THE DOCTRINE OF THE N.A.F.T.A. GLOBALIST DEMOCRATS IS TO SERVE THE BILLIONAIRE CLASS WITH ENDLESS WAVES OF INVADING 'CHEAP' LABOR SUBSIDIZED WITH WELFARE FUNDED BY TAXES ON MIDDLE AMERICA.
In many speeches, Mayorkas says he is building a mass migration system to deliver workers to wealthy employers and investors and “equity” to poor foreigners. The nation’s border laws are subordinate to elites’ opinion about “the values of our country,” Mayorkas claims.
Thursday, March 28, 2024
CHINESE DICTATOR XI JINPING TELLS RED JOE BIDEN TO FIGURE ON BAILING CHINA OUT LIKE HE HAS UKRAINE - JUST FOLLOW THE MONEY INTO THE BIDEN CRIME FAMILYS' POCKETS
THE BIDEN KLEPTOCRACY
American people deserve to know what China was up to with Joe Biden, especially when Beijing had already shelled out millions of dollars to Biden family members — including millions in set-asides for “the big guy.” What else is on that infamous Hunter Biden laptop? The conflicted Biden Justice Department cannot be trusted to engage in any meaningful oversight on this issue. We need a special counsel now.
TOM FITTON - JUDICIAL WATCH
In 2018 and 2020, Breitbart Senior Contributor and Government Accountability Institute President Peter Schweizer published Secret Empires and Profiles in Corruption. Each book hit #1 on the New York Times bestseller list and exposed how Hunter Biden and Joe Biden flew aboard Air Force Two in 2013 to China before Hunter’s firm inked a $1.5 billion deal with a subsidiary of the Chinese government’s Bank of China less than two weeks after the trip. Schweizer’s work also uncovered the Biden family’s other vast and lucrative foreign deals and cronyism. Breitbart Political Editor Emma-Jo Morris’ investigative work at the New York Post on the Hunter Biden “laptop from hell” also captured international headlines when she, along with Miranda Devine, revealed that Joe Biden was intimately involved in Hunter’s businesses, appearing to even have a 10 percent stake in a company the scion formed with officials at the highest levels of the Chinese Communist Party. PAM KEY
“It’s often said that China is in a cold war with America. The reality is far worse: the war is hot, and the body count is one-sided,” the book’s Amazon description reads, adding that “China is killing Americans and working aggressively to maximize the carnage while our leaders remain passive and, in some cases, compliant.”
“Why?” it asks, adding that Schweizer once again “unloads bombshell after bombshell, exposing the Chinese Communist Party’s covert operations in the American drug trade, social justice movement, and medical establishment to sow chaos and decadence in the United States.”
Hours after its cover was revealed, the book skyrocketed to #1 on Amazon’s “Movers & Shakers” list. Blood Money currently sits at #53 on Amazon following the its announcement.
Xi Jinping Hosts Personal Sit-Down with U.S. Business Leaders in Desperate Bid to Lift Chinese Economy
Chinese dictator Xi Jinping met with a group of visiting U.S. business leaders in Beijing on Wednesday, making a bid to lure much-needed foreign investment back into China’s flagging economy.
Xi promised the economy would stabilize and said overseas businessmen need not fear persecution by his authoritarian government.
Radio Free Asia (RFA) noted that Xi’s presence at the meeting was unusual because gatherings of foreign executives at the end of the annual China Development Forum are usually handled by the Chinese Communist Party’s number two man, the premier.
The current premier, Li Qiang, has spearheaded China’s efforts to reassure foreign investors after the madness of coronavirus lockdowns and a series of heavy-handed business crackdowns.
Among other gambits, Li appeared to be in charge of welcoming exiled tech tycoon Jack Ma back into the Communist Party’s good graces after regulators wrecked his fortune and drove him out of the country in 2020. Ma’s return to China was a clear public-relations gambit to reassure foreign money that Beijing’s crackdowns were over.
Li handled the meeting with foreign executives after last year’s China Development Forum, but he apparently was not present at this year’s event, which is rather unusual. Instead, Xi put in a personal appearance on Wednesday, stressing that Beijing plans to offer more opportunities to outside investors and greater regulatory transparency.
Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with representatives from American business, strategic and academic communities at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 27, 2024. (Huang Jingwen/Xinhua via Getty Images)
RFA observed that foreign investment in China declined by eight percent in 2024, driven by the Chinese economy slipping to the slowest growth in almost 25 years, fear of Xi’s “raids on consultancies and due diligence firms,” a new authoritarian “anti-espionage law,” lingering anxiety over the Wuhan coronavirus disaster, political tensions between Beijing and Western governments, and a growing movement among international corporations to “de-risk” by relying less heavily on China for manufacturing.
Xi’s regime has been especially rattled by the de-risking trend, which is seeing much Western business shift to alternatives like Vietnam and India. Li tried bullying Western companies out of de-risking with threats and insults over the summer, but it did not work.
Xi took a much friendlier approach on Wednesday, promising a “better future” for relations between China and the United States and posing for chummy photos with business luminaries such as Chubb CEO Evan Greenbarg and Carlyle Group Asia Managing Director Stephen Orlins, who are representatives of an NGO devoted to improving U.S.-China relations.
Other U.S. attendees included Qualcomm president Cristiano Amon, BlackRock founder Stephen Schwarzman, FedEx CEO Raj Subramaniam, and Bloomberg chairman Mark Carney.
Chinese state media portrayed Xi listening attentively to all of their concerns and responding with a promise that “China’s reforms will not pause, the opening will not stop.”
“We are planning and implementing a series of major measures to comprehensively deepen reforms, continue to build a market-oriented, legal and international first-class business environment, to provide enterprises from all over the world, including American companies, more space to develop,” Xi said.
“In the face of new situations and changes in China-US economic and trade relations in recent years, both sides must adhere to mutual respect, mutual benefit, equal consultation, act in accordance with economic laws and market rules, expand and deepen mutually beneficial economic and trade cooperation, respect each other’s development rights,” he said.
Xi’s pledges of reform and openness were accompanied by plenty of blame-shifting and thinly veiled hints of what China expects in return for rolling out the red carpet for American investors. He blamed most of the difficulties in bilateral relationships on the United States, patronizingly instructing it to “actively explore the right way to get along.” His sudden enthusiasm for playing by “market rules” was an effort to lay the groundwork for China objecting to U.S. regulations on imported electric vehicles.
Xi insisted that China’s economy is “sound and sustainable,” and is merely working through a few temporary setbacks, but Hudson Institute senior fellow Thomas J. Duesterberg said China’s economic slowdown has rattled Xi badly enough to make him desperate for foreign investment.
“I hope that behind closed doors, these CEOs have conveyed to Xi Jinping that if he wants to continue to enter the U.S. market, he must do better and allow U.S. and other foreign companies to operate in China on a reciprocal basis,” Duesterberg told RFA, echoing the complaint Xi would have heard most frequently from his guests.
Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with representatives from American business, strategic and academic communities at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 27, 2024. (Huang Jingwen/Xinhua via Getty Images)
Chinese state media claimed Xi’s performance was a big hit with the visiting American executives, who understood the symbolic importance of the dictator handling the meeting personally.
“The U.S. companies appreciated China’s recent introduction of a series of important initiatives to further reform and opening-up, expressing their optimism about the prospects of the country’s economic development. They said they will unswervingly continue to explore the China market, and develop a long-term close cooperative relationship with China,” China’s state-run Global Times reported on Wednesday.
The Global Times quoted “Chinese experts” who said the American business community is eager to be friends with the People’s Republic of China and it would be “quite challenging for the U.S. government to hinder such momentum,” a veiled reference to the possibility that Donald Trump will dislodge the much more China-friendly Joe Biden from the White House in the 2024 election.
The Global Times also focused on some approving comments made by American executives, particularly Apple CEO Tim Cook, who recently declared there is “no supply chain in the world” more important to his company that China – a statement Chinese media interpreted as a sign the de-risking movement is coming to an end.
At roughly the same time Xi met with U.S. executives in Beijing, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Ma Zhaoxu had a phone call with U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell to discuss “international and regional issues.”
The State Department said the call was an effort to “responsibly manage competition in the relationship” between America and China. Campbell “underscored the importance of maintaining peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait, in the South China Sea, and on the Korean peninsula,” and also “raised concerns” about China’s support for the Russian war machine.
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