What Really Happened in Wuhan: Investigating the Chinese lab leak theory

Ellanjay

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What Happened to Australia?–From Covid ‘Double Speak’ to Deporting Djokovic; World Shifts on Covid​



What happened to Australia?–The world continues to ask in astonishment. With the dust not yet having settled from the shock deportation of tennis world number one, Novak Djokovic–the Australian Immigration Minister has revealed the dumbfounding, underlying reason why he cancelled the tennis star’s visa. Ontario is among the latest of world cities to drastically revise its Covid data. It follows a number of American states that have done the same. Why is the world’s messaging on Covid-19 suddenly changing? In China, the Chinese Communist Party’s ‘zero-Covid’ policy is in full swing to supposedly pave the way for a smooth Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics. Meanwhile, the impact of its draconian ‘safety’ measures are resounding more and more obviously around the world.
 

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What Happened to Australia?–From Covid ‘Double Speak’ to Deporting Djokovic; World Shifts on Covid​



What happened to Australia?–The world continues to ask in astonishment. With the dust not yet having settled from the shock deportation of tennis world number one, Novak Djokovic–the Australian Immigration Minister has revealed the dumbfounding, underlying reason why he cancelled the tennis star’s visa. Ontario is among the latest of world cities to drastically revise its Covid data. It follows a number of American states that have done the same. Why is the world’s messaging on Covid-19 suddenly changing? In China, the Chinese Communist Party’s ‘zero-Covid’ policy is in full swing to supposedly pave the way for a smooth Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics. Meanwhile, the impact of its draconian ‘safety’ measures are resounding more and more obviously around the world.
Ontario a city? Changing it's data? The policy may be changing but not "drastically". It is a gradual change taking up to end March to be wide open and only if COVID is gone..
Yes, China is tightening up it's policy. Saying to protect international athletes as well as its own people. Are you saying that is unwise? What woud you, and the world, say if a bunch of athletes got COVID and could not take part in their competition??
So, why is Australia being besmirched for enforcing a policy that it, at the time of Djokovic entry, it has in place? Djokovic is just pissed he (or his "people") pooched on his paperwork.
 

Ellanjay

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An interview with Dr. Yan Limeng on the Gain of Function funded by the US​



Did NIH fund Wuhan Virology Institute on Gain of Function or not? Dr. Fauci has been denying it. Has he been truthful? The 13-million people city of Xi'an has been locked down for nearly one month. Was it really due to Coronavirus, or there is something new that we don't yet know? CCP has been again promoting stories of viruses coming from dead animals or through the mail. What is the story behind that? Join Wei & Cathy's live interview of Dr. Yan Limeng at 7pm PST Thursday!
 

Ellanjay

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Beijing is coordinating with Moscow and backing it economically


Anders Corr


January 25, 2022; Updated January 26, 2022



Epoch Times News Analysis



Any Russian invasion of Ukraine will depend upon economic depth in China, and diplomatic appeasement by Germany and France. Beijing is likely encouraging Moscow to invade, which serves the purposes of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

While NATO should be pivoting to address the China threat, Russia is using 100,000 troops on the border with Ukraine to pressure NATO for “legally binding security guarantees” that Ukraine will not join the alliance.

Moscow seeks the withdrawal of NATO military infrastructure to 1997 positions, when the two powers signed an agreement. These are impossible demands that would mean rolling back democracy in Eastern Europe, and the expansion of Beijing and Moscow’s illiberal influence globally. If NATO appeases Russia by abandoning Ukraine today, China will double down on its demand for Taiwan tomorrow. Giving into a bully only encourages the others.



Already, some Eastern European countries are vetoing the European Union’s measures against Beijing’s human rights abuse and territorial aggression, including in the South China Sea. Germany and France, which are weaker on China and Russia than is President Joe Biden, are looking for diplomatic escapes that require throwing Ukraine under the bus.

For example, Germany opposes letting Estonia gift Soviet-made artillery pieces to Ukraine, because they were based in East Germany at reunification, from which they were sent to Finland, and then Estonia. As noted by The Wall Street Journal, “Germany’s refusal could be read by Moscow as another sign of division in the West’s ranks.”

This is not the time for division among democracies. Estonia should hand the howitzers over to Ukraine anyway, accompanied by a speech about Germany’s cowardice.

