rand EOsnap Ed Crooks Amatera Louie China Briefing Robert Blumen Kirth Gerson Jon Slattery Bw Minky Worden Josie Garthwaite /26653656
thortrollhammer@gmail.com comes with a new idea:
Domestic TerrorEconomyElectionsEnergyEnvironmentalismEurope: TerrorEuropean UnionFar EastFatwa This!flu
Brad DeLong thinks about it:
Brad DeLong on July 16, 2009 at 09:11 AM in Economics , Economics: Federal Reserve , Economics: Fiscal Policy , Economics: Macro | Permalink
In addition to this, Jim Newell states:
imissopus says at 1:26 pm, July 8th, 2009 - Reply Wait, hang on, I m trying to get this straight. When Muslims in Iran riot against political oppression we need to support them and bomb the shit out of their leaders, but when Muslims in China riot against much more severe political repression in their country, they are terrorists who should all be shipped to Gitmo and waterboarded forever? I haz a confuzed. Perhaps the wingnuts could put together some sort of flowchart explaining which repressed Muslim populations I can support and which I should hope to see die in a fire.
However, Rand states that:
All services (web, FTP, mail, etc.) are not available to users from Mainland China. Messages from and to mail servers located in Mainland China will not be delivered.
For example, EOsnap considers:
Tag Cloud Africa Agriculture Algal Bloom Antarctica Arabian Sea Area of convection Argentina Atlantic Ocean Australia Bay of Bengal Brazil California Canada Caspian Sea China Deforestation Dust Storm Egypt Europe Fires France Gulf of Mexico Hurricane Ice India Indian Ocean Iran Italy Japan Kazakhstan La Reunion Libya Madagascar Mediterranean Sea Mexico Morocco Mozambique Channel Myanmar Pacific Ocean Persian Gulf Philippines Phytoplankton Queensland Red Sea Russia Sahara Desert Salt Lake Saudi Arabia Sediments Sicily South America South China Sea Spain Sudan Tropical Cyclone Tropical Storm Turkey United Kingdom USA Volcano
But Ed Crooks has a different opinion:
Perhaps the biggest obstacle is that two sets of network connections will have to be built. One, going to China, will be expensive but achievable. The Chinese are keen and have already started putting up pylons heading towards the Russian border. But RusHydro will also need a high-voltage network to transmit its power to the markets of western Russia. As Mr Zubankin points out:
In addition to this, Amatera states:
those guys, but hopefully the enaction of this new law will curtail the more malicious brand of online crooks: those that hack and ravage player accounts. Even if you haven t experienced it yourself, we almost all know someone who s fallen victim to the practice, and we understand how much of a pain in the butt it can be to get things squared away again.
However, louie states that:
November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008
For this reason, China Briefing says:
« Pepsi Opens its First Overseas Green Plant in Chongqing Hong Kong, Mainland Businesses to Use Yuan for Trade Settlement
Ed Crooks brings a word of caution:
In emerging economies, however, the position can be very different. Where France and Germany have used up about 95 per cent of their hydro power potential, and the US 82 per cent, Russia has used just 19 per cent of its potential. In Russia s far east, including east Siberia, the scope for development is even greater. That creates a huge opportunity to export Russian electricity to China. There are, however, some daunting challenges to be overcome.
For this reason, Robert Blumen says:
bandsma: Mr. Fox, Russia grew under Stalin because previously the country was significantly under invested i... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
Kirth Gerson gives a bit of an idea about it:
After thinking about this for a bit, I do wonder how much the history of the one child policy has contributed to social unrest. As far as I remember the trend in China was that males outnumbered females by a not insignificant margin. According to the CIA World Factbook it's something like 1.13 : 1 for people aged 0-15. posted by delmoi at 10:02 AM on July 18 [ 1 favorite ]
As Jon Slattery says:
Flippin heck who s miserable now? Newsnight s Michael Crick: Political journalists ... Guardian Gordon Brown intro in poor taste?
But bw has a different opinion:
DNA DNA computers dna manufacturing DNA nanoarray DNA nanotechnology DNA origami DNA synthesis domes double lithography
As a result of that, Minky Worden belives:
Minky Worden Media Director of Human Rights Watch Posted: June 27, 2009 12:13 PM BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts Bloggers' Index
Josie Garthwaite thinks that the problem is:
Much work remains to be done for Pike s forecast to prove on target. Public and workplace charge points involve so many different groups (utilities, billing system developers, city regulators, hardware companies, automakers) that coordinating them all represents a huge job or, for the companies that, like IBM , want to help manage the coordination of this multibillion-dollar buildout, a potential opportunity.
