country:china

  • Chart: All the Goods Targeted in the Trade Spat - WSJ

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-look-at-which-goods-are-under-fire-in-trade-spat-1522939292

    The U.S.’s tit-for-tat with China over tariffs has ushered in a high-stakes standoff over the future of trade between the world’s two largest economies.

    On Tuesday, the U.S. proposed a 25% tariff on some 1,300 Chinese goods, unveiling the most aggressive challenge in decades to Beijing’s trade practices. The items range from high value-added goods such as medicines and medical equipment to intermediate goods like machine tools and chemicals, according to a release by the U.S. Trade Representative. On Wednesday, China retaliated by targeting 106 high-value American exports, from airplanes to soybeans, in a tactic Beijing officials say is meant to secure a truce.

    Here is the universe of goods included in the proposed tariffs on both sides.

    #états-unis #chine #commerce_international #visualisation #wsj

  • GfK releases new digital maps for Asia

    http://gisuser.com/2018/03/gfk-releases-new-digital-maps-for-asia

    GfK has released a new, completely overhauled digital map edition for all of Asia. The edition features coverage of 49 countries, ranging from the three BRICS nations Russia, India and China to smaller countries such as Bhutan. In addition to more granular coastlines, the digital maps depict the latest status of administrative and postal regions. Detailed, up-to-date digital maps are a prerequisite for accurate location-based market analyses.

    Apparemment une importante sorce d’information sur les nouvells limits administratives dans ds pays « sensils »

    China

    Administrative: There have been adjustments to all administrative levels. The new map edition includes the latest boundaries for China’s 33 provinces, 343 prefectures and 2,879 counties.
    Postal: Six-digit postcodes are available for China’s 50 largest metropolitan regions. This corresponds to 6,215 six-digit postcodes in the new map edition. The edition also includes comprehensive coverage of the country’s two-, three- and four-digit postcodes.
    Topographic: The newly digitized maps feature substantially more detail in cities and along coastlines. Boundaries match the street/house level in cities for which six-digit postcode boundaries are available.

    India

    Administrative: For the first time, the India edition includes a map of the country’s subdistricts, which encompass 6,027 regions. In terms of the nation’s superordinate districts, 42 have been dissolved, 87 newly created and 51 newly named. All 707 regions received new IDs. At the federal state and union territory level, one state was divided, making 36 regions in total.
    Postal: There have been only minor changes at the level of India’s more than 19,000 six-digit postcodes (PIN Codes). Exceptions are the states of Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kolkata and Mumbai, which have been completely overhauled.
    Topographic: Most changes in this category affect the various city map layers. In terms of India’s cities with more than 5 million inhabitants, six new ones have been added since 2014. As a result, there are now eight cities in this population bracket. Among cities with between one and five million inhabitants, eight have been added, making 38 in total. There have also been many changes to the smaller cities, reflecting India’s dynamic structural development with its more than 1.3 billion inhabitants.

    #asie #cartographie #inde #chine #Indonésie

  • China Plans Merger of Shipbuilders to Create Behemoth - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-30/china-is-said-to-plan-merger-of-shipbuilders-to-create-behemoth


    China State Shipbuilding Corp.’s Longxue Shipyard in Guangzhou, China.
    Photographer: Qilai Shen

    China’s government is working on a plan to combine its two biggest shipbuilders to create an industrial giant that would dwarf its South Korean rivals, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

    The state council, China’s cabinet, has given its preliminary approval to merge China State Shipbuilding Corp. with China Shipbuilding Industry Corp., the people said, asking not to be identified as the information isn’t public. The two companies have combined revenue of at least 508 billion yuan ($81 billion) making products ranging from aircraft carriers for China’s navy to vessels to carry containers, oil and gas for commercial companies.

  • First Deep Sea Mining Production Vessel Launched in China – gCaptain
    http://gcaptain.com/first-deep-sea-mining-production-vessel-launched-in-china

    Toronto-based Nautilus Minerals Inc. has announced that its newbuild deep sea mining production support vessel has been launched at the Mawei shipyard in China.

    The vessel, named Nautilus New Era, will be used by Nautilus and its partner, Eda Kopa (Solwara) Limited, to mine for gold and copper at the Solwara 1 Project site in the Bismarck Sea of Papua New Guinea.
    […]
    The Production Support Vessel (PSV), which Nautilus will charter from Dubai-based Marine Assets Corporation for a minimum period of 5 years, will be equipped with a dynamic positioning system which will provide a stable platform for deepsea mining operations irrespective of wind and wave conditions.