Russia’s military buildup is already visibly distracting and disuniting NATO alliance members. Biden mistakenly revealed that NATO members recently disagree on the proper response to various types of Russian invasion.

But sanctions, at least, are sure. Any deeper border incursions past what Putin already took—Crimea and effectively, the Donbass region of Eastern Ukraine—will turn Vladimir Putin and his cronies into not just the leaders of a rogue state, as currently, but into absolute pariahs.

Even democratic allies that are not being tough enough on Russia and China are losing esteem. A Washington Post editorial by historian Katja Hoyer has a title that says it all: “Germany has become a weak link in NATO’s line of defense.” Hoyer argues that “Germany cannot be depended upon when it comes to imposing sanctions on Russia.”

Sanctions will send Russia deeper into China’s cold embrace, which has swallowed so many countries after they egregiously break international law, for example, through genocide or the invasion of neighboring countries. Thereafter entirely dependent upon trade with China to evade Western sanctions, they all but lose their sovereignty.

Burma (commonly known as Myanmar), North Korea, Cambodia, Laos, Venezuela, and increasingly, Iran, Pakistan, Afghanistan, the Philippines, and Russia are falling into Beijing’s orbit through too much illiberal trade.

A redirection of Russian trade from the United States and Europe to China is already occurring, and provides evidence for Russians and the world that Beijing stands behind Moscow’s aggression.



People walk past a wall decorated with a mural of Moscow’s Red Square, in Beijing on Dec. 8, 2021. (Jade Gao/AFP via Getty Images)

In 2021, according to a report by Dimitri Simes in the Nikkei Asia Review, annual trade increased between Russia and China by over 35 percent, to a record of over $146 billion. The two countries plan to add another $200 billion in trade by 2024.

But Russia’s economy is approximately one-tenth that of China, and its trade with the country is lopsided, giving Beijing the upper hand economically and, therefore, politically.

While approximately 40 percent of Russia’s trade has over the years been with the European Union, this has not yielded similar political influence for Europe because democracies shy away from economic bullying. The CCP, on the other hand, is a checkbook diplomacy impresario.

Putin is already showing his fealty to Beijing by attending its disgraced Winter Olympics, dubbed the “Genocide Games” by human rights advocates. The Biden administration is wisely instituting an Olympic diplomatic boycott, honored by many of our most important allies.

There are unfortunate exceptions. The Polish president is one of the few U.S. allied heads of state to fink and attend, putting into question his allegiance to democracy over profits to be made in China.

Xi Jinping is coercing Putin to ski the same fake slopes, by delaying high-profile deals for signature in Beijing, including the final contract for a natural gas pipeline, called the Power of Siberia-2, that will further connect the two illiberal behemoths.

As noted by Simes, “Analysts say the standoff between Russia and the West over Ukraine, which could bring new sanctions against Moscow, is likely to tighten the Kremlin’s bond with Beijing even more.”

Nikkei quotes international relations professor Artyom Lukin, at a university in Russia, as saying that “Putin likely received some guarantees from Xi that if a crisis erupts over Ukraine and the West imposes major sanctions against Russia, then China will stand shoulder to shoulder with Russia.”

Chris Devonshire-Ellis, of an Asia investment advisory firm, told the outlet, “If further trade sanctions are placed on Russia, Moscow will need to increase Russia’s sourcing capabilities elsewhere, with China being one avenue.”

Russia has, since 2010, increasingly depended on China for energy exports, including through two pipelines costing $80 billion, and a $13 billion gas processing plant.



Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin attend a signing ceremony for a monumental, multi-decade gas supply contract in Shanghai on May 21, 2014. (Alexey Druzhinin/AFP via Getty Images)

If Russia invades Ukraine, U.S. and allied sanctions should be immediate and tough, including against Putin, his closest associates, Russia’s biggest business people, all of their immediate families, the country’s sovereign debt, access to the SWIFT international banking system and U.S. technology, the top Chinese companies doing business in Russia, and the Nord Stream-2 energy pipeline to Germany.
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Ellanjay

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Australian Open drops ban on Peng Shuai shirt; Huawei pays White House lobbyist $1M: Document​



Chinese tech giant Huawei shelled out a $1 million paycheck—earned for lobbying the White House—over six months to a single lobbyist, who’s just one of half a dozen hired since last July. The Australian Open retracts a ban on T-shirts supporting star athlete Peng Shuai after major backlash from the tennis community and Australian politicians. An award-winning film is moving audience members across the country. It’s based on a true story—how an American reporter and a group of Chinese students worked to expose Beijing’s propaganda. A Beijing court sentences a Falun Gong practitioner to eight years in prison. But the timing of her punishment is being called into question—just weeks ahead of the Winter Olympics. Beijing’s Defense Ministry says China and Russia are working together to boost military capabilities. The two countries’ navies recently held joint military drills.
 