Sources:
thortrollhammer@gmail.com Brad DeLong Jim Newell Rand EOsnap Ed Crooks Amatera louie China Briefing Robert Blumen Kirth Gerson Jon Slattery bw Minky Worden Josie Garthwaite
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Domestic TerrorEconomyElectionsEnergyEnvironmentalismEurope: TerrorEuropean UnionFar EastFatwa This!flu
Brad DeLong thinks about it:
Brad DeLong on July 16, 2009 at 09:11 AM in Economics , Economics: Federal Reserve , Economics: Fiscal Policy , Economics: Macro | Permalink
In addition to this, Jim Newell states:
imissopus says at 1:26 pm, July 8th, 2009 - Reply Wait, hang on, I m trying to get this straight. When Muslims in Iran riot against political oppression we need to support them and bomb the shit out of their leaders, but when Muslims in China riot against much more severe political repression in their country, they are terrorists who should all be shipped to Gitmo and waterboarded forever? I haz a confuzed. Perhaps the wingnuts could put together some sort of flowchart explaining which repressed Muslim populations I can support and which I should hope to see die in a fire.
However, Rand states that:
All services (web, FTP, mail, etc.) are not available to users from Mainland China. Messages from and to mail servers located in Mainland China will not be delivered.
For example, EOsnap considers:
Tag Cloud Africa Agriculture Algal Bloom Antarctica Arabian Sea Area of convection Argentina Atlantic Ocean Australia Bay of Bengal Brazil California Canada Caspian Sea China Deforestation Dust Storm Egypt Europe Fires France Gulf of Mexico Hurricane Ice India Indian Ocean Iran Italy Japan Kazakhstan La Reunion Libya Madagascar Mediterranean Sea Mexico Morocco Mozambique Channel Myanmar Pacific Ocean Persian Gulf Philippines Phytoplankton Queensland Red Sea Russia Sahara Desert Salt Lake Saudi Arabia Sediments Sicily South America South China Sea Spain Sudan Tropical Cyclone Tropical Storm Turkey United Kingdom USA Volcano
But Ed Crooks has a different opinion:
Perhaps the biggest obstacle is that two sets of network connections will have to be built. One, going to China, will be expensive but achievable. The Chinese are keen and have already started putting up pylons heading towards the Russian border. But RusHydro will also need a high-voltage network to transmit its power to the markets of western Russia. As Mr Zubankin points out:
In addition to this, Amatera states:
those guys, but hopefully the enaction of this new law will curtail the more malicious brand of online crooks: those that hack and ravage player accounts. Even if you haven t experienced it yourself, we almost all know someone who s fallen victim to the practice, and we understand how much of a pain in the butt it can be to get things squared away again.
However, louie states that:
November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008
For this reason, China Briefing says:
« Pepsi Opens its First Overseas Green Plant in Chongqing Hong Kong, Mainland Businesses to Use Yuan for Trade Settlement
Ed Crooks brings a word of caution:
In emerging economies, however, the position can be very different. Where France and Germany have used up about 95 per cent of their hydro power potential, and the US 82 per cent, Russia has used just 19 per cent of its potential. In Russia s far east, including east Siberia, the scope for development is even greater. That creates a huge opportunity to export Russian electricity to China. There are, however, some daunting challenges to be overcome.
For this reason, Robert Blumen says:
bandsma: Mr. Fox, Russia grew under Stalin because previously the country was significantly under invested i... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
Kirth Gerson gives a bit of an idea about it:
After thinking about this for a bit, I do wonder how much the history of the one child policy has contributed to social unrest. As far as I remember the trend in China was that males outnumbered females by a not insignificant margin. According to the CIA World Factbook it's something like 1.13 : 1 for people aged 0-15. posted by delmoi at 10:02 AM on July 18 [ 1 favorite ]
As Jon Slattery says:
Flippin heck who s miserable now? Newsnight s Michael Crick: Political journalists ... Guardian Gordon Brown intro in poor taste?
But bw has a different opinion:
DNA DNA computers dna manufacturing DNA nanoarray DNA nanotechnology DNA origami DNA synthesis domes double lithography
As a result of that, Minky Worden belives:
Minky Worden Media Director of Human Rights Watch Posted: June 27, 2009 12:13 PM BIO Become a Fan Get Email Alerts Bloggers' Index
Josie Garthwaite thinks that the problem is:
Much work remains to be done for Pike s forecast to prove on target. Public and workplace charge points involve so many different groups (utilities, billing system developers, city regulators, hardware companies, automakers) that coordinating them all represents a huge job or, for the companies that, like IBM , want to help manage the coordination of this multibillion-dollar buildout, a potential opportunity.
