Saturday, September 17, 2022

DICTATORS UNITE TO SAVE THEIR HEADS AS THEIR ECONOMIES POUR DOWN THE STORM DRAINS - RUSSIA, CHINA, INDIA, IRAN & PAKISTAN Meet for SCO Alliance - Is This a New Threat to NATO Alliance?

 WATCH THESE VIDEOS:


RUSSIA, CHINA, INDIA, IRAN & PAKISTAN Meet for SCO Alliance - Is This a New Threat to NATO Alliance?






Huge fire engulfs skyscraper in China


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QA96fCpHiR8



Gravitas: Australia snubs China's request to join free-trade pact





Sen. Tom Cotton warns Apple against Chinese chipmaker YMTC




THE BIDEN CRIME FAMILY

Jesse Watters: The people responsible won’t talk



The main objective of “political animals” like Obama and the Clintons is to get elected; it’s not to fix a broken America, nor to protect her. There are people who govern and there are people who campaign; Obama and the Clintons are the latter. Just look at the huge Republican electoral gains under Obama and the Clintons. It’s amazing that Democrats who still care about their party still support the very people who have brought it down.


China is America's enemy but Joe Biden's friend

By J. Marsolo

The corrupt media know the truth about China paying the Bidens and about the China fentanyl smuggled through Mexico. In addition to the China virus and China fentanyl, China steals our technology and intellectual property that costs our country between $300 and 600 billion in losses per year.  The FBI reported in February 2020 that China is the biggest law enforcement threat to the United States and that China was seeking to steal American technology by "any means necessary."

 


POPES HAVE ALWAYS KISSED DICTATOR AND KINGS' ASSES. IT IS FUNDAMENTALLY A NEO-FASCIST RIGHT WING INSTITUTION THAT NEEDS TO BE BANNED.

Pope Francis Throws Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen Under the Bus

Joseph Zen
ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images
3:32

ROME — Pope Francis has decided not to protest the Hong Kong trial of Cardinal Joseph Zen, arrested last May for his part in the nation’s pro-democracy movement.

This week a reporter asked the pope whether Cardinal Zen’s arrest and trial constitute a violation of religious freedom, to which the pontiff basically answered that Zen got what was coming to him.

The pope first denied that China is undemocratic, insisting that such labels are unhelpful because China is a very “complex” country. Second, he acknowledged Zen’s arrest but refused to criticize it or to defend the 90-year-old cardinal.

“Cardinal Zen is going to trial these days, I think. And he says what he feels, and you can see that there are some limitations there,” he stated.

Remarkably, the European Parliament (EP) condemned the arrest of Zen this summer in the strongest of terms, while the pope was silent.

“Parliament condemns the arrests of Cardinal Joseph Zen, one of the strongest advocates of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement, and of the other four trustees of the 612 Humanitarian Relief Fund,” the EP stated in July, noting that these and similar repressive actions “constitute an attack on the freedoms guaranteed in the Hong Kong Basic Law, including the freedom of religion or belief.”

“The resolution urges the Hong Kong authorities to drop all charges against Cardinal Zen and the other four trustees,” it added.

Yet, when asked directly whether he agrees that Zen’s arrest was a violation of religious freedom, the pope demurred.

Myanmar Cardinal Charles Bo also condemned the arrest of his brother cardinal, describing it as an appalling example of how far Hong Kong has fallen from its prior status as a free state.

Charles Maung Bo, archbishop of Yangon (Myanmar) arrives to be elevated cardinal during the papal consistory on February 14, 2015 at St. Peter's basilica in Vatican. The pope welcome 20 new cardinals to the ranks today, including 15 who are below 80 and would therefore be entitled to vote in a conclave to decide a new pontiff in the event of something happening to the current one. AFP PHOTO / ANDREAS SOLARO (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP) (Photo by ANDREAS SOLARO/AFP via Getty Images)

Charles Maung Bo (Photo by ANDREAS SOLARO/AFP via Getty Images)

“Hong Kong used to be one of Asia’s freest and most open cities,” Bo, who is the president of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences, said. “Today, it has been transformed into a police state. Freedom of expression, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly and association, and academic freedom have all been dismantled.”