Ellanjay

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EU launches WTO action against China; Pompeo on 'Unsilenced' movie: 'indictment of CCP'​



Some #SolarPanel production lines are moving out of China. The shift follows new U.S. import restrictions on products tied to forced labor. Supply chains are shifting back to the United States. A new bill aims to help boost that process, especially for American semiconductor manufacturing. Former Secretary of State #MikePompeo is calling on Americans to watch an award-winning film. He calls the movie an “honest, scathing indictment of the Chinese Communist Party.” The European Union takes action against China to back one of its member countries. Now, the organization is launching a case against the Chinese regime with the World Trade Organization. Thousands of blossoms go up in flames. A Hong Kong flower farmer is cutting his supply in half ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday after strict pandemic measures sent demand on a downward spiral.
 

Ellanjay

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China’s strict rules limit holiday gatherings; China angered over meeting of US, Taiwan VP​



Ahead of Lunar New Year’s eve, Taiwan's president pledges to "stride" into the world, and thanks democratic nations for their support of the island. Taiwan’s foreign minister says the island won’t stay silent in the face of the Chinese Communist Party's coercion. At the same time, a brief meeting between Taiwan and Washington draws China's ire—after officials from the two nations met on a visit to Honduras. A U.S. commission voices concern for the safety of America’s Olympic athletes—specifically, about those who speak out about China’s human rights abuses. Activists are using a T-shirt campaign to draw attention to a missing Chinese sports star. They say they hope the message will get the world’s attention. Some Chinese families won’t be able to reunite for the year’s biggest festival: the Lunar New Year. The separation looms for the third year in a row, as pandemic restrictions cast a shadow on the celebration.
 

Ellanjay

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China’s Internal Issues That Could Lead to Collapse of the CCP



Ahead of Lunar New Year’s eve, Taiwan’s president pledges to “stride” into the world, and thanks democratic nations for their support of the island. Taiwan’s foreign minister says the island won’t stay silent in the face of the Chinese Communist Party’s coercion. At the same time, a brief meeting between Taiwan and Washington draws China’s ire—after officials from the two nations met on a visit to Honduras. A U.S. commission voices concern for the safety of America’s Olympic athletes—specifically, about those who speak out about China’s human rights abuses. Activists are using a T-shirt campaign to draw attention to a missing Chinese sports star. They say they hope the message will get the world’s attention. Some Chinese families won’t be able to reunite for the year’s biggest festival: the Lunar New Year. The separation looms for the third year in a row, as pandemic restrictions cast a shadow on the celebration.
 

Ellanjay

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Lunar New Year celebrations around the world; FBI chief: China’s threat ‘more brazen’ than ever​



The Year of the Tiger is knocking–and people around the world are celebrating. Many embrace traditional festivities, including a unique, underwater lion dance! But not everyone has been able to enjoy the holiday, as migrant workers in China fight to receive their paychecks. The FBI chief calls the Chinese Communist Party “more brazen” and “more damaging” than ever before. His remark comes days before the Beijing Olympics’ Opening Ceremony. Two hundred COVID-19 cases have been detected among #OlympicAthletes and staff. Among the infected patients is a U.S. gold medal hopeful. And 10,000 people in one Chinese city are transported to a #QuarantineCenter. Thousands were seen lining up for hours in the rain, including parents with babies and the elderly.
 

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FEBRUARY 2, 2022 BY ADMIN

Chinese Military-Linked Firm Gathers American DNA, Provides COVID Tests

Technicians work at a genetic testing laboratory of BGI in Kunming, Yunnan Province, China, on Dec. 26, 2018. (Stringer/Reuters)
Technicians work at a genetic testing laboratory of BGI in Kunming, Yunnan Province, China, on Dec. 26, 2018. (Stringer/Reuters)

Chinese Military-Linked Firm Gathers American DNA, Provides COVID Tests​

Antonio Graceffo
Antonio Graceffo
February 2, 2022
Epoch Times News Analysis


China is “developing the world’s largest bio database,” said Edward You, who is the U.S. national counterintelligence officer for Emerging and Disruptive Technologies. “Once they have access to your genetic data, it’s not something you can change like a pin code.”