Sources:
thortrollhammer@gmail.com Brad DeLong Jim Newell Rand EOsnap Ed Crooks Amatera louie China Briefing Robert Blumen Kirth Gerson Jon Slattery bw Minky Worden Josie Garthwaite
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
China From: Tom Usher TIZ Tyler Cowen Bw Room For Debate Michelle Collins Suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) CCT Holly Bailey Christopher Logan Jon Slattery Confidential Reporter /26653655
While it may be true, Tom Usher thinks:
Donations: 29 received Thomas U, Burien: 5.00 Thomas U, Burien: 22.67 Comment: Covering Bank of America\\\'s $22 in monthly service charges & PayPal\\\'s transaction fee (2.9% + $0.30) for this transaction
Tom Usher comes with a new idea:
EXCERPTS: SMALL-C COMMUNISM THE VOLUMES MAIN VOLUME SUPPLEMENTAL VOLUME SITE HOME PAGE (NOT THE "BLOG" HOME PAGE) THE PLAN: THE CHRISTIAN COMMONS
TIZ points out another thing aside from that:
Possibly related posts: (automatically generated) What if the Uighurs were Christian rather than Muslim? The Uighurs and China: lost and found nation Uighurs claim 400 killed in unrest in western China Scores Killed in Ethnic Riots in China-Washington Post
But Tyler Cowen says that's not all:
Our Guests July S M T W Th F St 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Furthermore, bw claims:
Bruce Bueno de Mesquita Predictions on Iran Update on China and South Africa Nuclear Reactor C... Nanoscale Might Allow Fairly Efficient Maxwell Dem...
Room for Debate is absolutely sure that:
Are there government policies on minority regions responsible for increasing ethnic tensions? Surprisingly (or not so surprisingly for someone familiar with Americaâs ethnic politics), some of my relatives fault the governmentâs preferential policies for helping to enhance ethnic identity and entitlement for minorities. Uighurs with disciplinary problems or criminal offenses are treated leniently, they say. In matters of employment, appointment and promotion in the public sector, Uighurs may be preferred over (perceived) more qualified Han candidates. âReverse discriminationâ in college admissions and population policies are other areas of Han complaints. While Han Chinese can have only one child, Uighurs receive honorary and monetary rewards for stopping at three, along with yearly bonuses. Whether legitimate or not, such complaints make it difficult for Han Chinese to appreciate Uighur grievances.
Michelle Collins brings more details:
So take heed, readers:Â Not only are their kids smarter and soon to be richer than ours, but now their animals are gayer?! Come on, America, we re better than this.
bw brings some great news:
The Best Ways to Lower Healthcare Costs by Enablin... Progress in Understanding Calorie Restricted Life ... Growing evidence of liquid salt water ocean on Sat...
bw does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
materials meat factories mechanical nanotechnology media equivalence medicine memristor MEMS metagenomics metamaterials metananocircuitry methane methylome
suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) can't forget that:
Net Nanny FolliesNewspapersOil, Energy and ResourcesOlympic Diary â" Beijing 2008Olympic NightsOpinion
CCT points out another thing aside from that:
News CategoriesSelect CategoryBeijing Auto WorksBeijing HyundaiBeijing-BenzBesturnBrilliance/Zhonghua Auto
Holly Bailey brings more details:
Statue of Liberty: Crown tickets sold out until September Readers' best Italy photos Worth reading: Dillinger's Chicago tourist trail Disney unveils faux Obama on the Fourth of July "Barstool-style" seating on a Chinese airline?
Christopher Logan objects:
Sarkozy Says Burqas are not welcome in France Philippines:Christians Attacked 1 Dead, 32 Hurt UK Prison:Gives Muslims Cells With no Non-Believer...
Jon Slattery is absolutely sure that:
Peter Preston: Digital Britain report shows the w... Now the Indy says: MPs don t pay for dinner
Similarly, Confidential Reporter adds:
Atlas Shrugs Blackfive Burma Watch Chief Asia Inspector China-Alberta China Company Startup Guide China Crossroads
As suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) says:
2009 Mar 152009 Mar 082009 Mar 012009 Feb 222009 Feb 15
Sources:
Tom Usher TIZ Tyler Cowen bw Room for Debate Michelle Collins suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) CCT Holly Bailey Christopher Logan Jon Slattery Confidential Reporter
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Donations: 29 received Thomas U, Burien: 5.00 Thomas U, Burien: 22.67 Comment: Covering Bank of America\\\'s $22 in monthly service charges & PayPal\\\'s transaction fee (2.9% + $0.30) for this transaction
Tom Usher comes with a new idea:
EXCERPTS: SMALL-C COMMUNISM THE VOLUMES MAIN VOLUME SUPPLEMENTAL VOLUME SITE HOME PAGE (NOT THE "BLOG" HOME PAGE) THE PLAN: THE CHRISTIAN COMMONS
TIZ points out another thing aside from that:
Possibly related posts: (automatically generated) What if the Uighurs were Christian rather than Muslim? The Uighurs and China: lost and found nation Uighurs claim 400 killed in unrest in western China Scores Killed in Ethnic Riots in China-Washington Post
But Tyler Cowen says that's not all:
Our Guests July S M T W Th F St 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Furthermore, bw claims:
Bruce Bueno de Mesquita Predictions on Iran Update on China and South Africa Nuclear Reactor C... Nanoscale Might Allow Fairly Efficient Maxwell Dem...
