Friday, April 17, 2020

CHINA'S LOOMING ECONOMIC COLLAPSE - SENATOR DIANNE FEINSTEIN RUSHES IN TO AID HER RED PAYMASTERS

Silicon Valley, and the Chinese Connection to Coronavirus Infection

By James Fulford

After Feinstein was elected to the Senate in 1992, Blum continued profiting off their ties to China. A the same time, the freshman lawmaker was pitching herself as a “China hand” to colleagues, even once claiming “that in my last life maybe I was Chinese.” HARIS ALIC

FEINSTEIN HAS SPENT HER POLITICAL LIFE STALKING THE HALLS OF CONGRESS SNIFFING OUT DEALS THAT PUT HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS IN HER POCKETS.

SHE HAS AVOIDED PROSECUTION BY VOTING AGAINST ANY ETHICS BILLS AND HER HUSBAND, RICHARD BLUM'S HANDING OUT "CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTION" BRIBES TO EVERY DEMOCRAT OUT THERE!




IN THE November 2006 election, the voters demanded congressional ethics reform. And so, the newly appointed chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., is now duly in charge of regulating the ethical behavior of her colleagues. But for many years, Feinstein has been beset by her own ethical conflict of interest, say congressional ethics experts.


“All in all, it was an incredible victory for the Chinese government. Feinstein has done more for Red China than other any serving U.S. politician. “ Trevor Loudon


“Our entire crony capitalist system, Democrat and Republican alike, has become a kleptocracy approaching par with third-world hell-holes.  This is the way a great country is raided by its elite.” ---- Karen McQuillan  AMERICAN THINKER.com


Senator Who Employed Chinese Spy Endorses Joe Biden for President

HARIS ALIC

  

A high-profile U.S. senator with professional and personal ties to China — including once employing one of its spies — is backing former Vice President Joe Biden amid mounting questions over his son’s business dealings with the communist regime.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), a former chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, announced her endorsement of the former vice president on Tuesday, claiming to have witnessed Biden’s “fortitude” and leadership during their overlapping tenures in Congress.
Feinstein said in a statement:
I’ve worked closely with Vice President Biden and I’ve seen firsthand his legislative ability, his statesmanship, and most importantly his moral fortitude (NO, IT’S NOT A JOKE, BUT THEN FEINSTEIN IS THE MOST SELF-SERVING CORRUPT POL IN U.S. HISTORY). During his time in Congress and in the White House, Joe Biden has been a tireless fighter for hard working (ILLEGALS) MEXICAN families.


Cotton: China’s Coronavirus ‘the Biggest, the Costliest, the Most Deadly Cover-Up in the History of Mankind’

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Friday on Fox News, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) discussed the possibility of a link to the global coronavirus outbreak and a Chinese lab and the possibility China’s government may have tried to cover up the outbreak domestically.
Cotton told “Fox & Friends” that if the allegations were true about China, it would be historic on a global level.
“The circumstantial evidence, which I began to cite in January, stacking up pretty quickly that this virus may have originated in those labs in Wuhan,” he said. “We knew from the very beginning that the Chinese Communist Party’s front story about the food market was probably wrong.”
“For one, it appears that they don’t even sell the kind of bats at that market from which this virus originated, and two, Chinese scientists in an authoritative study as early as January found that about a third of the early cases had no contact with the food market whatsoever,” he continued. “We know that China has a very sloppy history of laboratory safety. Some of our own diplomats at the embassies in China went to these labs as far back as two years ago and said the shape the practices there were very alarming. And you can see how the Chinese Communist Party has continued to lie about this from the very beginning as if they have something to cover up. If that’s the case, it really is the biggest, the costliest, the most deadly cover-up in the history of mankind.”
Follow Jeff Poor on Twitter @jeff_poor