Cardinal Zen was arrested and charged “simply because he served as a trustee of a fund which provided legal aid to activists facing court cases,” Bo noted. “How can it be a crime to help accused persons have legal defense and representation?”

Bo also denounced “recent propaganda attacks against the Church in pro-Beijing media in Hong Kong, and of growing self-censorship among religious leaders due to the circumstances.”

“To see a city that was a beacon for freedom, including religious freedom, move so radically and swiftly down a much darker and more repressive path is heartbreaking,” he said, adding that the Chinese government has “repeatedly and blatantly” broken promises made in the Sino-British Joint Declaration, a situation he called “appalling.”

For his part, Cardinal Zen has repeatedly criticized Pope Francis’s appeasement policy with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), describing the pope as naïve and accusing him of selling out the underground Catholic Church. His trial begins Monday.

Francis refused to back Hong Kong’s pro-democracy demonstrations and has conspicuously refrained from criticizing the CCP’s egregious and well-documented abuses against the Uyghur Muslims in China’s Xinjiang region, despite numerous requests that he do so.

Aimed at China? EU Proposes Ban on Goods Made with Forced Labour

ALTAY, CHINA - JULY 15, 2022 - Immigration management police officers form a patrol team to patrol the border area of the port of entry in Altay, Xinjiang Province, China, July 15, 2022. (Photo credit should read CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)
CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images
3:35

The European Union has now formally proposed a ban on all goods made with forced labour from being sold within the bloc, a move that is seen as being aimed at China’s abuse of minorities.

A ban on the sale of all goods manufactured with the use of forced labour is now a step closer to being implemented in the EU, with the European Commission releasing a draft proposal detailing the measure on Wednesday.

While officials have insisted that the ban will not be targeted at any one company or industry, the push for further legislation on the issue is largely seen as being in response to Communist China’s alleged use of minority slave labour.

According to a press release published by the European Union, the ban as proposed covers items produced both inside and outside the EU, and looks to deal with both private and public forced labour without discriminating against any particular company or industry.

“This proposal will make a real difference in tackling modern-day slavery, which affects millions of people around the globe,” European Commission trade tsar Valdis Dombrovskis said regarding the ban.

“Our aim is to eliminate all products made with forced labour from the EU market, irrespective of where they have been made,” he continued. “Our ban will apply to domestic products, exports and imports alike.”

Thierry Breton, the bloc’s internal market chief, meanwhile decried goods produced with forced labour as being “unsustainably” made, saying that the EU needs to be “assertive” in “defending” its values, as well as enforcing “rules and standards”.

“Our Single Market is a formidable asset to prevent products made with forced labour from circulating in the EU, and a lever to promote more sustainability across the globe,” the politician — who previously threatened to kick Twitter out of the EU should Elon Musk lower the amount of censorship on the platform — remarked.

While European Union bigwigs have insisted that these measures are not targeted at any one industry or enterprise, it has been less vocal as to whether or not a specific country has prompted the proposal of new rules.

This may be because one specific state did indeed spark interest in the ban, with POLITICO reporting that the new measures are being seen as a response to Communist China using the forced labour of minority ethnic groups to manufacture various goods.

In particular, the leftist regime’s use of Uyghurs — a Muslim-majority ethnic group from the province of Xinjiang — has drawn particular ire in recent years, with a United Nations report published late last month lending further credence to reports that minorities from the region have been forced into working in various factories since 2018.

The report also found that allegations that Chinese authorities have been arbitrarily detaining large swathes of the civilian population of Xinjiang are credible, and that state authorities have likely been torturing individuals from Uyghur and other ethnic minority backgrounds under the guise of counter-extremism efforts.

While the EU’s proposed law could mean it wants to take a harsher line in regards to this issue, the bloc in the past has been rather lax on alleged human rights abuses in Xinjiang, with authorities even reportedly allowing firms within the bloc to export surveillance equipment to China, some of which may have been used to enable the continued abuse of human rights by state authorities.

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