Room for Debate is absolutely sure that:
Are there government policies on minority regions responsible for increasing ethnic tensions? Surprisingly (or not so surprisingly for someone familiar with Americaâs ethnic politics), some of my relatives fault the governmentâs preferential policies for helping to enhance ethnic identity and entitlement for minorities. Uighurs with disciplinary problems or criminal offenses are treated leniently, they say. In matters of employment, appointment and promotion in the public sector, Uighurs may be preferred over (perceived) more qualified Han candidates. âReverse discriminationâ in college admissions and population policies are other areas of Han complaints. While Han Chinese can have only one child, Uighurs receive honorary and monetary rewards for stopping at three, along with yearly bonuses. Whether legitimate or not, such complaints make it difficult for Han Chinese to appreciate Uighur grievances.
Michelle Collins brings more details:
So take heed, readers:Â Not only are their kids smarter and soon to be richer than ours, but now their animals are gayer?! Come on, America, we re better than this.
bw brings some great news:
The Best Ways to Lower Healthcare Costs by Enablin... Progress in Understanding Calorie Restricted Life ... Growing evidence of liquid salt water ocean on Sat...
bw does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
materials meat factories mechanical nanotechnology media equivalence medicine memristor MEMS metagenomics metamaterials metananocircuitry methane methylome
suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) can't forget that:
Net Nanny FolliesNewspapersOil, Energy and ResourcesOlympic Diary â" Beijing 2008Olympic NightsOpinion
CCT points out another thing aside from that:
News CategoriesSelect CategoryBeijing Auto WorksBeijing HyundaiBeijing-BenzBesturnBrilliance/Zhonghua Auto
Holly Bailey brings more details:
Statue of Liberty: Crown tickets sold out until September Readers' best Italy photos Worth reading: Dillinger's Chicago tourist trail Disney unveils faux Obama on the Fourth of July "Barstool-style" seating on a Chinese airline?
Christopher Logan objects:
Sarkozy Says Burqas are not welcome in France Philippines:Christians Attacked 1 Dead, 32 Hurt UK Prison:Gives Muslims Cells With no Non-Believer...
Jon Slattery is absolutely sure that:
Peter Preston: Digital Britain report shows the w... Now the Indy says: MPs don t pay for dinner
Similarly, Confidential Reporter adds:
Atlas Shrugs Blackfive Burma Watch Chief Asia Inspector China-Alberta China Company Startup Guide China Crossroads
As suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) says:
2009 Mar 152009 Mar 082009 Mar 012009 Feb 222009 Feb 15
Sources:
Tom Usher TIZ Tyler Cowen bw Room for Debate Michelle Collins suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) CCT Holly Bailey Christopher Logan Jon Slattery Confidential Reporter
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
China From: WEN LIAO Louie Edward Harrison Idea Of The Day Tim Collard Room For Debate Kirth Gerson HDS Greenway Admin Christopher Logan David Sirota Smith@newamerica.net Bw Suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) Jon /26220732
WEN LIAO does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
See All Photo Essays Who Are the Uighurs? The Least Free Places on Earth July/Aug 2009 Think Again Asia s Rise Feature The Death of Macho Special Report The Failed States Index See Entire Issue Preview Digital Edition
louie has another idea:
Monthly Archives June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008
Edward Harrison brings a word of caution:
The Savings Glut. Controversy Guaranteed. by Brad Setser 2009-06-30 11:58:43 China's Loan Growth isn't Boosting my Confidence in China's "Green Shoots" by Michael Pettis 2009-06-30 11:41:51
Idea of the Day is rather skeptical:
July 14, 2009, 6:23 am The Case for Piecemeal Lawmaking Today s idea: History suggests that piecemeal reform is better than going for the whole legislative enchilada, a columnist says and that goes for most of the Democrats domestic agenda.