A Warning For The U.S. in China’s Sharp Contraction

BEIJING, CHINA - JANUARY 22: A Chinese police officer wears a protective mask as he stands guard at Beijing Station before the annual Spring Festival on January 22, 2020 in Beijing, China. The number of cases of a deadly new coronavirus rose to over 400 in mainland China Wednesday as …
Photo by Kevin Frayer/Getty Images
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China’s economy lurched into a deep contraction in the first three months of the year as much of the country was shut down by the coronavirus.
In a stark warning for the rest of the world, the economy did not bounce back as strongly as predicted once the lockdowns were lifted.
The recent figures suggest that far from a V-shaped crash and recovery, China faces a drawn-out struggle to revive an economy that suffered its biggest contraction since possibly the mid-1960s after millions of people were told to stay home to fight the coronavirus.
The world’s second-largest economy shrank by 6.8 percent from a year earlier in the quarter ending in March after factories, offices and shopping malls were closed to contain the outbreak, official data showed Friday. Consumer spending, which supplied 80 percent of last year’s growth, and factory activity were weaker than expected.
China, where the pandemic began in December, is the first major economy to start to recover after the ruling Communist Party declared the virus under control. Factories were allowed to reopen last month, but cinemas and other businesses that employ millions of people still are closed.
Consumption and services, the more market-driven parts of the economy, are in a protracted slump as businesses in China struggle to find customers and demand has slumped due to heavy job losses and fears of a second viral outbreak. Those same factors could also so recoveries in the U.S. and Europe.
“China is in for a drawn-out recovery,” he said.
The last contraction this big was 5.8 percent in 1967 during the upheavals of the ultra-radical 1965-75 Cultural Revolution, according to Iris Pang of ING.
Forecasters earlier said China might rebound as early as this month. But a sharp recovery is unlikely, in part because demand from importers has slumped due to the economic drag of the pandemic and in part because domestic demand has remained extremely weak.
Instead, they expect a gradual crawl back to growth in low single digits in the coming quarters. For the full year, forecasters including UBS, Nomura and Oxford Economics expect little to no growth.
In total, China has reported 4,632 deaths after the total for Wuhan, the city of 11 million people at the center of the outbreak, was revised upward Friday. The mainland has announced 82,367 cases.
Retail sales fell 19 percent from a year earlier in the first quarter. That improved in March, the final month of the quarter, to a decline of 15.8%. But consumers, jittery about possible job losses, are reluctant to spend despite government efforts to lure them back to shopping malls and auto showrooms.
That is a blow to automakers and other companies that hope China will power the world economy out of its most painful slump since the 1930s.
Job-hunter Ni Hong’s challenge highlights the problem. Ni, 32, quit her job in Beijing in January to find a new one, but the virus disrupted those plans. Ni is paying her mortgage out of her savings and avoiding other spending while she looks in a market flooded with newly laid-off workers.
“In the past, there were maybe two or three candidates for a post,” Ni said. “Now, I have eight to 10 competitors, so the chance for me to be eliminated is much higher.”
That is a political challenge for the ruling party, which bases its claim to power on China’s economic success. The party appealed to companies to keep paying employees and avoid layoffs during the shutdown. But an unknown number have failed, adding to public anxiety.
The economy already was squeezed by a tariff war with President Donald Trump over Beijing’s technology ambitions and trade surplus. Last year’s growth sank to a multi-decade low of 6.1 percent.
Exports fell 6.6 percent in March from a year earlier, an improvement over the double-digit plunge in January and February. But forecasters say demand is bound to slump in America and Europe as anti-virus controls keep shoppers at home.
“Lingering consumption weakness and sliding foreign demand will weigh on the upturn,” said Louis Kuijs of Oxford Economics in a report.
Growth was stronger than some forecasts that called for a contraction of up to 16 percent but this is the biggest contraction since market-style reforms started in 1979.
“The numbers were even uglier than most anticipated, which is good!” said Andy Rothman of Matthews Asia in a report. “These ugly numbers indicate that the leadership didn’t fudge the data to hide the seriousness of the situation.”
Investment in factories, real estate, and other fixed assets, the other major growth driver, sank 16.1 percent.
Auto sales sank 48.4 percent from a year earlier in March. That was better than February’s record 81.7 percent plunge but is on top of a 2-year-old decline that is squeezing global and Chinese automakers in the industry’s biggest global market.
Asian stock markets rose following the announcement, which was in line with investor expectations. By mid-afternoon, Tokyo’s benchmark Nikkei 225 index was up 3 percent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was 2.4 percent higher.
The ruling party has yet to announce this year’s official growth target. It has been at least 6 percent in previous years. Beijing looks likely to miss its target of doubling incomes from 2010 levels by this year.
Controls on Beijing, the capital, and some other cities have been tightened to prevent a resurgence of the disease. Most foreigners are barred from entering the country.
Beijing is boosting spending on a “New Infrastructure” Plan that includes next-generation telecom networks, artificial intelligence, electric vehicle charging and data centers. But leaders don’t want to pump too much money into the economy with full fledged stimulus for fear of adding to debt or pushing up inflation that is near a seven-year high.
Carrying out that infrastructure investment “will take a much longer time than it would do without social distancing in place,” said Pang of ING. “Recovery will be a long road.”
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—The Associated Press contributed to this report. AP video producer Wayne Zhang and researcher Yu Bing contributed.