Racing to dominate the bioeconomy, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is compiling a massive database of medical, health, and genetic information from people around the world, including Americans.

The CCP enlists the help of private companies to aid in gathering genetic data, which can be combined with top military supercomputing capabilities, to discover genetic weaknesses in a population. Bioweapons can then be developed, which prey on these weaknesses. As part of Beijing’s military-civil fusion policy, Chinese scientists, along with the military, have been conducting research in the areas of brain science, gene editing, and the creation of artificial genomes.

Similar research could be used to enhance the performance of Chinese soldiers. BGI Group, formerly Beijing Genomics Institute, is the leader of the CCP’s genome project, as well as one of the leading producers of COVID-19 tests. BGI also has ties to China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA), according to a Jan. 30 report by Reuters.

BGI operates the largest pig cloning project in the world. After manipulating generations of pig DNA, intentionally producing pigs that are smaller or larger, more susceptible to certain diseases, or less susceptible to others, the CCP is zeroing in on the ability to produce “super soldiers.” Among the projects currently underway is BGI’s attempt to make China’s Han ethnic soldiers less susceptible to altitude sickness.

BGI’s current chief infectious disease scientist, Chen Weijun, was among the first scientists to sequence COVID-19, taking samples from a military hospital in Wuhan. He is also credited with the patent on the BGI test kits, which have been distributed around the world, including in the United States. Four of BGI’s researchers have been affiliated with the National University of Defence Technology (NUDT), under China’s Central Military Commission, which is headed by Chinese leader Xi Jinping. The NUDT has been blacklisted by the United States as a threat to national security.

Under Xi, private technology companies have been increasingly integrated into military-related research. In 2021, BGI offered to set up COVID test centers in the United States. But U.S. security officials warned that test centers would allow China to gain access to American DNA, as the swabs have genetic material on them. According to Mike Orlando, the head of the National Counterintelligence and Security Center, no U.S. states agreed, but at least 18 other countries allowed BGI to establish test centers. Additionally, BGI test kits were sent to 180 nations.
The logo of Chinese gene firm BGI Group The logo of Chinese gene firm BGI Group is seen at its building in Beijing, China, on March 25, 2021. (Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters)

Chinese medical testing companies regularly use DNA collected from test subjects for other research. Human rights groups say the CCP is using the data for security purposes such as identifying and tracking Uygher Muslims. Furthermore, Chinese police are trying to amass samples of DNA from the country’s 700 million males, to keep track of future criminals.

Home ancestry tests are another way that the Chinese regime is obtaining DNA from Americans. The U.S. military has warned soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines to avoid companies such as Ancestry and 23andMe, which have ties to China. An estimated 50 million Americans have already paid to have their saliva tested for their DNA ancestry, according to Bill Evanina, former director of the U.S. National Counterintelligence and Security Center.

Antonio Graceffo, Ph.D., has spent more than 20 years in Asia. He is a graduate of the Shanghai University of Sport and holds a China-MBA from Shanghai Jiaotong University. Graceffo works as an economics professor and China economic analyst, writing for various international media. Some of his books on China include “Beyond the Belt and Road: China’s Global Economic Expansion” and “A Short Course on the Chinese Economy.”



To be continued on next post
 

Ellanjay

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Continue from last post

Chinese Military-Linked Firm Gathers American DNA, Provides COVID Tests​


Chinese firm WuXi Biologics bought a Pfizer manufacturing plant in China, and established a production facility in Massachusetts. In 2015, the firm also bought a stake in 23andMe. WuXi Biologics now has locations in Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and New Jersey, as well as a drug plant in Delaware, which was built with a state grant.

BGI Group earns part of its revenue by selling genetic sequencing services to universities and health systems around the world. The company has also been purchasing U.S. genomics firms since 2013, and now has multiple partnerships with U.S. companies involved in gene sequencing. In each of these arrangements, BGI gains access to genetic data.