For this purpose, Tim Collard suggests:
Unfortunately, wicked post-colonialist ideas of press freedom may have tripped them up, as the Namibians have arrested three people over a corruption scam involving a company managed by Hu Haifeng, the son of President Hu Jintao , and it has got all over the local media (as well as The Daily Telegraph ). It seems that Chinese government finance for airport security scanners has been diverted to a dodgy company offering âconsultancy servicesâ, whose three leading figures, two Namibians and a Chinese, are now in the slammer.
Room for Debate scans the other's answers and reply:
Terrorists Fan the Flames Rohan Gunaratna is a professor and head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. His books include âInside Al Qaeda: Global Network of Terror.â
Kirth Gerson explains:
Even where there have been ostensibly laudable programmes by the central government to preserve and promote non-Han language and traditional culture, it is tainted by being carried out in a top-down way and with the over-arching demand that it serve some larger national "project" of integration of the big happy family of new China (it's actually expressed something like that - the ä¸åæ°'æå¤§å®¶åº). One example that springs to mind is the work done to preserve the great Tibetan oral
For this reason, HDS Greenway says:
The dominant Han people of China probably began rubbing up against the indigenous inhabitants of Xinjiang around 60 B.C. when the Chinese established a protectorate, only to lose it to the locals. The Tang dynasty expanded Han Chinese control westward again, and established a settlement near where the provincial capital of Urumchi is today the scene of recent race riots between Han and Uighur only to lose control again.
admin explains:
truth911 Says: July 8th, 2009 at 5:22 am gotta hand it to the cia they are as stupid as we think still overpaid useless criminals tho because thats who they work for you need to wake up to china
Christopher Logan points out another thing aside from that:
into the night, according to participants and witnesses.The official Xinhua News Agency reported that "the situation was under control" by Monday morning and that police had shut down traffic in parts of the city as a precaution.
In other words, David Sirota puts it this way:
here. As some background on our journey, my wife Emily and I visited both coastal and the less-well-traveled interior regions of China for about three weeks in June and July. We were guided around the country by my longtime friend Mike Levy, who was a Peace Corps volunteer in China and who has a forthcoming book about his experiences entitled "Kosher Dogmeat." These reports describe what we saw through the eyes of a progressive and just an average American Clark W. Griswold .
Idea of the Day thinks that the problem is:
July 13 (2) CSI: Flunkytown Monday Today's idea: To fix the national scandal of compromised crime labs, they should be made independent of law enforcement, a study says. But that's an unlikely political prospect. [ Miller-Mccune ]
Furthermore, smith@newamerica.net claims:
Posted by brigid, Jul 16 2009, 7:02PM - Link Strange how such an anti-Islamic state has such warm relations with countries like Iran, Pakistan, and the Sudan. And here we are, nearing the end of the first decade of the 21st century, the right wing ideological dream that embrace of capitalism would bring democracy and human rights to China and any other country who follow suit is revealed as such a falsehood.
bw sees it this way:
The government is also planning to have 150 gW of installed wind power capacity by 2020, of which 30 gW will come from offshore wind farms. Installed wind power capacity should reach 35 gW by the end of 2011, of which 5 gW will come from offshore wind farms.
Furthermore, suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) claims:
Books on China Foreign journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao : Paul French, author of a book on Carl Crow has written a book about the lives and exploits of foreign journalists reporting from China from the 1820s to 1949.
Jon sees it this way:
The Internet Addiction Treatment Centre (IATC) in Daxing county uses a blend of therapy and military drills to treat the children of China s nouveau riche addicted to online games, Internet pornography, cybersex and chats.
Sources:
WEN LIAO louie Edward Harrison Idea of the Day Tim Collard Room for Debate Kirth Gerson HDS Greenway admin Christopher Logan David Sirota smith@newamerica.net bw suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) Jon
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
See All Photo Essays Who Are the Uighurs? The Least Free Places on Earth July/Aug 2009 Think Again Asia s Rise Feature The Death of Macho Special Report The Failed States Index See Entire Issue Preview Digital Edition
louie has another idea:
Monthly Archives June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008
Edward Harrison brings a word of caution:
The Savings Glut. Controversy Guaranteed. by Brad Setser 2009-06-30 11:58:43 China's Loan Growth isn't Boosting my Confidence in China's "Green Shoots" by Michael Pettis 2009-06-30 11:41:51
Idea of the Day is rather skeptical:
July 14, 2009, 6:23 am The Case for Piecemeal Lawmaking Today s idea: History suggests that piecemeal reform is better than going for the whole legislative enchilada, a columnist says and that goes for most of the Democrats domestic agenda.