Tom Cotton, Dan Crenshaw Introduce Bill to Allow Americans to Sue China for Coronavirus Damages

This photo taken on February 6, 2020 shows a laboratory technician working on samples from people to be tested for the new coronavirus at "Fire Eye" laboratory in Wuhan in China's central Hubei province. - BGI Group, a genome sequencing company based in southern China, said it opened on February …
Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images
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Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) and Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) introduced a bill on Thursday that would allow Americans to sue China in federal court for “death, injury, and economic harm caused by the Wuhan Virus.”
“By silencing doctors and journalists who tried to warn the world about the coronavirus, the Chinese Communist Party allowed the virus to spread quickly around the globe,” Cotton, an Army veteran, said in a statement.
“Their decision to cover up the virus led to thousands of needless deaths and untold economic harm. It’s only appropriate that we hold the Chinese government accountable for the damage it has caused,” he added.
The bill, dubbed ‘‘Holding the Chinese Communist Party Accountable for Infecting Americans Act of 2020,” asserts that covering up the virus and causing it to spread faster or further than it otherwise would have can be considered a tortious, wrongful act.
The bill could give the United States more leverage to get China to pay for damages it has caused or come to an agreement on settling the claims.
If passed, the bill could put pressure on China to settle claims, or else face potentially millions of claims in federal court.
“We need to hold the Chinese government accountable for their malicious lies and coverup that allowed the coronavirus to spread across the world,” Crenshaw, a former Navy SEAL, said in a statement. He went on to say:
The communist regime expelled journalists, silenced whistleblowers, and withheld vital information that delayed the global response to the pandemic. Simply put: their actions cost American lives and livelihoods. This bill will help ensure China’s actions are not without consequences.
The bill is modeled after the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act (JUSTA), which allows the families of victims of 9/11 to sue Saudi Arabia for damages.
Anger against China has grown in the U.S. since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, which originated in Wuhan, China.
As noted in the bill, China silenced doctors who tried to warn colleagues about the coronavirus, ordered the destruction of laboratory samples and research on the virus, and detained and silenced researchers, journalists, and citizens who tried to share information about the virus that was deemed unflattering to the Chinese Communist government.
“Chinese Government officials have intentionally underreported or altered official numbers of COVID–19 infections and deaths in China, leading world health experts to make flawed analyses that severely underestimated the nature and seriousness of COVID–19,” it stated.
“Academic studies have shown that, had appropriate interventions occurred to stop the spread of COVID–19 even just weeks earlier, the spread of COVID–19 would have been severely curtailed,” it said.
“The cover-up of COVID–19 by the Chinese Government — has caused significant death, injury, and economic harm in the United States and around the world; and is, at minimum, grossly negligent behavior causing significant injury.”
The bill is similar to one introduced on Tuesday by Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO), called the Justice for Victims of COVID-19 Act, which would strip China of sovereign immunity for civil claims in U.S. courts and allow courts to freeze Chinese government assets so victims can enforce their claims. It would also establish a task force at the State Department to investigate China and seek compensation.