    The PSV will be equipped with a moonpool through which the Subsea Slurry and Lift Pump (SSLP) and riser system can be deployed. On deck, the slurry will be dewatered and the solid material will be stored temporarily in the PSV’s hull, and then discharged to a transportation vessel moored alongside. Filtered seawater is then pumped back to the seafloor through the riser pipes.

    When completed, the PSV will measure 227 meters in length and 40 meters in width with accommodation for up to 180 people and generate approximately 31MW of power.

    Final delivery of the vessel is scheduled for March 31, 2019.

  • Growth At Any Cost: Top Facebook Executive Defended Data Collection In 2016 Memo — And Warned That Facebook Could Get People Killed
    https://www.buzzfeed.com/ryanmac/growth-at-any-cost-top-facebook-executive-defended-data

    That isn’t something we are doing for ourselves. Or for our stock price (ha!). It is literally just what we do. We connect people. Period.

    That’s why all the work we do in growth is justified. All the questionable contact importing practices. All the subtle language that helps people stay searchable by friends. All of the work we do to bring more communication in. The work we will likely have to do in China some day. All of it.

    Here are the internal Facebook posts of employees discussing today’s leaked memo - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2018/3/30/17179100/facebook-memo-leaks-boz-andrew-bosworth

    #facebook #croissance

  • If you’re Chinese, then being a ‘shameless’ savvy saver is likely to be in your DNA | South China Morning Post
    http://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/community/article/2138956/if-youre-chinese-then-being-shameless-savvy-saver-likely-be

    Chinese people, like most others, love money. But to be more precise, we take great joy in scrupulously balancing between saving money and spending within our means.

    This attitude has been extolled as a virtue. In fact, it’s become so ingrained in our psyche that no matter where or how we are brought up or how we are educated, when it comes to handling money, being sensible and frugal is second nature to us.

    We often do it without thinking and feel no shame in doing so, even if we might appear penny-pinching to others.

    So there was little surprise when a recent Citibank study revealed Hong Kong is packed with a million millionaires, 68,000 of whom have at least HK$10 million (US$1.27 million) squirrelled away.

    Another report by Wealth-X, a firm that conducts research and valuations on ultra-high net worth individuals, also found that Hong Kong is a magnet for the ultra-wealthy. It was the city with the second-highest number of such residents, after New York.

    Any Chinese would tell you that accumulating wealth may be hard work, but keeping it is even harder.

    As a popular Chinese saying goes, “The first generation makes the money, the second one holds onto the inheritance, but the third one spends it.” This Chinese proverb serves as a warning and a reminder that sensible budgeting and frugality is not only a virtue but a survival mantra that needs to be etched on the mind.

    Therefore, our attitudes towards money are shaped early in life by our elders as an integral part of Chinese culture and upbringing. We are told at a very young age that to be a responsible person, we must work hard and save up a nest egg to secure our future and consequently, our family’s future.

    All Chinese are also familiar with the saying, “To store up grains in case of a famine”. This obviously is the basic principle that illustrates we may be money-oriented but it’s all for good reason.

    We are driven by a sense of responsibility to provide for our families and the fear that something might go wrong also prompts us to work hard to save up for rainy days.

    There’s no shame in being a savvy saver – even in times of prosperity
    Many of my old relatives have said that their life savings are hidden away in tin boxes stashed under their beds, cupboards or even their floorboards. I once came across a biscuit tin that contained a big wad of HK$1,000 bills, a bank book, some old photographs and some identification documents; I later found out the items belonged to one of my aunts.

    When I asked her why she stored all these valuables in a tin box, she said the items were like her life – the photographs were her past and the money was to support her now and in the future. She thought keeping “her life” in a tin box was the best way to keep it safe, as in the event of a misfortune like a fire, she would be able to quickly grab all of her valuables.

    Last week, I was having dinner with my girlfriend and when she ordered hot lemon water, I immediately asked the waiter to give her a mug of hot water instead, but with two pieces of lemon for me. The waiter took the order but gave me a funny look. I didn’t even have to explain to my girlfriend, Patty, who is an overseas Chinese, the reasoning behind my order – I wanted to save money.

    By ordering the hot water and lemon separately, the restaurant wouldn’t know how to charge us – so it would be free. We burst out laughing and both agreed that being thrifty is in our DNA. We may come from very different backgrounds but we are undeniably Chinese when it comes to our views of money.

