China has its own definition of what’s fair and what’s not fair among countries, according to author William J. Holstein. Collage: Asia Times/Patrick Dunne
William J. Holstein, Asia Times: China’s ‘New Art of War’ includes stealing cutting-edge technologies
The author’s Introduction to a new book detailing how Xi Jinping targets the US with his ‘China dream’
“The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.”
—Sun Tzu, author, The Art of War
Australians are engaged in a highly emotional debate about China’s influence in their lives. A book by Clive Hamilton entitled, Silent Invasion: China’s Influence in Australia, describes how the Beijing government and Communist Party are systematically attempting to influence Australian policies and cultural life. Hamilton calls it “rot at the heart of the Australian democracy.” The Australians may now understand what China is attempting to do in their country.
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WNU Editor: One of the top abusers of stealing technology has been Huawei .... Huawei "Spent All Their Resources Stealing", Stunning New Exposé Shows (Zero Hedge). But the bigger story is not China stealing secrets. The bigger story is how China is trying to influence foreign governments. This blog has mentioned more than once that while all the political and media attention has been on Russia trying to influence the American process, the Russians are pikers when compared to what China has (and is doing) right now.
Australia, once clearly anti anyone not white, is now Asian. New Zeland, seeing what was taking place has put in new rules: you can not buy property there unless you are a citizen.
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ReplyDeleteHuawei bought IBM's computer business years ago and that appeared to get them up and running. Lenovo was the brand name, I believe.
I have a Lenova I bought used.
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