The Never-ending Siren’s Song: China’s Pull on American Businesses



Coronavirus is forcing American businesses to reduce or halt their operations in China, but when the crisis passes, business will resume. What CEOs should consider is that Xi Jinping’s authoritarian and secretive response to the outbreak is a microcosm of how his government operates.
James Palmer, senior editor for Foreign Policy, writes, “The hostility to transparency and fear of speaking out baked into the fabric of Xi Jinping’s China can’t be thrown away for one crisis. Transparency is not a window that can be opened and shut at the state’s will when it finds it useful.”
China's mass detention of Muslims and government-backed theft of western technology has led to much talk but little concrete action from the international community. And there is no reason to think Xi Jinping will institute political reforms. Unfortunately, American businesses continue to drink at the poisoned well of Chinese commerce because the economic incentives and potential profits are too large to turn down. Instead of continuing to appease a regime that spreads fake news claiming that America created the coronavirus, American CEOs should decide to value long-term principles over short-term profit.
Last fall, the NBA experienced the competing pulls of Chinese outrage and domestic discontent when the general manager of the Houston Rockets, Daryl Morey, tweeted a message supporting protesters in Hong Kong. China reacted by kicking the NBA out of China and removing NBA games from television. The league tried to appease both sides by defending Morey’s right to free speech in an English press release while simultaneously releasing a statement in Chinese condemning his comments.
During the league’s all-star break, commissioner Adam Silver acknowledged that “hundreds of millions” were lost due to the standoff with China. The league lowered its salary cap projections because of the incident, and many players lost lucrative endorsement deals.
The story has faded out of the American news cycle, and the NBA is reengaging with China with little fanfare. Inside the NBA, players and owners alike are unlikely to speak out against China in the future after seeing how much they could lose. China has gotten what it wanted, a shaken NBA that is unlikely to resist Chinese demands.
Many other companies have discovered that money talks as American businesses are becoming more and more dependent on China. For example, KFC and General Motors both conduct more business in China than in America. The Chinese government encourages these investments by having lower corporate tax rates and fewer worker protections than most other developing nations.
Xi Jinping is rewarding the investments of American companies by pursuing an aggressive agenda that includes building islands in the South China Sea, stealing technology from companies operating in China and hacking Equifax to gain leverage over American citizens. The Trump administration will likely push for American businesses to distance themselves from China, especially after China’s coronavirus response, which has included blaming America for the virus and expelling American journalists.
Companies will have to decide between doing business with an untrustworthy regime who may steal their technology or forgoing massive profits.
Michael Bloomberg’s company faced a similar dilemma when deciding whether to publish a news story that would have exposed Chinese leadership as corrupt. Recently leaked audio shows Bloomberg News squashed the story because management was worried they would be kicked out of China if they published.
If a news company supposedly dedicated to publishing the truth gives in to Chinese pressure so easily, it is doubtful many other companies will resist Xi’s pull.
Many experts argue that China will become democratic as it adopts free-market policies. This transformation could still happen, but China has been gradually opening its economy for thirty years without significant political change. If anything, Xi Jinping is consolidating power and appears to have balanced aspects of an open economy with state control.
Instead of transforming China, businesses are being transformed by China as their executives submit to Chinese demands. Whitewashing the protests in Hong Kong or pretending that Taiwan is part of China on a map seem minor, but these actions show an alarming tendency to appease China’s authoritarian demands. Xi Jinping’s slow and secretive response to the coronavirus shows how devastating Chinese government malice and incompetence can be to the United States and the rest of the world.
American companies have succeeded in part because they take bold risks, but China is a risk that is unlikely to pay off. Xi Jinping has trapped American businesses and getting out won’t be easy.
Moving away from China isn’t only the morally right thing to do, but it also will protect American companies from a regime that has no compulsions when it comes to stealing what it wants.
Caleb Ashley is a content specialist for a public relations firm in Alexandria, Virginia

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