    Famed Canadian comedian Russell Peters was spot on in one of his shows when he described a shopping experience he had when trying to get a discount from a Chinese shop owner who only gave him a reduction of 50 cents.

    He said “Chinese won’t give you a bargain … instead they will try to get every penny from you.”

    Many years ago, I heard that for every $10 a Chinese makes, they would save $9. It might sound far-fetched but it’s true that an average Chinese person saves a lot more than many of his overseas counterparts.

    According to the International Monetary Fund, from 1995 to 2005, the average urban household savings rate in China stood at 25 per cent of disposable income, with some other analysts even putting it as high as 30 per cent.

    When we have our minds set on earning that first barrel of gold, every penny counts, and we always look for a bargain. Others may laugh at our frugality or supposed stinginess, but at the end of the day, there’s no shame in being a savvy saver – even in times of prosperity.

    With that in mind, let’s finish off today with another Chinese adage and some food for thought: “When rich, think of poverty, but do not think of riches when you are poor”. In other words, there is never a bad time to save. Even when you have deep pockets, you must always be prepared for leaner times.

    Luisa Tam is a senior editor at the Post

    This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Savvy saving is a way of life for Chinese

    #économie #affaires #Chine

  • Dear Mark Zuckerberg,
    https://hackernoon.com/dear-mark-zuckerberg-dd5d7e767c21?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    You’re likely going through a stressful time right now, as your company falls under fire from many different angles over its use of my data. #facebook, the company you created, now has more users (~2.1 billion) than there are people in China (~1.4 billion), the largest country in the world.You have the ability to reach all of these users with whatever message you’d like them to see, whenever you want them to see it. You control the way billions of people get their news and information, you have immense influence over the connected world.It’s because of your great power that I’m concerned when I see this headline:“Facebook has gotten too big for Mark Zuckerberg”“Mark Zuckerberg is not comfortable with the enormous influence he has over the world.” — CNN MoneyYo, Mark. Here’s the deal, you’re (...)

    #tech #privacy #social-media #mark-zuckerberg

  • China’s Military Handed Control of the Country’s Coast Guard - Bloomberg
    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-26/military-control-of-china-coast-guard-adds-edge-to-sea-disputes

    China’s decision to give its top military body control over the country’s vast coast guard has increased concerns about the risk of miscalculation in the disputed waters of East Asia.

    The ruling Communist Party is transferring authority over Asia’s biggest coast guard fleet to the Central Military Commission from the civilian State Oceanic Administration, as part of a sweeping government overhaul announced last week in Beijing. That will give President Xi Jinping — China’s commander-in-chief — direct control over the ships that the country often relies on to assert territorial claims across the region.

  • Cerrarán tres refinerías de manera indefinida
    http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/petroleo/cerraran-tres-refinerias-manera-indefinida_228396

    Petróleos de Venezuela planea cerrar en las próximas semanas tres de sus cuatro grandes refinerías de manera indefinida debido a la escasez de crudo para procesar y por la falta de personal que opere las plantas, aseguraron sindicalistas. Las refinerías son Cardón, Puerto La Cruz y El Palito.

    El directivo de la Federación Única de Trabajadores Petroleros de Venezuela, Iván Freites, dijo que la refinería Cardón, estado Falcón, solo se usaría para la producción de lubricantes y como parte de la logística de la empresa estatal para el suministro de combustibles al mercado. Tiene una capacidad total de 310.000 barriles por día; mientras que las otras dos refinadoras, Puerto La Cruz y El Palito, pueden producir 187.000 y 145.000 barriles al día.

    Freites agregó que las empresas Rosneft de Rusia y Petrochina decidieron retirarse del proyecto con el que iban a operar en refinerías del centro de Paraguaná, y asumir las inversiones para hacer conversiones profundas en las plantas, principalmente en la producción de combustible automotriz. Rosneft iba a manejar la refinería de Amuay con una capacidad de 650.000 barriles diarios y Petrochina en Cardón, cuya capacidad es de 310.000 barriles por día.

    • Ça fait quand même tout drôle de voir Rosneft et PetroChina (CNPC) sur la péninsule de Paraguaná ! Quand j’étais ado, il y a bien bien longtemps à Punta Cardón, Amuay appartenait à la Creole Petroleum Corporation (accent vénézuélien, svp) filiale de SOCal / Esso / Exxon et Cardón de Shell.

