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 Strategies & Market Trends | True face of China -- A Modern Kaleidoscope


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To: RealMuLan who wrote (11052)5/21/2012 10:44:32 PM
From: hui zhou   of 11580
 
James Fallows on 'China Airborne'
whyy.org 

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To: hui zhou who wrote (11053)5/22/2012 12:36:57 AM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Very stupid buy on China side, I hope BOTH U.S. and Chinese gov. block the purchase of AMC by the Chinese. It is a complete money losing business for movie theater in the U.S for the next 20-30 years. The only parties who will celebrate the deal are those $2 billion debt holders, since they can get back every penny they put in, may be more, and dump them on the stupid Chinese buyer.

Is this The Wanda Group a private owned Chinese company?
nytimes.com 

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To: hui zhou who wrote (11044)5/22/2012 12:47:00 AM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Is there any difference bet. the Chinese princelings and the U.S. Princelings????????--Steven Strauss: "Chelsea Clinton for Congress? What Does That Tell Us About America? "

politicsinformer.com 

By the way, FYI, the life expectancy for the U.S. Senator is around 27 years! and for the House representatives, it is also longer than 20 years! ONLY fools believe in the U.S. "democracy"!

Other things like Bush family already has 2 U.S. presidents, Jeff Bush could become the 3rd one!

Multiple pairs of Father/son are simultaneously serving in the U.S. government. Tell me that is not Princelings! .

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To: Julius Wong who wrote (11033)5/22/2012 12:50:46 AM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Exclusive: U.S. lets China bypass Wall Street for Treasury orders


reuters.com 

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To: RealMuLan who wrote (11056)5/22/2012 1:55:48 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Video --"Dalai Lama - Not so Zen by Maxime Vivas"

French journalist has published a book on the "hidden" side of the Dalai Lama.The book has just been released, a year after the journalist made a trip to the China's Tibet Autonomous Region.World News brings you the details.PKG"Not So 'Zen': The Hidden Side Of The Dalai

shugdensociety.wordpress.com 

PARIS, Aug. 20 (Xinhua) — A French writer’s book put on sale recently has disclosed another side, including opportunism and tricks, of the Dalai Lama deified by some Western politicians and armchair pundits.

Maxime Vivas’s new book “Not So ‘Zen’: The Hidden Side Of The Dalai Lama” hit the shelves of bookstores and online retailers Thursday, days after the Dalai Lama himself held a three-day public conference in the southern French city Toulouse.

Facts and views in the 130-page French-language book refute the long-time self-beatification of the Dalai Lama.

“Based on the word of the Dalai Lama in his transcribed memoirs and also in his speeches during his trips abroad, Maxime Vivas highlights opportunism, omissions, tricks, and lies of a man and his kingdom,” the publisher Max Milo Editions said in a press kit.

“In a plea for secularism, the author raises the question of what would be a ‘Free Tibet’ led by a recalcitrant prophet in front of science and freedom of worship,” the publisher said, while presenting a briefing of a feudal system decades ago under the Dalai Lama and the free primary education system in today’s Tibet that is significantly bringing down the illiteracy rate.

“The trend in France is mostly to edit mass books praising the Dalai Lama. Writing against the Dalai Lama or breaking his image is akin to smearing the portraits of Nelson Mandela or Mahatma Gandhi, the idols which we can’t touch,” Vivas told Xinhua.

Confusion-and-curiosity-driven, Vivas conducted a truth-seeking trip to Tibet in the summer of 2010 with several other French journalists.

He found there is a modern Tibet prospering with free prayers in temples and monasteries and even on the streets, and Tibetan-written signs are everywhere.

“What I saw in Tibet is not like what I read from the French press and books,” he said.

To clarify the contradiction of the real Tibet he witnessed and the one in the Dalai Lama’s propaganda and most Western reports, Vivas read numerous documents, including studies of French parliamentarians, and researched opinions from various angles.

“This book is not based on documentation of the opponents of the Dalai Lama, not documentation of the Chinese authorities,” he said. “But the information I have drawn from speeches, lectures, interviews and memoirs of the Dalai Lama, and also with his followers …”

The book with the Dalai Lama’s photo on the cover is now on the bookshelves of Fnac, the largest retailer of cultural and electronic products in France, and in the book category of U.S.-based Amazon.com, the world’s largest online retailer.

There have been many comments about the book on the Internet.

Some pointed out the double status of the Dalai Lama mixing political with religious faces.

“However the truth is, he is not actually the person he appears to be. His actions have not always been in accordance with his message of peace, tolerance and compassion…” a netizen named “Caz Namyaw” commented.

The book also has drawn attention from the French media including TV5, bfm radio and France info, among others.

Showing footage of a regional TV channel’s interview on the book, Vivas pointed out several illogical arguments posed by some French media, which he said questioned him on the basis of prejudgment rather than the content of his book.

Vivas also said he didn’t believe in the Dalai Lama’s March announcement of handing over political power because he since met U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House in July.





In Chinese
guancha.cc 

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To: RealMuLan who wrote (11057)5/24/2012 9:00:13 AM
From: hui zhou   of 11580
 
Survey: China is richer, but not happier
marketplace.org 

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From: hui zhou5/24/2012 12:45:21 PM
   of 11580
 
May 24 (Reuters) - Sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp (CIC) is in advanced talks to buy an up to $2 billion stake in Alibaba Group, sources told Reuters, as the Chinese e-commerce powerhouse looks to secure the last of the funding it needs to buy back part of its stake from Yahoo Inc.

Yahoo and Alibaba struck a deal last week whereby the Chinese company agreed to buy back up to half of the 40 percent stake in itself held by Yahoo for $7.1 billion, valuing Alibaba at $35 billion.

Alibaba is raising $4.6 billion of that target through an issue of preferred shares, bank loans and the sale of a stake to existing shareholders - Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings Pvt Ltd and DST Global. Another $2.5 billion in cash would allow Alibaba to fund the full $7.1 billion purchase.

Sources with direct knowledge of the matter said CIC's $2 billion puchase of the Alibaba stake would help the e-commerce company complete its funding for the Yahoo purchase.

Alibaba is also in talks with private equity firms that would assist in funding the remaining $500 million, sources said, including Bain Capital, Blackstone Group LP, and Hony Capital.

The sources declined to be named because the discussions were private. Alibaba, Blackstone, CIC and Hony all declined comment. Bain could not immediately be reached for comment.

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To: hui zhou who wrote (11058)5/24/2012 1:33:55 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
Why would anyone feel surprised about this? I am not.

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To: hui zhou who wrote (11058)5/24/2012 1:34:29 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
OT:

US NSA outsourcing under the radar<G>
businessinsider.com 

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To: hui zhou who wrote (11058)5/24/2012 1:40:28 PM
From: RealMuLan   of 11580
 
OT:

Here are 10 countries whose people are UNHAPPIER than Chinese<G>

businessinsider.com 

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