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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (149144)6/14/2019 11:15:51 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217573
 
Per read of the situation Message 32195260

<<(4) Away from the street level, the extradition treaty, whilst necessary but can wait.

... (5) So, I do believe it is important to try to stop the treaty passage through the legislative process, and note there are a lot of weak-kneed politicians needing a lesson by the people for the people.

... (9) Hong Kong can pivot, leverage, and play to advantage to do better than all. Whatever Hong Kong does, best to try maintaining status of being the freest in this galaxy of this universe. Let's see if Hong Kong does so. The effort is delicate.>>

Freedom HK democracy works fine, and money carries the day.

Just out from send-tray ...

On 15 Jun 2019, at 11:12 AM, J wrote:

Monday should be good

Unsure of what all the fuss was about by suspect msm

As mentioned often, there are only two governments in this galaxy of this universe that are actually afraid of the people they rule over, and they sit in Beijing and Hong Kong

The rest of the governments just do rule-by-making-up-rules, spin, and repeat, treating the chief-decider desk as accountability-free respite in between elections

Back to mind over money, everyone

scmp.com

Hong Kong government will announce pause on unpopular extradition bill by afternoon

Officials to hit pause button on passage of bill ahead of Sunday protests Beijing officials in charge of Hong Kong affairs meeting in Shenzhen on bill

However, whether a pause on the legislation would encourage those opposed to the bill to continue to take to the streets in a planned rally on Sunday, or appease them, remains to be seen.

On Friday evening, the Civil Human Rights Front, which organised last weekend’s march which drew hundreds of thousands, and pan-democratic lawmakers made it clear a delay would not be enough. Nothing short of scrapping the bill would be acceptable, they said.



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (149144)6/16/2019 8:22:07 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217573
 
Given that electioneering democracy works so well in USA, and that the people are so aware in between times of reality TV and popping a pill or caping a pipe, the neo-people are doing what best be done by the rights-people for the rights-people against other right-/freedom-people

Whereas the freedom-people of Hong Kong, so unaware as they discuss macro whilst sharing yum-cha (sipping tea) and passing a dim sum (dumplings of various sorts), and happy to be run roughshod by non-elected servants ...

A neo-people national security related clip / copy / paste requiring no reading between the lines or off of pages not-written

Yes, I know, am being naughty

wsj.com

As China Tariffs Loom, Some U.S. Companies Say Buying American Isn’t an Option

Business owners struggling to find alternatives to Chinese imports urge Trump administration to drop tariff plans

By
Katy Stech Ferek and
Josh Zumbrun

June 16, 2019 5:30 a.m. ET
Seeing few alternatives to Chinese imports, Mr. Pelkey has joined hundreds of other business owners and executives in begging Trump administration officials to drop plans to slap 25% tariffs on $300 billion in Chinese imports.

“It would be great if I could just say, ‘I’m going to get my [fireworks] containers from U.S. companies,’ ” said Mr. Pelkey, chief executive of Atlas PyroVision Entertainment in Jaffrey, N.H. “They don’t exist.”

President Trump contends fresh tariffs are needed to force a recalcitrant China to end unfair trade practices. As added benefits, Mr. Trump has said, the tariffs enrich the U.S. Treasury and can help U.S. manufacturers compete against low-price Chinese imports.

But with public hearings on the tariff plan set to begin Monday, the U.S. trade representative’s office has already been flooded with letters from companies like Atlas PyroVision saying they have few options besides China.


Fireworks for sale at the Atlas Fireworks retail store in Rindge, N.H. Photo: Elizabeth Frantz for The Wall Street Journal

A Wall Street Journal analysis of federal import data gives weight to those claims. The list of items to be hit by new tariffs includes 273 categories of goods—including consumer fireworks, fishing reels and electric blankets—for which China accounts for more than 90% of imports. Last year, $66.3 billion worth of these items were imported from China.

Window curtain importer S. Lichtenberg & Co. Inc., which supplies Walmart Inc., Kohl’s Corp. and Amazon.com Inc.,stopped sewing hems and rod pockets at its U.S. facilities in 2007. President Scott Goldstein said restarting that work isn’t on the table.

“I don’t even know if we can get sewers or what we would have to pay them,” said Mr. Goldstein, adding that none of the U.S. textile mills or dye houses that the 300-worker company, founded in 1933 and based in New York, used to buy fabric from are still in business.