    • Abandono de refinerías de Pdvsa lleva a operar solo la de Amuay
      http://www.el-nacional.com/noticias/economia/abandono-refinerias-pdvsa-lleva-operar-solo-amuay_229154

      [Iván Freites, directivo de la Federación Única de Trabajadores Petroleros de Venezuela,] también secretario general del sindicato de trabajadores petroleros de Falcón reveló el contenido del informe operativo del complejo refinador Paraguaná (integrado por Amuay y Cardón) correspondiente a marzo de 2018: “Al 31 del mes pasado Amuay procesó una carga de crudo de 200.000 barriles diarios, pero su capacidad instalada es 635.000 barriles al día”.
      […]
      Las condiciones de Cardón a finales de marzo pasado eran bastante críticas y cerró con una producción de 100.000 barriles diarios de su capacidad instalada de 305.000 barriles por día. Además de las plantas paradas, el problema más grave de esa refinería son los servicios industriales como consecuencia del mal funcionamiento de la planta eléctrica que provee electricidad, vapor y aire indispensables para los distintos procesos.

      El representante de la Futpv afirmó que los problemas y las grandes inversiones requeridas en Amuay y Cardón hicieron desistir a Rosneft de Rusia y Petrolera Nacional de China de su intención de emprender el proyecto de recuperación de las instalaciones, las cuales serían manejadas por las empresas mediante un contrato de arrendamiento con Pdvsa.

  • China needs more water. So it’s building a rain-making network three times the size of Spain | South China Morning Post
    http://www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2138866/china-needs-more-water-so-its-building-rain-making-network-three

    Tens of thousands of chambers will be built at selected locations across the Tibetan plateau to produce rainfall over a total area of about 1.6 million square kilometres (620,000 square miles), or three times the size of Spain. It will be the world’s biggest such project.

    The chambers burn solid fuel to produce silver iodide, a cloud-seeding agent with a crystalline structure much like ice. 

    The chambers stand on steep mountain ridges facing the moist monsoon from south Asia. As wind hits the mountain, it produces an upward draft and sweeps the particles into the clouds to induce rain and snow.

    #Chine #pluie #eau

  • #Mongolie, l’attribution de 1072 actions de la mine de charbon de #Tavan_Tolgoï aux 2,5 millions de citoyens mongols (décidée il y a 6 ans…) passe en phase active.

    What mobilizing Erdenes TT shares for 2.5 million citizens could mean for the stock market | The UB Post
    http://theubpost.mn/2018/03/05/what-mobilizing-erdenes-tt-shares-for-2-5-million-citizens-could-mean-for-

    Nearly 2.5 million Mongolian citizens will finally be registered as shareholders in Erdenes Tavan_Tolgoi (Erdenes TT) nearly six years after a mass distribution of shares in 2012. More than two thirds of Mongolian citizens currently own 1,072 shares each in the majority state-owned coal mining company. But that ownership has been in name only, with many displeased with the government’s inaction in mobilizing citizen-held shares. But thanks to a recent vote by the board of Erdenes TT, the issue is likely to reach a resolution in the near future, and with that comes the potential for a monumental shift in the nation’s economy.
    […]
    In 2017, Erdenes TT mined more than 10.1 million tons of coal and exported 8.4 million tons, amassing revenue of 1.1 trillion MNT. From this revenue, 243 billion MNT was contributed to the state budget. G.Khashchuluun believes that this revenue can be doubled or even tripled, helping to strengthen the value of the company.

    “Right now, Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi mainly exports raw coal to China. If the company ceases export of raw coal and begins exporting processed coal, revenue could be increased twofold or even threefold. This can be accomplished by the government with an increased export tax on raw coal,” G.Khashchuluun said.

    No matter how the situation plays out, the fate of Erdenes TT is on pace to have far-reaching effects on not only Mongolia’s financial and mining sector but also the economic and political landscape of the nation.

  • “Nobody Knows Anything About China”
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2018/03/21/nobody-knows-anything-about-china

    We don’t know China because, in ways that have generally not been acknowledged, virtually every piece of information issued from or about the country is unreliable, partial, or distorted. The sheer scale of the country, mixed with a regime of ever-growing censorship and a pervasive paranoia about sharing information, has crippled our ability to know China.

    #china #censorship #gigo

  • Exclusive: U.S. Warship Sails Near Disputed South China Sea Island, Officials Say - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2018/03/23/world/asia/23reuters-usa-china-southchinasea.html


    Guided-missile destroyer USS Mustin (DDG-89) transits the Philippine Sea on March 14, 2018.
    US Navy photo.