For this purpose, Tim Collard suggests:
Unfortunately, wicked post-colonialist ideas of press freedom may have tripped them up, as the Namibians have arrested three people over a corruption scam involving a company managed by Hu Haifeng, the son of President Hu Jintao , and it has got all over the local media (as well as The Daily Telegraph ). It seems that Chinese government finance for airport security scanners has been diverted to a dodgy company offering âconsultancy servicesâ, whose three leading figures, two Namibians and a Chinese, are now in the slammer.
Room for Debate scans the other's answers and reply:
Terrorists Fan the Flames Rohan Gunaratna is a professor and head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. His books include âInside Al Qaeda: Global Network of Terror.â
Kirth Gerson explains:
Even where there have been ostensibly laudable programmes by the central government to preserve and promote non-Han language and traditional culture, it is tainted by being carried out in a top-down way and with the over-arching demand that it serve some larger national "project" of integration of the big happy family of new China (it's actually expressed something like that - the ä¸åæ°'æå¤§å®¶åº). One example that springs to mind is the work done to preserve the great Tibetan oral
For this reason, HDS Greenway says:
The dominant Han people of China probably began rubbing up against the indigenous inhabitants of Xinjiang around 60 B.C. when the Chinese established a protectorate, only to lose it to the locals. The Tang dynasty expanded Han Chinese control westward again, and established a settlement near where the provincial capital of Urumchi is today the scene of recent race riots between Han and Uighur only to lose control again.
admin explains:
truth911 Says: July 8th, 2009 at 5:22 am gotta hand it to the cia they are as stupid as we think still overpaid useless criminals tho because thats who they work for you need to wake up to china
Christopher Logan points out another thing aside from that:
into the night, according to participants and witnesses.The official Xinhua News Agency reported that "the situation was under control" by Monday morning and that police had shut down traffic in parts of the city as a precaution.
In other words, David Sirota puts it this way:
here. As some background on our journey, my wife Emily and I visited both coastal and the less-well-traveled interior regions of China for about three weeks in June and July. We were guided around the country by my longtime friend Mike Levy, who was a Peace Corps volunteer in China and who has a forthcoming book about his experiences entitled "Kosher Dogmeat." These reports describe what we saw through the eyes of a progressive and just an average American Clark W. Griswold .
Idea of the Day thinks that the problem is:
July 13 (2) CSI: Flunkytown Monday Today's idea: To fix the national scandal of compromised crime labs, they should be made independent of law enforcement, a study says. But that's an unlikely political prospect. [ Miller-Mccune ]
Furthermore, smith@newamerica.net claims:
Posted by brigid, Jul 16 2009, 7:02PM - Link Strange how such an anti-Islamic state has such warm relations with countries like Iran, Pakistan, and the Sudan. And here we are, nearing the end of the first decade of the 21st century, the right wing ideological dream that embrace of capitalism would bring democracy and human rights to China and any other country who follow suit is revealed as such a falsehood.
bw sees it this way:
The government is also planning to have 150 gW of installed wind power capacity by 2020, of which 30 gW will come from offshore wind farms. Installed wind power capacity should reach 35 gW by the end of 2011, of which 5 gW will come from offshore wind farms.
Furthermore, suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) claims:
Books on China Foreign journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao : Paul French, author of a book on Carl Crow has written a book about the lives and exploits of foreign journalists reporting from China from the 1820s to 1949.
Jon sees it this way:
The Internet Addiction Treatment Centre (IATC) in Daxing county uses a blend of therapy and military drills to treat the children of China s nouveau riche addicted to online games, Internet pornography, cybersex and chats.
Sources:
WEN LIAO louie Edward Harrison Idea of the Day Tim Collard Room for Debate Kirth Gerson HDS Greenway admin Christopher Logan David Sirota smith@newamerica.net bw suggest@danwei.org (Danwei Jobs) Jon
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Monday, August 10, 2009
China From: CCT Aimee Kirth Gerson Room For Debate Derek Markham Owen Fletcher Reuters Christopher Logan CNN Evan Osnos Robert Blumen Iteknologi Suzanne Stevens Admin WEN LIAO World News With Charles Gibson /26200365
CCT sees it this way:
Recent Comments VW-fan on Facelifted Chery A5 - It s nice. CharlieP on Golf GTI to be made in China at last Michael Christenson on Chinese made London Cab - the TX4 launched today! Esprit de Flandre on Facelifted Chery A5 - It s nice. dabizi on Honda Pilot to be made in China dabizi on Greatwall Hover H5 Sighted boogies on Honda Pilot to be made in China Matt on Sichuan Tengzhong might not get Hummer approval Matt on BYD SUV - Fact, fiction, or some serious Photoshop work? Matt on Chery and JAC to be pushed together by the Govt Pages Contact Us Other Sites We Like A touch of CLASS Austin Rover Chinese Cars Chinese Mountain Bikes MGUK Qingdao China Guide
Meanwhile, Aimee came up with this idea:
All party accountability: Engaging in corruption is a shared activity involving those who both give and receive bribes or kickbacks. With this in mind, penalties should apply to all actors and best efforts should be made to identify each and every link in the chain.