Illinois collectibles maker The Bradford Exchange began using Chinese workers in 1985 to paint intricate scenery on porcelain figurines and assemble devices that light up and play music. Now, more than half of its products are hand-painted or involve handwork, said Chief Executive Richard Tinberg.

It takes a skilled artisan to paint the figurines that adorn the four tiers of the company’s spinning musical Christmas tree, or to put together the mechanics inside its “Nightmare Before Christmas”-themed wall clock, which dangles characters and a swinging pendulum, Mr. Tinberg said. Both products, made under licensing deals with the Walt Disney Co. , sell for about $200 apiece.

“There are very few people over here who want to do the type of detailed handwork on products that are sold to the middle class,” said Mr. Tinberg, whose company records more than $400 million in annual revenue.

Share Your ThoughtsShould Chinese products be exempted from tariffs if U.S. importers say they can’t find suitable alternative suppliers, in other countries or domestically? Why or why not? Join the discussion below.

Company officials at baby-gate and bedrail maker Regalo International LLC told U.S. trade officials that the threat of tariffs 18 months ago prompted them to look for new manufacturing partners in Mexico and other foreign countries that may have pockets of cheaper labor.

But the search turned up short. Vietnam can handle orders for wood products and textiles but “has very weak infrastructure in metal fabrication,” officials at the Minnesota company said in a letter. In general, factories couldn’t match China’s prices or keep up with production demands.

“It was NOT even close,” they wrote.

Strikeforce Bowling LLC, which imports hundreds of thousands of bowling shoes and bags from China, began searching for alternate suppliers in the Dominican Republic, Cambodia and Bangladesh soon after President Trump won the election in 2016, said the company’s president, Bradley Handelman.

But suppliers in those countries wanted larger orders than he required, he said, so his company continues to source its goods from China.


Mr. Pelkey at an Atlas PyroVision warehouse in Jaffrey, N.H., on Friday. Photo: Elizabeth Frantz for The Wall Street Journal

In New Hampshire, Atlas PyroVision used to make its own fireworks. But rising costs forced it to close its factory in 1995, Mr. Pelkey said, and it now relies almost solely on Chinese imports to stage municipal fireworks shows and to sell sparklers and other pyrotechnics to consumers.

According to trade data from the Census Bureau, the U.S. now imports 86% of display fireworks used in shows from China.

Mr. Pelkey said he has looked for suppliers in countries including Vietnam, Cambodia, India and Mexico, and has yet to find one that can make fireworks of the quality he typically sees in China.

Mr. Pelkey says reviving the dormant U.S. fireworks manufacturing industry is unlikely, given the high costs of insurance and the tight regulation that comes with the manufacture of explosive devices. It would also take years to hire and train a workforce, he said.

Some manufacturers, however, have filed comments supporting the tariffs, including car-seat maker Dorel Juvenile Group Inc. of Columbus, Ind.


Mr. Pelkey and an employee at Atlas PyroVision work together. Photo: Elizabeth Frantz for The Wall Street Journal

The company’s 700 workers now produce three million seats a year, and it stands ready to boost production, Timothy Gallogly, the company’s director of legal affairs, told U.S. trade officials in a June 6 letter.

“Dorel is confident that its workers can handle additional capacity,” Mr. Gallogly said.

Even so, companies with the ability to increase production in response to Chinese tariffs are minorities in the industry, said Kelly Mariotti, executive director of the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association. Most baby products sold by U.S. companies, including car seats, cribs, highchairs, play yards and strollers, are made in Asia, she said.

Ms. Mariotti’s organization is pushing trade officials to remove baby products from the next round of tariffs, in an effort to keep them affordable.

“Higher costs for these products will place an unfair burden on families that will undoubtedly result in fewer babies and toddlers having access to products critical to their safety,” she said in a statement.

The tariffs have also drawn opposition from broad coalitions of business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Retail Federation. In a letter to President Trump on June 13, tariff opponents including Walmart, TargetCorp. and Costco Wholesale Corp. said current and proposed tariffs would raise costs to a family of four by an average of $2,000 a year.

—Anthony DeBarros contributed to this article.