    A U.S. Navy destroyer carried out a “#freedom_of_navigation ” operation on Friday, coming within 12 nautical miles of an artificial island built by China in the South China Sea, U.S. officials told Reuters.

    The operation, which infuriated Beijing, was the latest attempt to counter what Washington sees as China’s efforts to limit freedom of navigation in the strategic waters.

    The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the destroyer _Mustin traveled close to #Mischief_Reef in the #Spratly Islands and carried out maneuvering operations. China has territorial disputes with its neighbors over the area.

    #Mer_de_Chine_Méridionale
    #Spratleys
    #FoN

  • Before the CIA, There Was the Pond | Newsmax.com
    https://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/US-Spy-Agency-The-Pond/2010/07/29/id/366034

    The head of the Pond was Col. John V. Grombach, a radio producer, businessman and ex-Olympic boxer who kept a small black poodle under his desk. He attended West Point, but didn’t graduate with his class because he had too many demerits, according to a U.S. Army document. His nickname was “Frenchy,” because his father was a Frenchman, who worked in the French Consulate in New Orleans.

    The War Department had tapped Grombach to create the secret intelligence branch in 1942 as a foundation for a permanent spy service. Grombach said the main objectives were security and secrecy, unlike the OSS, which he said had been infiltrated by allies and subversives and whose personnel had a “penchant for personal publicity.” It was first known as the Special Service Branch, then as the Special Service Section and finally as the Coverage and Indoctrination Branch.

    To the few even aware of its existence, the intelligence network was known by its arcane name, the Pond. Its leaders referred to the G-2 military intelligence agency as the “Lake,” the CIA, which was formed later, was the “Bay,” and the State Department was the “Zoo.” Grombach’s organization engaged in cryptography, political espionage and covert operations. It had clandestine officers in Budapest, London, Lisbon, Madrid, Stockholm, Bombay, Istanbul and elsewhere.

    Grombach directed his far-flung operations from an office at the Steinway Hall building in New York, where he worked under the cover of a public relations consultant for Philips. His combative character had earned him a reputation as an opportunist who would “cut the throat of anyone standing in his way,” according to a document in his Army intelligence dossier.

    In defining the Pond’s role, Grombach maintained that the covert network sought indirect intelligence from people holding regular jobs in both hostile countries and allied nations — not unlike the Russian spies uncovered in June in the U.S. while living in suburbia and working at newspapers or universities.

    The Pond, he wrote in a declassified document put in the National Archives, had a mission “to collect important secret intelligence via many international companies, societies, religious organizations and business and professional men who were willing to cooperate with the U.S. but who would not work with the OSS because it was necessarily integrated with British and French Intelligence and infiltrated by Communists and Russians.”

    On April 15, 1953, Grombach wrote that the idea behind his network was to use “observers” who would build long-term relationships and produce far more valuable information than spies who bought secrets. “Information was to be rarely, if ever, bought, and there were to be no paid professional operators; as it later turned out some of the personnel not only paid their own expenses but actually advanced money for the organization’s purposes.”

    The CIA, for its part, didn’t think much of the Pond. It concluded that the organization was uncooperative, especially since the outfit refused to divulge its sources, complicating efforts to evaluate their reports. In an August 1952 letter giving notice that the CIA intended to terminate the contract, agency chief Gen. Walter Bedell Smith wrote that “our analysis of the reports provided by this organization has convinced us that its unevaluated product is not worth the cost.” It took until 1955 to completely unwind the relationship.

    Mark Stout, a former intelligence officer and historian for the International Spy Museum in Washington, analyzed the newly released papers and said it isn’t clear how important the Pond was to U.S. intelligence-gathering as a whole. “But they were making some real contributions,” he said.

    Matthew Aid, an intelligence historian and author of “The Secret Sentry: The Untold History of the National Security Agency” who has reviewed some of the collection, said there was no evidence the Pond’s reports made their way to decision-makers. “I’m still not convinced that Grombach’s organization was a worthwhile endeavor in World War II and even less so when it went off the books,” he said.

    What it may have lacked in quality and influence, however, the Pond certainly made up with chutzpah.

    One of the outfit’s most unusual informers was a French serial killer named Marcel Petiot, Grombach wrote in a 1980 book.