Under China’s National Intelligence Law, all data obtained by Chinese companies, even abroad, must be turned over to the CCP, upon request.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) warned that Chinese firms invest in U.S. companies in the hopes of gaining access to U.S. data. Last year, CFIUS blocked a Chinese firm from purchasing a California fertility clinic, which was located in close proximity to six U.S. military bases. The concern was that not only would the CCP gain access to the genetic data of U.S. soldiers, but also of their unborn children.

In spite of the obvious dangers, this year, the Biden administration signed a $1.3 billion deal with iHealth Labs, a unit of the Chinese firm Andon Health Co., for home COVID test kits. It is part of the administrations’ initiative to provide 1 billion free rapid COVID-19 tests to Americans.

The Winter Olympics will provide a perfect opportunity for DNA data gathering. Olympic athletes and coaches will be subjected to daily COVID tests, while media personnel and other attendees will also be tested on a regular basis. This means that the CCP will have the genetic material of every person who attends the Games. Attendees will also be required to download a government-approved health app, which has been proven to have security flaws. Internet security experts warn that the app will be able to gather user data, which, combined with genetic information, can be fed into China’s massive artificial intelligence and genome projects.

Antonio Graceffo, Ph.D., has spent more than 20 years in Asia. He is a graduate of the Shanghai University of Sport and holds a China-MBA from Shanghai Jiaotong University. Graceffo works as an economics professor and China economic analyst, writing for various international media. Some of his books on China include “Beyond the Belt and Road: China’s Global Economic Expansion” and “A Short Course on the Chinese Economy.”

 

Ellanjay

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China's Digital Currency a Surveillance Tool for Authoritarian Regimes | CLIP​



Erik Bethel explains why China's digital yuan will actually be a tool for surveillance of ethnic minorities or dissidents in China, and that purchasing data will be tied into China's current social credit system. He warns that this digital yuan currency model could be exported to authoritarian regimes around the world, and it even threatens to overtake the US dollar as the world's reserve currency.
 

Ellanjay

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Chinese Military-Linked Firm Gathers American DNA, Provides COVID Tests. Feat. Dr. Antonio Graceffo​



In 1936, Nazi Germany, already gaining world notoriety for its authoritarian, xenophobic culture, hosted the Summer Olympics. Some 85 years on, the despotic Chinese Communist Party–with its doctrine of ‘unrestricted warfare’ against America and the Western World–is charged with hosting the Winter Olympics. Closer to home, there is an alarming trend–recently reported on by China Economics Professor, Dr. Antonio Graceffo–of firms linked to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) heavily investing in U.S. biopharm and genomics companies. The connection between this and the CCP’s research to develop bioweapons is a cause of major national security concern. Recently, a CCP-linked company sought ownership of a fertility clinic, located within driving distance of six American military bases–A place many U.S. soldiers and spouses would likely attend for fertility, paternity testing, etc. I ask Dr. Graceffo what the CCP would do with the DNA of American soldiers? Dr. Graceffo is a contributor to “The Epoch Times” and the author of “Beyond the Belt and Road: China's Global Expansion.”
 

Ellanjay

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Suspect arrested after attack on Falun Gong booth; The fentanyl crisis: What’s happening​



Wuhan is more than the pandemic’s epicenter. It’s also the focus of another sinister problem–the fentanyl epidemic. This synthetic opioid kills one American every 8 and a half minutes. Officials say it’s just a few clicks away, and may be delivered to your doorstep without you even knowing it. And a seemingly pro-Beijing man in #Flushing—handcuffed by New York police. The arrest comes after he wreaked havoc on street booths four times since last week. The attacks involve a spiritual practice that faces persecution in China.
 

Ellanjay

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Chained Mother of Eight Striking China’s Societal Moral Limits​


Video

China Insider
David Zhang
A chained mother is taking China by storm. Her devastating story as a human trafficking victim is earthshattering for the Chinese regime. Things are getting out of hand as her story is drawing more attention than the Olympics.
We dive into what is really happening to her, and why there is a big chance this escalates into something groundbreaking.
 

Ellanjay

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The CCP Is the Big Loser in the ‘Genocide Games’​

If these Games have shown the world anything about China, it’s not what Beijing hoped they would

James Gorrie
James Gorrie
Writer
February 18, 2022
Commentary
https://forums.canadiancontent.net/javascript:void(0);

The Olympic Games aren’t over yet, but as far as Beijing’s hope for a boost in international standing, the Games are indeed finished.