Write to Katy Stech Ferek at katherine.stech@wsj.com and Josh Zumbrun at Josh.Zumbrun@wsj.com



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (149144)6/16/2019 8:41:34 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217573
 
I love Hong Kong people

loud, noisy, mostly minding own business, generous, practical, realistic, and very extremely aware of macro


bbc.com



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (149144)6/16/2019 8:50:27 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217573
 
from e-mail tray

On 17 Jun 2019, at 8:15 AM, J wrote:
Compared to Hong Kong Singapore is a nice hotel room, for short visits, is all

Like Canada, the schooling there shall give rise to mostly white collar sheeple tax serfs ready for sashimi-ing in the real world coming at us

Kartik here on the thread is an exception, and I would wager more suitable for Hong Kong but for accident of domicile



On 17 Jun 2019, at 8:04 AM, J wrote:

Let me rephrase myself so that I do not insult the word ‘ruled’,

I meant to note, it is naive to believe Singapore shall ever be anything other than a well-cowed Neo-feudal dynastic public toilet needing to expend resources on defending against democratic Malaysia and rule-of-law Indonesia

On 17 Jun 2019, at 7:59 AM, J wrote:

It is naive to believe Singapore shall be anything more than a well-ruled Neo-feudal public toilet

On 15 Jun 2019, at 7:25 PM, M wrote:

Live video of Singapore reacting to political unrest in Hong Kong:

twitter.com

M



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (149144)6/17/2019 6:31:35 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
dvdw©

  Respond to of 217573
 
hmmmnnn, a puzzler

officialdom wants to wet-work a venture and reduce employment, by the read of the article per msm

ft.com

Trade war: will US espionage fears scupper Chinese rail group?

State-owned CRRC faces claims that its rail cars could be used for spyingIn its 19th century heyday, the city of Springfield in Massachusetts produced the first industrial assembly line, the first gasoline-powered automobile and the first sleeping rail car. Wason, one of its leading companies, made passenger coaches and streetcars for clients across the US and countries as far afield as Egypt. While Wason went out of business in the 1930s, Springfield prospered well into the 20th century before deindustrialisation forced many of its factories to close.

So when a Chinese company announced in 2014 that it was investing $95m in a new plant to build rail cars — on a site that once housed a vast Westinghouse factory that closed in the 1970s — many in the region were excited about the prospects. For the past four years, around 200 workers have been employed in a gleaming new factory producing cars for the Boston subway system, with work on similar contracts for Philadelphia and Los Angeles to follow.

Yet rather than being celebrated as a symbol of potential regeneration, the plant has found itself sucked into the escalating trade conflict between the US and China.

For its critics, the issue is symbolised by the giant Chinese flag flying alongside the stars and stripes at the main gates — a nod to its ownership by CRRC, a Chinese state-owned enterprise that is the biggest manufacturer of rolling stock in the world.


Leading US politicians from both parties have accused the company of using its links with the Chinese state to compete unfairly for contracts and of being a vehicle for possible Chinese espionage. Some have called for CRRC’s exclusion from upcoming tenders for the Washington and New York subway systems.

Such criticisms have been greeted with bemusement in Springfield. John Scavotto Jr, the leader of the local chapter of the sheet metal workers union, says the CRRC facility is a “godsend” — with high-paying jobs including benefits — but is worried about its future and is angry at the hostility coming from US President Donald Trump and Washington.

“This guy wants to have his war with China, let him have it, but leave us alone in Springfield,” he says, speaking of the US president. “I beg them to come down here from Washington and see for themselves what they’re trying to hurt, what they’re trying to quash, what they’re trying to make disappear.”


The CRRC plant in Springfield produces cars for railway and underground systems in major US cities © Jake Belcher/FT

In 2014, CRRC won a contract to supply Boston's subway system with more than 280 cars © Jake Belcher/FTThe furore over CRRC and its Massachusetts plant is emblematic of the increasingly febrile climate surrounding many Chinese investments in the US, at a time when the world’s two biggest economies are engaging in a process of decoupling that is driven by broader commercial and strategic tensions.

Chinese investment in the US has always been fairly controversial, even after the country’s accession to the World Trade Organization in 2001. Oil company Cnooc’s proposed 2005 takeover of Unocal was scuppered in large part because of political opposition, and others have met similar fates since then.

Chinese foreign direct investment in the US did, however, increase over the years, hitting a peak of $46bn in 2016. Since Mr Trump came into office, it has dropped sharply, to $29bn in 2017 and just $5bn in 2018, according to Rhodium Group. A key driver of the decline emanated from Beijing, rather than Washington, following capital controls that reined in foreign acquisitions by many private Chinese entities. But perceived US hostility has been another major spur, especially over the past year.