    The Secret Intelligence Branch, as he referred to the Pond, began receiving reports from Petiot during the war. He was a physician in Paris who regularly treated refugees, businessmen and Gestapo agents, but he also had a predilection for killing mostly wealthy Jews and burning their bodies in a basement furnace in his soundproofed house. He was convicted of 26 murders and guillotined in 1946.

    Nevertheless, Grombach considered him a valuable informer because of his contacts.

    One cable discovered among the newly released papers appears to confirm the Pond was tracking Petiot’s whereabouts. In the undated memo, the writer says Petiot was drawn by a Gestapo agent “into a trap to be arrested by the Germans.” Petiot was briefly arrested in 1943 by the Gestapo.

    Such sources were often feeding their reports to top operatives — often businessmen or members of opposition groups. But there were also journalists in the spy ring.

    Ruth Fischer, code-named “Alice Miller,” was considered a key Pond agent for eight years, working under her cover as a correspondent, including for the North American Newspaper Alliance. She had been a leader of Germany’s prewar Communist Party and was valuable to the Pond in the early years of the Cold War, pooling intelligence from Stalinists, Marxists and socialists in Europe, Africa and China, according to the newly released documents.

    But it was the help from businesses in wartime that was essential to penetrating Axis territories.

    The Philips companies, including their U.S. division, gave the Pond money, contacts, radio technology and supported Grombach’s business cover in New York. Philips spokesman Arent Jan Hesselink said the company had business contacts with Grombach between 1937 and 1970. He added that they could not “rule out that there was contact between Philips and Grombach with the intention of furthering central U.S. intelligence during the war.”

    The Pond laid the groundwork and devised a detailed postwar plan to integrate its activities into the U.S. Rubber Co.’s business operations in 93 countries. It is unknown if the plan was ever carried out. The Pond also worked with the American Express Co., Remington Rand, Inc. and Chase National Bank, according to documents at the National Archives.

    American Express spokeswoman Caitlin Lowie said a search of company archives revealed no evidence of a relationship with Grombach’s organization. Representatives of the other companies or their successors did not respond to requests for comment.

    The Pond directed its resources for domestic political ends, as well.

    In the 1950s, Grombach began furnishing names to McCarthy on supposed security risks in the U.S. intelligence community. By then, the Pond was a CIA contractor, existing as a quasi-private company, and the agency’s leadership was enraged by Grombach’s actions. It wasn’t long before the Pond’s contract was terminated and the organization largely ceased to exist.

    #histoire #USA #espionnage #CIA

  • Is U.S. President Trump Drawing Inspiration From Inner Mongolia? | The UB Post
    http://theubpost.mn/2018/03/18/is-u-s-president-trump-drawing-inspiration-from-inner-mongolia

    It’s perhaps for this reason that there wasn’t actually that much discussion about a proposal that would be particularly unusual for modern America: the idea of a military parade in Washington D.C. While this has actually happened before when the U.S. needed to drum up civilian support for conflicts abroad, it’s now viewed more as a mark of an authoritarian or dictatorial regime (thanks in large part to associations with North Korea and Russia). We don’t know exactly what Trump is envisioning, but it’s possible that he’s actually taking inspiration from Inner Mongolia – which may be a first for a U.S. president.

    The closest thing to an official account is that Trump was directly inspired by the Bastille Day parade he witnessed in France – almost a cheerier version of the sort of parades we’ve occasionally seen in Russia and the Far East. However, we also know that in July of last year Xi Jinping presided over a parade in Inner Mongolia, marking the 90th anniversary of the People’s Liberation Army. Over 12,000 military units and personnel were in action with Jinping inspecting them directly, ultimately making for both an impressive spectacle and a formidable show of strength.

    Given the fact that Trump publicly discusses what he appears to view as a very competitive relationship between the U.S. and China, it’s easy to imagine that this 2017 parade had an effect on him as well. So while some still think it’s unlikely the U.S. president actually gets his parade, there’s a chance we could see an Inner Mongolian spectacle imitated in Washington in the near future.

    #défilé_militaire #humour_mongol

    Opinion libre, probablement inspirée par cette revue des revues

    Donald Trump Is Not the Only One Who Likes a Grand Parade
    http://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/new-atlanticist/donald-trump-is-not-the-only-one-who-likes-a-grand-parade


    Soldiers of China’s People’s Liberation Army prepared for a military parade to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the foundation of the army at Zhurihe military training base in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region in China on July 30, 2017.
    China Daily via Reuters

    US President Donald J. Trump wants a military parade—a grand military parade.