Hosting the Winter Olympics is not turning out to be quite the global reputation builder that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) had hoped or expected it to be. Treating athletes like Uyghurs seems to be the Beijing way–old habits die hard.

A Public Relations Disaster​

Sure, the Games in Beijing are a nod to China’s massive global influence, but they’ve also become a platform to show the world the nasty face of the CCP.


From a public relations perspective, the Games have been a disaster. Some of the problems that have arisen could have easily been anticipated but probably not avoided.

In fact, Beijing’s problems began before the Games even started.

For example, Beijing was hit with another outbreak of the CCP virus before the Games began. The CCP’s response was to lock down certain areas, as well as entire cities, affected by the outbreak.

Beijing's Yanqing Olympic village A general of the Olympic Village of the 2022 Beijing Winter Games at the National Sliding Center in Yanqing district, Beijing, is seen on Feb. 3, 2022. (Daniel Mihailescu/AFP via Getty Images)
To make matters worse, a second outbreak occurred of a hemorrhagic strain of the virus—or perhaps a different one?—also came about.

Quite frankly, either or both of them should have been cause to cancel the Games.

But for whatever reason, that Games began on schedule. Predictably, since then, athletes have come down with the disease and have missed events.

Think of that situation: you’re an athlete who’s dedicated years of training and sacrifice in order to compete in the Olympics, only to lose your opportunity by catching a disease allegedly created by the same country that’s been allowed to host the Games.

Of course, every host nation faces the risks of making mistakes and looking foolish because unexpected things happen. But athletes catching the CCP virus, being quarantined and missing their events because the Games are being held in China—the source of the pandemic—isn’t one of them.

Did anyone expect that to not happen?

The ‘Genocide Games’​

Even the opening ceremonies proved to be a disaster.

In light of Beijing’s unrivaled abuse of the Uyghurs in Xinjiang, the CCP must have thought that using a cross-country skier of Uyghur ethnicity, Dinigeer Yilamujiang, to start the Games would help remake China’s global image.

One may wonder just what sort of “remake” the CCP had in mind?

Was the world to suddenly believe that communist China is a country to be admired or even emulated?

Predictably, that idiotic stunt had the opposite effect.

2022 Beijing Olympics - Opening Ceremony Torchbearers Zhao Jiawen and Dinigeer Yilamujiang hold the Olympic torch during the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics at the National Stadium in Beijing on Feb. 4, 2022. (Toby Melville/Reuters)
Yilamujiang’s lighting of the Olympic torch literally put a spotlight on the CCP’s brutal treatment of that minority. It also gave legs to the derogatory term, “Genocide Games,” by which the 2022 Beijing Olympics are now commonly referred, which is as right and proper as it could be.

The CCP was rightfully mocked around the world for that particular brand of stupidity.

One wonders how anyone on the CCP’s Olympic planning committee could have imagined that such an act would have any other effect than the one it had?

Evidently, those are the kinds of decisions that get made when only one voice—the Party’s—matters.

Perhaps not so ironically, after finishing 43rd in her event, like over a million of her Uyghur countrymen, Yilamujiang simply disappeared and has not been seen since.

Who’s Watching?​

A bright spot—if it could be described as such—is the fact that these Games are suffering from a horrendously low viewership. Most of the world just isn’t watching, with about half as many viewers tuning in as last Winter Olympics.

But for those who are watching, the CCP is showing just how afraid it truly is. That may be the most important outcome of all in these Olympic Games.

Describing the CCP as fearful may not seem rationale, as it is the vast majority of China’s 1.4 billion people that fear the Party.

But it’s actually the case.

The CCP is afraid of everyone and everything.

For what other reason than fear would the Party find it necessary to censor torchbearer Yilamujiang, Chinese tennis champion Peng Shuai, and gold medalist free-skier Eileen Gu?

The CCP censors these young female athletes for one simple reason: they fear what these young women say.

The Party leadership is showing the world that they’re not strong enough to handle the opinions of few female athletes.

That’s the biggest victory of these Games so far.

A Fragile, Inadequate Leader​

On a more personal level, imagine how fragile a national leader—an absolute dictator, no less—must feel that he cannot withstand even the slightest bit of criticism from a handful of young women?

The CCP really can’t help looking foolish and brutish because that’s the nature of the Party—absolutist rule that has been the cruelest in modern history.