Chinese acquisitions of American companies in sensitive technological sectors are now routinely knocked back on national security grounds by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US. Cfius also recently forced a Beijing-based company to sell Grindr, the gay dating app, over fears of potential misuse of its trove of personal data.

CRRC’s initial Springfield investment, agreed after it won a contract in 2014 to supply Boston’s subway system with more than 280 cars, represents a rare instance of a Chinese greenfield manufacturing investment. Such projects have trickled into the US at a rate of about $1bn a year since 2011 according to Rhodium. The Springfield plant was precisely the type of investment that both Washington and Beijing welcomed at the time — a rare infusion of Chinese manufacturing dollars and knowhow in an industrial sector that no longer exists in the US.

Kevin Kennedy, the official in charge of Springfield’s economic development, calls the CRRC investment “a return to our manufacturing roots”.


John Scavotto Jr, leader of the Springfield chapter of the sheet metal workers union, says the CRRC facility is a 'godsend' © Jake Belcher/FTAfter its breakthrough tender win in Boston over Canadian, Japanese and South Korean rivals in 2014, CRRC went on to secure subway car contracts in Chicago, Philadelphia and Los Angeles between March 2016 and March 2017. CRRC won the Boston tender with a bid of $557m, substantially below those of Hyundai Rotem ($721m), Kawasaki ($905m) and Bombardier ($1bn).


CRRC has created upwards of 200 jobs in MassachusettsThose four contract wins, secured during the final years of Barack Obama’s presidency and the first few months of Mr Trump’s, occurred in a markedly different phase in Sino-US relations. Since Mr Trump signalled his intention in late 2017 to take a tougher line on Chinese trade and investment issues than his predecessors had, CRRC has lost at least three bids for railcar contracts, including two in New York and one in Atlanta.

China-made components that CRRC assembles in Springfield were targeted in Mr Trump’s first round of trade war tariffs, imposed in July 2018 on Chinese industrial exports worth about $50bn a year. When CRRC applied for an exemption from tariffs on China earlier this year, the request was rejected by the office of the US trade representative — despite dozens of letters of support for its relief petition from politicians, union officials, chambers of commerce and vocational schools in Massachusetts and California.

“CRRC’s first North American facility and its success is critical to our city and region’s economy, bringing back manufacturing and skilled labour,” Springfield mayor Domenic Sarno wrote.

“I am surprised by the knee-jerk reactions in the world of trade that have happened in this country under this president,” adds Mr Kennedy. “The business world wants you to be reliable and predictable and that’s how we, the mayor and I, try to do our business in Springfield?.?.?.?CRRC kept its word and created upwards of 200 jobs here in Massachusetts. Most of those are in Springfield and they’re looking at expansion. We have no complaints at all about the relationship.”


Outside of Massachusetts, the Chinese company has another US affiliate in Chicago, CRRC Sifang America, which is building rail cars for the subway system there and possibly the Washington metro, should it win that contract.

But as the company’s US presence has expanded, so has the political opposition. CRRC’s most vocal critics on Capitol Hill include Chuck Schumer, the leader of the Democrats in the Senate, and Marco Rubio, the Republican senator from Florida. “This is part of China’s long-term strategy to undermine US industry and dominate the advanced technologies of the 21st century,” Mr Rubio wrote in the New York Post at the end of May.

A few days earlier, Mr Schumer had called for the US commerce department to probe whether CRRC posed a national security risk “given what we know about how cyberwarfare works”.


Kevin Kennedy, head of economic development in Springfield, says CRRC's investment has allowed 'a return to our manufacturing roots' © Jake Belcher/FTA small lobbying group called the Rail Security Alliance (RSA), backed by some of America’s top freight rail companies, has been beating the drum hard about the dangers allegedly posed by CRRC. Its arguments range from suspicion that CRRC will eventually move on from passenger rail cars and dominate the US freight rail sector to worries about the state support it enjoys. “If they wanted to play by the same rules as France, Germany, Canada, Korea and Japan play by, fine,” RSA’s Erik Olson says. “But those aren’t the rules they play by. From an economic standpoint they are driven to produce jobs in China for the Chinese.”


CRRC invested $95m in its Springfield plant © Jake Belcher/FTThe tariffs imposed on CRRC’s China-made components last July are having an impact. “We basically lost the Atlanta contract [in March] because of price, which is unusual,” says Russell Askalof, a former quality control manager at CRRC in Springfield. “Part of the reason we won so many of the other contracts was that CRRC [Massachusetts] was able to parlay the cheap labour in China that it uses to build the frame of the cars into a substantial discount for the total car.”