    Trump, reportedly inspired by the Bastille Day parade he witnessed in Paris last summer, has asked the Pentagon to organize a parade down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington that [wait for it] tops the French.

    The reaction to Trump’s plan has ranged from skepticism to criticism.

    The last major military parade in the United States marked victory in the Gulf War in 1991. George H.W. Bush was president at the time. According to the Washington Post, opinion was sharply divided over the parade.


    US President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron attended the Bastille Day military parade in Paris with their wives, First Lady Melania Trump (left) and Brigitte Macron (right), on July 14, 2017. Trump was reportedly so impressed by the display that he asked the Pentagon to host a military parade in Washington.
    Reuters/Yves Herman

  • Shirley & Spinoza Radio
    https://s14-eu5.ixquick.com/cgi-bin/serveimage?url=http:%2F%2Fcompound-eye.org%2Fimages2%2FComputron1_V

    http://compound-eye.org

    Shirley & Spinoza Radio appears to be the work of one man - Fausto Caceres - as opposed to a child star and a 17th-century philosopher. The station, which you can stream via the internet, iTunes, Windows or Flash Player, has been on air in one form or another since the late 90s and has roots in the American college town of Berkeley. Now, somewhat exotically, it broadcasts from behind the Iron Firewall in the People’s Republic of China – in Urümqi in the western Xinjiang region.

    Whenever I’ve tuned in – which has been most of the past week, apart from the football and a bit of Bacon – the same show has been on. Entitled Broken Bouncing Mixed Up Radio Waves, it’s a fantastic collage of pre-rock’n’roll swing, easy listening, 50s radio adverts, pulp sci-fi soundtracks, telephone static, old folk and country, cut’n’paste pop from interestingly named acts like Stock, Hausen and Walkman, plus, if one is fortunate, Moog cover versions of Bacharach and David tunes. Predicting what genre you’ll hear next is impossible.

    Yes, there is much fromagerie and arty wibble, but also much beautiful vintage music that would never get airtime on regular radio such as Theremin pioneer Clara Rockmore, whose wonderful The Swan followed the Carter Family’s I Will Never Marry; two tracks that you would never expect to work together, but, thanks to Caceres’s excellent ear, flowed into each other seamlessly – an example of what he calls “live mixing” where he places songs and sounds on top of each other spontaneously and hopes for the best.

    This oddball transmission from the edge of the planet deserves more listeners. A statistical widget on the site revealed that for much of my listening pleasure, I was one of just nine people tuning in - knowledge that made me feel both privileged and sad. Not that Caceres is without his fans - he was even the subject of a film about his other obsession - a secondhand photo album that contains letters from a schizophrenic man who believed he was being chased by the Mafia.

    Sensibly, Caceres appears to have left his radio operation to run on automatic pilot these days – while he makes field recordings of traditional Chinese music – but an archive suggests there were once busier times at Shirley & Spinoza, especially at the weekends where regular shows included SpoooOOOooky (dedicated to horror film trailers), Old Timey Radio (vintage radio dramas) and Remote Operator, which mixed together “environmental recordings from life here in China, genuine China tunes, opera clips and cat solos”. All three can be downloaded from the site, the latter is highly recommended for anyone who likes the sound of Chinese airport ambience mixed together with a Japanese experimental banjo band called Satanicpornocultshop and a singing cat. You don’t get that on Magic. Well, not often.

    https://www.theguardian.com/culture/tvandradioblog/2009/aug/24/station-to-station-shirley-and-spinoza

    #radio #web_radio

  • China to bar people with bad ’social credit’ from planes, trains
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-credit/china-to-bar-people-with-bad-social-credit-from-planes-trains-idUSKCN1GS10S

    China said it will begin applying its so-called social credit system to flights and trains and stop people who have committed misdeeds from taking such transport for up to a year. People who would be put on the restricted lists included those found to have committed acts like spreading false information about terrorism and causing trouble on flights, as well as those who used expired tickets or smoked on trains, according to two statements issued on the National Development and Reform (...)