How fitting for a worldwide event that the CCP looks to as a means of supporting its legitimacy, demonstrates its illegitimacy on every level.

Is the reality a cluster of pathetic, fearful tyrants ruling and ruining China lost on the rest of the CCP members?

One can’t imagine how it could be so.


James R. Gorrie is the author of “The China Crisis” (Wiley, 2013) and writes on his blog, TheBananaRepublican.com. He is based in Southern California.

 

Ellanjay

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How Ancient Chinese Strategies Can Apply to US-China Showdowns


Video

China Insider
David Zhang

How do ancient military and Confucius writings in China help win wars and manage a country? And how has the modern world adapted these strategies? In particular, in the U.S.-China relationship, strategic development is very important.
I spoke with Morgan Deane, author of the new book, “Beyond Sun-Tzu: Classical Chinese Debates on War and Statecraft.” We discuss how the Chinese Communist Party may adopt these strategies against the West, and what we can learn to counter China’s military and economic expansionism.
 

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An Interpol logo shows at Interpol’s Global Complex for Innovation in Singapore on Sept. 30, 2014. (Edgar Su/Reuters)


Kick China Out of Interpol



Interpol must come clean on Hong Kong

Anders Corr


February 20, 2022

Commentary PDF Audio


Interpol is supposed to be a respected international police organization, for collaboration to nab murderers and rapists. But when the world’s worst criminals get control, it starts to look closer to terrorism or the mafia.

That is the sorry state of international policing as Interpol refuses to help Hongkongers who are fleeing persecution from Beijing’s so-called National Security Law (NSL). Interpol should publicly reaffirm the safety of Hong Kong human rights advocates who fear its politicized arrest warrants, called “red notices.”

The Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) 2020 NSL is horrible and broadly worded, according to Amnesty International, and has global extraterritorial effect. The law applies globally to anyone of any citizenship who organizes peaceful protests anywhere, for example, on Chinese human rights issues. Beijing can use its influence to get Interpol to issue red notices against anyone who violates the NSL—chilling freedom of speech everywhere.



Did you attend a human rights protest on Hong Kong, or against the Uyghur genocide, and then go to Portugal for vacation? Watch out—Interpol could have you on a list and arrest you when you land with your Hawaiian shorts and Vinho Verde in hand.

The Portuguese authorities, who have an extradition treaty with China, could then send you for prosecution in a Beijing court. Surprise. Vacation over.

On Jan. 13, 16 Hongkongers and their supporters signed an open letter to the Interpol General Secretariat. They wrote, “Most of us have been forced to flee Hong Kong after the imposition of the National Security Law, which essentially created a set of political crimes.”

“Our only real crime is standing up for the fundamental human rights and liberties enshrined in the [U.N.] Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” signed in 1948 by China, Britain, the United States, and most other countries at the time.

One of the letter signatories from Hong Kong, Simon Cheng, claims to have been tortured while detained by the Chinese regime. He was at the time a British Consulate employee in Hong Kong.

Simon Cheng (front left) and Finn Lau (center) in a march commemorating the two-year anniversary of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy movement in London on June 12, 2021. (Yanning Qi/The Epoch Times)

The British Foreign Office warned another British citizen, Luke de Pulford, that he risked extradition to Hong Kong for prosecution.

According to the letter’s authors, the Chinese regime in 2021 increased its talk of “going after” the activists, including through Interpol. “Most of us undersigned have been confirmed as being wanted or having an arrest warrant on us, based on the National Security Law,” they wrote. “Others have been implicated in court documents or in State-aligned media publications.”

The signatories are likely the “tip of the iceberg,” as they noted, given tens of thousands of human rights advocates who fled Hong Kong since Beijing’s suppression of pro-democracy protesters and free media in that city.

“The constant threat and uncertainty of a potential arrest as China expands its long-arm policing efforts by both legal and illegal means, creates a profound chilling effect striking at the heart of fundamental liberties such as the freedom of expression and movement everywhere,” they wrote.

The letter signatories give the example of the Uyghur Idris Hasan, targeted by a China-initiated Interpol red notice in 2017. Hasan was detained and is currently facing deportation from Morocco. The notice was apparently issued in violation of Interpol’s own rules and review processes. If extradited to China, he could be detained in a “reeducation” camp, subjected to forced labor, tortured, forcefully sterilized, or killed.

