when i suggested that about China i got the comment removed, and a PM!Pies4shaw wrote:^Better nuke Seoul, then, too.
Chinese imperialism and future Australian sovereignty
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- think positive
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- stui magpie
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Is that about Andrews signing up for their Belt and Road stuff? Someone needs to give him a clip and reminder that there's no such thing as free money.Wokko wrote:Sometimes you have to tell a mate they're being a dickhead. In this case WE are the dickhead.roar wrote:Did you hear Pompeo yesterday? I have no doubt we are better off with US as an ally than China but let's not think the US wouldn't shaft us in a second, if it was in their interest.stui magpie wrote: the USA for all it's faults has been an ally of ours for decades.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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Poor China, putting Don Quixote referenced cartoons in their state owned media now.
https://twitter.com/ChinaDaily/status/1 ... 1264570373
https://twitter.com/ChinaDaily/status/1 ... 1264570373
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
I think that’s accurate, isn’t it? We are tilting at windmills. As a trivial and globally irrelevant nation, we can have absolutely no impact on China. The cartoon mocks our impotency.
It doesn’t actually matter what people think about China’s conduct, the only thing that can have a useful impact is co-ordinated international compliance action. At the moment, there is no suggestion of any practical response. There’s been a bit of “It wasn’t me, it was them” whinging out of the White House but little suggestion of any action.
Will folks be satisfied if Australia bans all rutile exports to China?
It doesn’t actually matter what people think about China’s conduct, the only thing that can have a useful impact is co-ordinated international compliance action. At the moment, there is no suggestion of any practical response. There’s been a bit of “It wasn’t me, it was them” whinging out of the White House but little suggestion of any action.
Will folks be satisfied if Australia bans all rutile exports to China?
- stui magpie
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Where do I start. We're neither trivial nor globally irrelevant and we can impact on China.
The cartoon doesn't mock our impotence, it's drawing from the scene where Don Quixote directs his servant to attack the windmill, painting Australia as the servant of the USA doing their bidding.
This is quite an interesting article, you may even learn something
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-05-25/ ... r/12281608
Like the fact that China is the worlds largest producer of iron ore, but it's shit quality so they need ours.
Nice summary bit at the end.
The cartoon doesn't mock our impotence, it's drawing from the scene where Don Quixote directs his servant to attack the windmill, painting Australia as the servant of the USA doing their bidding.
This is quite an interesting article, you may even learn something
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-05-25/ ... r/12281608
Like the fact that China is the worlds largest producer of iron ore, but it's shit quality so they need ours.
Nice summary bit at the end.
As a challenger for global economic domination, China will remain an important market for Australia, at least for some years. But its unwavering growth trajectory is a thing of the past.
Mass unemployment, huge debts and a one-party state leadership that will countenance no questioning has put it at odds with large sections of its own population, regional neighbours and the western alliance, a volatile mix guaranteed to increase global tensions.
Where it once viewed Australia as a compliant and convenient source of food and raw materials, the past few weeks clearly have signalled a shift. Beijing's ruling elite now sees us as an errant and ungrateful junior.
In this period of reflection, perhaps it's time we considered our future.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
That's true, but I still don't believe they wouldn't shaft us if it suited their agenda.Wokko wrote:Sometimes you have to tell a mate they're being a dickhead. In this case WE are the dickhead.roar wrote:Did you hear Pompeo yesterday? I have no doubt we are better off with US as an ally than China but let's not think the US wouldn't shaft us in a second, if it was in their interest.stui magpie wrote: the USA for all it's faults has been an ally of ours for decades.
kill for collingwood!
- stui magpie
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Of course they would, and we'd do the same back but with possibly the exception of New Zealand I think the USA and AUS would be the last two countries to screw each other over.roar wrote:That's true, but I still don't believe they wouldn't shaft us if it suited their agenda.Wokko wrote:Sometimes you have to tell a mate they're being a dickhead. In this case WE are the dickhead.roar wrote: Did you hear Pompeo yesterday? I have no doubt we are better off with US as an ally than China but let's not think the US wouldn't shaft us in a second, if it was in their interest.
Trump exempted us from his trade restrictions at the start of his term, and we've fought side by side with the Yank for 100 years now. Washington calls and we answer every time. In this case we've got a State premier who is SO obviously in China's pocket signing us up to things that nobody in their right mind thinks is a good idea right now. Dan answered these concerns by bathing our landmarks in Red and Gold like a good little vassal state would.
