SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Julius Wong who wrote (195654)1/29/2023 11:01:52 AM
From: Julius Wong  Respond to of 219166
 
US arms sales boom in 2022 due to war in Ukraine


Senior Airman Joseph Barron/U.S. Air Force via AP
FILE — In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, a U.S. Air Force F-35 Lightning II aircraft assigned to the 34th Fighter Squadron, departs from a KC-10 Extender aircraft after receiving fuel over Poland, Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022.

U.S. weapons sales to other countries experienced a major uptick in 2022, jumping to more than $51.9 billion largely due to Russia’s war on Ukraine.

In the aftermath of the Feb. 24 invasion, European nations rushed to arm themselves, giving U.S. weapons sales a 49 percent boost from the $34.8 billion in sales in 2021, according to new data released Wednesday by the State Department.

more at
thehill.com



To: Julius Wong who wrote (195654)1/30/2023 12:41:37 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Pogeu Mahone

  Respond to of 219166
 
interesting approach

scmp.com

Chinese-Americans in Texas protest ‘hateful’ state senate bills
Two proposed Senate bills in Texas would, in part, ban people and businesses with ties to China from buying propertyThe bills have elicited outrage from Chinese-Americans in North Texas, who have large enclaves in multiple cities

Published: 1:20pm, 30 Jan, 2023



A rally in opposition to Texas Senate Bill 147 on Sunday, in Dallas. Photo: TNS

Hundreds of people from North Texas gathered in downtown Dallas on Sunday to voice their opposition toward two Texas senate bills that they say are unjustly targeting Chinese-Americans.

Texas Senate bills 147 and 552, both of which have been authored by Republican lawmakers, aim to add regulations that would ban people with ties to four countries (China, Iran, North Korea and Russia) from purchasing real estate or property in the state.

The latter relates to the purchase of agricultural land by companies with ties to the four countries.

Multiple organisations with ties to the Chinese-American community have planned rallies in major Texas cities to protest the proposed legislation after Governor Greg Abbott expressed his support for Senate Bill 147 on Twitter.

Democrats in the state held a news conference last week to denounce Senate Bill 147, and described it as racist and unconstitutional.

The Senate bills have elicited outrage from Chinese-Americans in North Texas, who have large enclaves in multiple cities, including Plano, Richardson, Irving and Allen.



More than 250 people showed up to the Sunday afternoon rally, which was held at John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza.

Hailong Jin, board director of the DFW Chinese Alliance, which hosted the rally, said the bills are a painful reminder for the Chinese-American community of the country’s past anti-Chinese legislation, such as the Chinese Exclusion Act and California’s “Alien Land Law”.

“You pass this law, other states will follow and anti-Asian hate will increase in this country – definitely,” Jin said.

Allen resident Jerry Pi has lived in North Texas for 20 years and is the president of a software startup. Pi, who is a US citizen, said he thinks SB 147 is unconstitutional and bad for the state’s economy.

Pi said he was disappointed to learn that Abbott supports the Senate bill.

“I always viewed (Abbott) as a conservative leader with strong principles,” Pi said. “This is not something that a conservative should do.”



A rally in opposition to Texas Senate Bill 147 on Sunday, in Dallas. Photo: TNS
Plano City Council member Maria Tu, who spoke to attendees of the rally, called on Austin lawmakers to do right by their Chinese-American constituents and to fight against the Senate bills.

“I’m here today, not to represent any political position or stance,” Tu said. “I am here because I am Chinese, American, and I’m Texan.”

Tu was joined by other local elected officials, including Democratic state representatives Carl Sherman, DeSoto, and Rafael Anchia, who urged attendees to continue speaking out against the bills and to make their voices heard by lawmakers in Austin.



‘Finally, they know her’: the first Asian-American on US currency
30 Nov 2022




Dallas’ Anchia said he initially doubted that the bill, even if passed, would hold up in court.

“When the governor, on the eve of Lunar New Year, tweeted out his support for this bill, I said: ‘Oh, no. We need to take this very, very seriously’,” Anchia said.

Anchia said the Senate bill is an attempt to “breed” hate against the Asian community, and told attendees at the Sunday event that he will join other Democrats in fighting the legislation.



Texas Governor Greg Abbott. Photo: AP
The Sunday event included testimonials from multiple Chinese-Americans from North Texas who expressed their pain, frustration and concern over the bills.

Kuo Zhang, 31, who lives in Euless, said Senate Bill 147 would severely affect plans to grow her family.

“My husband and I are expecting a baby and we were planning to buy a house for our extended family, too,” Zhang said.

Wei Wu, 32, said she has lived in downtown Dallas for about two years and recently finished her law degree at Texas A&M University.

She said Senate bills 147 and 552 are “hateful and discriminatory”.

“We are here, we pay taxes, we’re here to seek our dreams; we should not be discriminated against,” Wu said.



To: Julius Wong who wrote (195654)1/31/2023 8:44:50 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 219166
 


Talks about vectors we are familiar w/

And we keep in mind that unit cost is a function of order volume

Albeit supply chain security / integrity highly suspect