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is conducting at least one genocide—maybe three if one includes the persecution of Falun Gong and Tibetans. The CCP rules through force rather than democratic election. It conducts fear campaigns against anyone who complains. The CCP should be considered a terrorist organization by U.S. law, as argued by Teng Biao, a respected University of Chicago academic, and Terri Marsh, an international human rights lawyer.

This is the country with which Interpol, and its member states, continue to sully themselves by continuing to treat the CCP’s China as a legitimate member of the international system.

In 2018, Interpol was led by Meng Hongwei, a Chinese police official answerable to the Beijing regime. When he ran afoul of CCP leader Xi Jinping, he himself was arrested on a trip to China. Beijing is now targeting Meng’s wife and twin boys, who the French police are thankfully providing with 24-hour protection.

Meng Hongwei, former president of Interpol, gives an address at the opening of the Interpol World Congress in Singapore on July 4, 2017. (Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images)

In November, China’s Hu Binchen was elected as one of Interpol’s 13 executive committee members. Hu is a senior police official answerable to Beijing. The organization elected an official from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as its president at the same time. The official, Ahmed Naser Al-Raisi, is accused of overseeing torture against a UAE human rights defender as well as against two Britons.

The UAE has long cooperated with China through extraditions of Uyghurs back to China. One report claims that Chinese police are detaining Uyghurs in a black jail on UAE territory. The UAE is a Belt and Road country, and has extensive trade with the totalitarian country.

Cheng argues that Interpol should cancel any red notices it may have issued against human rights defenders, and confess publicly to having issued them.

The Wall Street Journal editorial board argues that America is not doing enough to protect those wrongly targeted by Interpol. While the State Department did say that “we will continue to stand with Hong Kongers as they respond to Beijing’s assault on their freedoms,” according to the Journal, these are just words. The U.S. government has not directly addressed the serious allegations of Beijing’s abuse of Interpol.

“The Biden Administration should push Interpol for a public response,” the Journal wrote. “If not, Hong Kongers might find out they’re a target only after it’s too late. Meanwhile, they will be living in fear, which is exactly what China wants.”

The Journal is right to demand at least this much from the Biden administration. But even this is a band-aid solution that fails to address the ultimate cause of the problem.

America must do more.

The CCP is closer to a mafia or terrorist organization than to a legitimate political party in control of a legitimate state apparatus. It is absolutely wrong to allow for it to control or even influence decision-making at the highest levels of international policing.

China should be kicked off Interpol until it gets its house in order, including an immediate cessation of the genocide and what may seem impossible but what should be demanded in accordance with the U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Beijing must begin to actively support democratization and human rights reforms within China itself.
(More See PDF Audio)



eReadings:The Genocide Games PDF(preview3.94M); ePu(3.21M);MOBI(2.62M)
 

Ellanjay

Council Member
Apr 11, 2020
1,744
251
83

Fauci Knew About Virus Lab Origin Via Secret Teleconference, Pushed Alternate Narrative​



Dr. Anthony Fauci was told in a secret teleconference that the COVID-19 virus very likely leaked from a laboratory in China. After the teleconference, however, Fauci and his associates began pushing an alternate narrative, instead claiming the virus was of natural origin, and the researchers who informed him and others of the likely lab leak also changed their narrative to align with Fauci, despite their own documented statements saying otherwise. To learn more about this, we sat down for an interview with Jeff Carlson and Hans Mahncke, hosts of Truth Over News.
 

Ellanjay

Council Member
Apr 11, 2020
1,744
251
83

Huawei Telecom Built Near US Nuclear Facilities


Video

China Insider
David Zhang


China, in its global ambition, seeks to control the latest in technology. Huawei has been the forefront fighter of China’s 5G plan. Together, they want to dominate the global 5G movement, and in turn, make China the strongest in the world. That was the plan until the United States banned its activities and destroyed its influence—for now. If Huawei’s sudden rise surprises you, then it’s time to learn about its careful infiltration into the Western world through low bidding contract offers and massive inner workings alongside the Chinese Communist Party.
I am joined by Jonathan Pelson, the author of “Wireless Wars: China’s Dangerous Domination of 5G and How We’re Fighting Back.” Let’s hear what he has learned about Huawei’s development, its network within and around the world, and how the United States fell to the Chinese tech giant but woke up in time.