Not sure of the constitutionality but I'd be all for the Feds somehow nixing this deal on National Security grounds.
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In the end the rain comes down, washes clean the streets of a blue sky town.
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- stui magpie
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Close.Work with everyone and trust no one, I'd have thought.
Trust no one completely. DTA - Don't Trust Anyone. But also acknowledge that there are some you can trust more than others. The USA has earned trust as an ally of ours over decades, China has proven repeatedly that they have no friends and will burn anyone on a whim. They value vassals not allies.
Work with everyone you can trust to be reliable, pay the bills on time and not fkuc you around when it suits them. So sell China stuff on terms that suit us but don't ever let yourself become reliant on an unreliable customer.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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^I don't disagree with diversifying clientele at all, just as I've argued for diversifying industry.
But when it comes to the US, you must still thinking of WWII war movies. From Vietnam to Iraq, the US has only dragged Australia into violent, destructive mires of its own making, not to mention two financial crises significantly at its own hand, as well as the global economic suppression mentioned above.
Pleasant press conferences in between can't be allowed to distract from the hard facts.
But when it comes to the US, you must still thinking of WWII war movies. From Vietnam to Iraq, the US has only dragged Australia into violent, destructive mires of its own making, not to mention two financial crises significantly at its own hand, as well as the global economic suppression mentioned above.
Pleasant press conferences in between can't be allowed to distract from the hard facts.
In the end the rain comes down, washes clean the streets of a blue sky town.
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- stui magpie
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You take an incredibly narrow view of the USA/AUS relationship for a smart bloke.
Yeah, we've fought in wars with them, the stuff that doesn't get the headlines is more important including trade, security, mutual interests, all the stuff that transcends individual leaders.
Yeah, we've fought in wars with them, the stuff that doesn't get the headlines is more important including trade, security, mutual interests, all the stuff that transcends individual leaders.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
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^But of that I would argue only the tacit security is worth anything. The rest represents cordial relations for the telly. Australia doesn't win from the US on the everyday trade and mutual interests front. Recall they pulled the TPP the second it could be used for political capital. Australians just like to be liked and thus overweight the warm photo ops (see John Howard's fatal mistake referenced above).
That said, I do accept that the tacit security blanket must cost something. But it certainly doesn't need to cost Vietnams and Iraqs, and going back to eggs in one basket, it's time to get others more involved as the US becomes increasingly flakey and dangerous, and effectively charges Australia more through its global economic suppression.
South Korea might once again prove an interesting case study given it depends heavily on the US for security, but would be held entirely hostage if it didn't have alternatives and leverage at hand.
That said, I do accept that the tacit security blanket must cost something. But it certainly doesn't need to cost Vietnams and Iraqs, and going back to eggs in one basket, it's time to get others more involved as the US becomes increasingly flakey and dangerous, and effectively charges Australia more through its global economic suppression.
South Korea might once again prove an interesting case study given it depends heavily on the US for security, but would be held entirely hostage if it didn't have alternatives and leverage at hand.
In the end the rain comes down, washes clean the streets of a blue sky town.
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you think there is actually meat in pies and hot dogs! By the way neither I or hubby eat either or meat. Rhino horn in particular has become a niche status symbol for wealthy Asians especially the Chinese and Vietnamese and not just in those countries those who reside in the US , Australia etc also are big consumers and your precious Koreans are the biggest consumers of bear bile outside China (even though it is technically illegal) so what’s their excuse for perpetuating such cruelty and being the biggest contributors to edging so many species rapidly towards extinction?pietillidie wrote:The eating of meat pies and hot dogs is hardly a niche hobby of the wealthy and (pseudo) intellectual, certainly in our culture.Morrigu wrote:I understand that pseudo intellectuals and people who think humans are way more important and deserving to life than animals....
I'm not taking a position on meat eating, just pointing this out.
I would really like to hear you justify the endorsement by the WHO of TCM which has nothing to do with the BOM and everything to do with appeasing China? Might just be me and most of my colleagues but we would sort of like the “World Health Organisation” to promote evidence based practice - too much to ask it seems when $$$ are paramount!
“The greatness of a nation and its moral progress can be judged by the way its animals are treated.”
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