Kirth Gerson might have an idea about it:
Apparently Iranians have been shouting "Death to China" at their rallies and protests lately. It probably doesn't help Ahmadinejad's case that China was one of the few countries to recognize their elections. Caught in-between these increasingly polarized and agitated ethnic communities is the Chinese state, which, rather than orchestrating the brutal oppression of the non-Han minorities, finds itself increasingly powerless So they say. posted by delmoi at 9:08 AM on July 18
Before going any further, Room for Debate wants to get this straight:
Although no major incidents were reported on Wednesday, unlike the previous three days, most non-government establishments in Urumqi were closed for the entire day. The streets of Urumqi and other major Xinjiang cities were flooded with truckloads and columns of riot policemen, with soldiers massed along Urumqiâs roadsides and at Xinjiangâs military bases on high alert and ready for immediate deployment. Together with nightly curfews, this is a recommendable strategy to restore and maintain order for the time being.
Derek Markham can't forget that:
viagra cialis levitracialis lawyer columbusonline generic cialisdaily cialiscialis injury attorney columbus
Owen Fletcher is not really sure about that:
The Web site for what the carrier calls the Mobile Market is split into game, software, music, video and theme download sections.
Reuters is not really sure about that:
"Our dealings with the Chinese government are going through formal channels. It is always important in these very delicate situations for governments and ministers to be very careful about their public commentary ... where an individual's freedom is at stake."
Christopher Logan does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
Maine Fines Christian org. in Support of Islam Iranian Cleric Says "rioters" Should be Executed Obama Pulls a Slick One~Iran Related
CNN thinks about it:
One reason for this large silence may be that most people have never heard of Uighurs before. Since they are not Arab, it is not surprising that their plight is not within the current zeitgeist radar of the greater Muslim and Arab world.
Thinking that's not all, Evan Osnos adds:
Still being unsure, Robert Blumen asks:
Ben Ranson: Mr. Blumen, The many grammatical errors give this essay an amateurish quality. A proper essay must... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
In other words, iteknologi puts it this way:
Archives June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 August 2007 July 2007
Suzanne Stevens objects:
Now, though, TPG is ready to sell its stake for $1.68 billion cash to Chinese insurer Ping An Insurance Co. of China Ltd., and there are reports that Chinese authorities may block the way to a cash realization. The
admin brings some great news:
The Opinions requires that courts of law at all levels must actively participate in the major policies unveiled by party committees and the government to preserve growth, preserve the livelihood of the people, and preserve stability , as well as participate in research and discussion of major projects, actively provide legal opinions and advice, actively provide consultation to the party and government, assist administrative bodies in perfecting systems and measures, and prevent and reduce conflict at the very source. With regard to the discovery of any problems in the government implementation of the law during the examination and trial of cases, (courts of law) should promptly propose opinions and suggestions for improvement to the relevant administrative bodies.
Having that in mind, Robert Blumen wonders:
JJ: I'm a Chinses student,and interested in Mises theories.I think Mr. Blumen's words are probably right... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
In other words, WEN LIAO puts it this way:
TODAY | PAST WEEK MOST READ MOST COMMENTED The Least Free Places on Earth Portraits of Instability Think Again: Asia s Rise The Death of Macho The Fall and Rise and Fall Again of the Baltic States
World News with Charles Gibson points out another thing aside from that:
The World Newser is World News' daily blog. Here, you'll find our staff's thoughts on the day's news and the way we build our broadcast. Plus, we'll share reports from our team of correspondents in the field, as well as producers behind-the-scenes.