“Morale is pretty low right now,” adds Mr Askalof, who left the company last month. “People are very concerned about their jobs.”

As for the concerns about hacked subway cars, the RSA points to the advanced technology that is contained in modern rail cars, with sensors and systems used to track and regulate everything from temperature to location. The allegation levelled against CRRC that it could be a vehicle for espionage strikes a particular nerve as the company enters the Washington Metro race.


Ollie Hall, Springfield resident: 'If they make for this country, to help build this country, to make it a better country, who could it harm?' © Jake Belcher/FT“You have members of Congress, the intelligence community, Department of Defense officials, staff, whoever [riding the DC Metro],” says Mr Olson. “We don’t think CRRC will do anything nefarious and start a war or anything, but could they track people, could they use this as an intelligence gathering tool? One hundred per cent.”


Chinese acquisitions of US companies in sensitive technological sectors are now routinely rebuffed © Jake Belcher/FTThilo Hanemann, a partner at Rhodium, says that protectionism has driven some of the backlash against Chinese companies. “There is a long list of Chinese greenfield projects in the US that [have been] attacked by special interest groups trying to protect their market and the current climate provides fertile ground for those campaigns,” he says. “It seems everyone is jumping on the red-scare bandwagon now.”

Jia Bo, vice-president of CRRC’s Massachusetts unit, rejects the criticisms from the RSA and lawmakers. The rail cars built in Springfield, he says, abide by all the safety standards and procurement rules requiring that the majority of components are made in the US. While the shells of the cars are indeed imported from a CRRC subsidiary in north-east China — and therefore subject to Mr Trump’s punitive tariffs — the high-value networking and monitoring systems are sourced from US, Japanese and German suppliers also used by CRRC rivals. “I feel they are using this as an excuse to exclude us from the competition,” Mr Jia says.


Jia Bo, vice-president of CRRC's Springfield unit: 'What they are saying, espionage, is a kind of speculation or an imaginary allegation' © Jake Belcher/FTHe defends CRRC even more forcefully over the spying claims: safety cameras are installed to ensure the rail cars run securely and any data goes to the relevant transit authorities. “What they are saying, espionage, is a kind of speculation or an imaginary allegation,” he says. As for whether CRRC’s investment is now in jeopardy, he acknowledges that the company does “face a certain level of risk” and thinks the US and China both need “better communication”, but he does not believe the tension would be permanent. “The issues will be solved,” he says.


A CRRC rail car manufacturing plant in Springfield, Massachusetts © Jake Belcher/FTIn Washington, CRRC does have one powerful defender in Richard Neal, the Democratic chairman of the House Ways and Means committee, which oversees taxes and trade. Mr Neal represents Springfield and its surrounding region and has been pushing back against some of the criticism. “There’s no question that the Chinese have a long history of actions that have threatened American jobs, technology and national security,” Mr Neal said last month. “However, it’s in our best interest, whenever possible, to strike the proper balance between protecting our national security and welcoming companies that create jobs and invest in our community. I believe we can do both.”

Kathy Brown, head of a neighbourhood council in Springfield, says she has not seen any evidence of opposition to, or scepticism about, CRRC in her meetings with residents — or even on local social media networks. “It’s pretty exciting to watch one of those cars roll out and make their way down Page Boulevard [the Springfield street where CRRC is located],” she says.

Ollie Hall, a Springfield resident and military veteran, agrees that CRRC should not be targeted simply because it is a Chinese company. “We buy a lot of products from [Chinese companies], now they want to make trains,” Mr Hall says. “If they make them for this country, to help build this country, to make it a better country, who could it harm?”

Giovanni De Caro, a 43-year old electrical assembly and repair worker at CRRC’s plant who grew up in Springfield, says the investment “brought this part of the city back to life”. He is confident that the company can continue to win contracts in America. “I think other cities throughout the US, are going to say ‘OK, let’s see what [CRRC] can do for us’,” he says. “They’ll realise that [what] other people are saying about us isn’t true.”

Mr De Caro has little sympathy for Mr Trump’s trade war with China. “I think it’s going to backfire. It will hurt us in the long run, and not just here at our company. All goods will get more expensive, so it’s going to be harder on working class families.”

Additional reporting by Arjun Kapur