    #contrôle #SocialNetwork #surveillance #voyageurs #SocialCreditSystem #profiling

    ##voyageurs

  • Less fertilizer, greater crop yields, and more money: China’s agricultural breakthrough

    Nearly 21 million farmers in 452 counties across China have adopted recommendations from scientists in a 10-year agriculture sustainability study to reduce fertilizer use. According to Nature, their efforts are paying off: all told, the farmers are now $12.2 billion better off than they were before.


    https://inhabitat.com/less-fertilizer-greater-crop-yields-and-more-money-chinas-agricultural-br
    #Chine #agriculture #fertilisants

  • House Proposal Targets Confucius Institutes as Foreign Agents – Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2018/03/14/house-proposal-targets-confucius-institutes-as-foreign-agents-china-c

    A new draft proposal in the House of Representatives seeks to require China’s cultural outposts in the United States, the Confucius Institutes, to register as foreign agents.

    The effort, spearheaded by U.S. Rep. Joe Wilson (R-S.C.), targets any foreign funding at U.S. universities that aims to promote the agenda of a foreign government.

    Après, il faudra s’attaquer à l’Alliance française (encore que le(s) gouvernement(s) français fait/font ça très bien tout seul(s)…) au Goethe-Institut ou à l’Instituto Cervantes.

  • ’We need more data-sharing and visibility in e-commerce air freight supply chains’ - The Loadstar
    https://theloadstar.co.uk/need-data-sharing-visibility-e-commerce-air-freight-supply-chains

    Cainiao, Alibaba’s logistics arm, has called on the air cargo industry to support data-sharing and visibility across its e-commerce supply chain network.

    Roger Su, head of global network planning and operations for the company, told delegates at the World Cargo Symposium in Dallas yesterday it needed better visibility across its ecosystem of handlers, carriers, truckers and forwarders.
    […]
    Chinese company #Alibaba has pledges to deliver within 24 hours in China and 72 hours globally, and is investing $15.2bn in logistics over the next four years, much of which will go into technology, said Mr Su.

    We need infrastructure investment and to get physical process points closer together to consolidate. And we are looking at how we can use technology to innovate and exchange data and streamline processes.

    World Customs Organisation (WCO) director of compliance and facilitation Ana Hinojosa said that, today, Customs was not quite ready for Alibaba’s plans.

    The maturity and development of countries around the world varies greatly, but over the last two years we have focused heavily on e-commerce.

    There has been a tsunami of small packages – for many countries, the volume has been exponential.

    Several players in the air cargo industry have already stepped up to the challenge. Swiss World Cargo, which as a capacity-limited belly carrier has an interest in small packages, is set to offer an e-commerce product.

    It has been piloting a proof of concept in two lanes, between London and Hong Kong, and London and Spain, which, according to Silvia Chacon Ramos, senior manager for postal services and e-commerce, has been very successful.

    The concept is integrating virtually with last-mile delivery partners,” she told The Loadstar. “That includes Customs clearance. We won’t do the delivery ourselves, but we have created a platform that can link and connect all the partners from origin to destination, starting from the etailer.

    It’s a #blockchain-based platform, visible regardless of where you are in the chain. It allows the final consumer to see every point of touch.

    One of the upcoming challenges for the e-commerce industry is new EU regulations which state that, from 2021, online marketplaces must collect VAT on their platforms and that the current VAT exemption for small consignments will be shelved.

  • F*** the #fud & Conferences Galore!
    https://hackernoon.com/f-the-fud-conferences-galore-146ab0e4957b?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    F*** the FUD & Conferences Galore!This week is a special one because of the sheer magnitude of the conference schedule on the heels of a major FUD attack and subsequent market correction. The last few days saw FUD attacks from Mt. Gox, the #sec, #binance, and not surprisingly the market overreacted to each event.What happens following these overreactions? Rebounds.Following this correction there was actually very positive news out of both China and South Korea, yet the market has not rebounded as one might presume. The most surprising part is that the FUD was unwarranted. The SEC has stated the exact same thing for the last two months. These articles just “reiterated” what is already common knowledge. They are reviewing current ICOs, especially the ones in the hundreds of millions of (...)

    #blockchain #fud-attack

  • America’s Military Is Nostalgic for World Wars – Foreign Policy
    http://foreignpolicy.com/2018/03/13/americas-military-is-nostalgic-for-great-power-wars

    “Great-power politics is back,” is a mantra civilian and military officials have repeated with increasing frequency over the past half-decade. The diagnosis has now been formally enshrined in the Trump administration’s National Defense Strategy, a summary of which was published by the Pentagon in mid-January. That strategy document proclaimed that “Inter-state strategic competition, not terrorism, is now the primary concern in U.S. national security.” This means that China and Russia are now the top priority for defense planners, not the Islamic State, al Qaeda, or self-directed terrorists living in the United States.

    #Etats-Unis