Sources:
CCT Aimee Kirth Gerson Room for Debate Derek Markham Owen Fletcher Reuters Christopher Logan CNN Evan Osnos Robert Blumen iteknologi Suzanne Stevens admin WEN LIAO World News with Charles Gibson
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
Recent Comments VW-fan on Facelifted Chery A5 - It s nice. CharlieP on Golf GTI to be made in China at last Michael Christenson on Chinese made London Cab - the TX4 launched today! Esprit de Flandre on Facelifted Chery A5 - It s nice. dabizi on Honda Pilot to be made in China dabizi on Greatwall Hover H5 Sighted boogies on Honda Pilot to be made in China Matt on Sichuan Tengzhong might not get Hummer approval Matt on BYD SUV - Fact, fiction, or some serious Photoshop work? Matt on Chery and JAC to be pushed together by the Govt Pages Contact Us Other Sites We Like A touch of CLASS Austin Rover Chinese Cars Chinese Mountain Bikes MGUK Qingdao China Guide
Meanwhile, Aimee came up with this idea:
All party accountability: Engaging in corruption is a shared activity involving those who both give and receive bribes or kickbacks. With this in mind, penalties should apply to all actors and best efforts should be made to identify each and every link in the chain.
Kirth Gerson might have an idea about it:
Apparently Iranians have been shouting "Death to China" at their rallies and protests lately. It probably doesn't help Ahmadinejad's case that China was one of the few countries to recognize their elections. Caught in-between these increasingly polarized and agitated ethnic communities is the Chinese state, which, rather than orchestrating the brutal oppression of the non-Han minorities, finds itself increasingly powerless So they say. posted by delmoi at 9:08 AM on July 18
Before going any further, Room for Debate wants to get this straight:
Although no major incidents were reported on Wednesday, unlike the previous three days, most non-government establishments in Urumqi were closed for the entire day. The streets of Urumqi and other major Xinjiang cities were flooded with truckloads and columns of riot policemen, with soldiers massed along Urumqiâs roadsides and at Xinjiangâs military bases on high alert and ready for immediate deployment. Together with nightly curfews, this is a recommendable strategy to restore and maintain order for the time being.
Derek Markham can't forget that:
viagra cialis levitracialis lawyer columbusonline generic cialisdaily cialiscialis injury attorney columbus
Owen Fletcher is not really sure about that:
The Web site for what the carrier calls the Mobile Market is split into game, software, music, video and theme download sections.
Reuters is not really sure about that:
"Our dealings with the Chinese government are going through formal channels. It is always important in these very delicate situations for governments and ministers to be very careful about their public commentary ... where an individual's freedom is at stake."
Christopher Logan does not seem to agree with this. In his own words:
Maine Fines Christian org. in Support of Islam Iranian Cleric Says "rioters" Should be Executed Obama Pulls a Slick One~Iran Related
CNN thinks about it:
One reason for this large silence may be that most people have never heard of Uighurs before. Since they are not Arab, it is not surprising that their plight is not within the current zeitgeist radar of the greater Muslim and Arab world.
Thinking that's not all, Evan Osnos adds:
Still being unsure, Robert Blumen asks:
Ben Ranson: Mr. Blumen, The many grammatical errors give this essay an amateurish quality. A proper essay must... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
In other words, iteknologi puts it this way:
Archives June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009 February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007 October 2007 August 2007 July 2007
Suzanne Stevens objects:
Now, though, TPG is ready to sell its stake for $1.68 billion cash to Chinese insurer Ping An Insurance Co. of China Ltd., and there are reports that Chinese authorities may block the way to a cash realization. The
admin brings some great news:
The Opinions requires that courts of law at all levels must actively participate in the major policies unveiled by party committees and the government to preserve growth, preserve the livelihood of the people, and preserve stability , as well as participate in research and discussion of major projects, actively provide legal opinions and advice, actively provide consultation to the party and government, assist administrative bodies in perfecting systems and measures, and prevent and reduce conflict at the very source. With regard to the discovery of any problems in the government implementation of the law during the examination and trial of cases, (courts of law) should promptly propose opinions and suggestions for improvement to the relevant administrative bodies.
Having that in mind, Robert Blumen wonders:
JJ: I'm a Chinses student,and interested in Mises theories.I think Mr. Blumen's words are probably right... [Is China's Economic Growth Real?]
In other words, WEN LIAO puts it this way:
TODAY | PAST WEEK MOST READ MOST COMMENTED The Least Free Places on Earth Portraits of Instability Think Again: Asia s Rise The Death of Macho The Fall and Rise and Fall Again of the Baltic States
World News with Charles Gibson points out another thing aside from that:
The World Newser is World News' daily blog. Here, you'll find our staff's thoughts on the day's news and the way we build our broadcast. Plus, we'll share reports from our team of correspondents in the field, as well as producers behind-the-scenes.
Sources:
CCT Aimee Kirth Gerson Room for Debate Derek Markham Owen Fletcher Reuters Christopher Logan CNN Evan Osnos Robert Blumen iteknologi Suzanne Stevens admin WEN LIAO World News with Charles Gibson
Disclaimer:
This text is automatically generated from different sources on the internet. It must be considered an experiment
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