
Intentional?
LOL!!
Where it might go, or where it might not. It is whether it interests me that counts. If it doesn't interest you then come back again because I never know what the next post will hold...
Comments if you want to;
the_probligo (where he lives) @yahoo.com.au
别丢华人的脸,检点一点。
请别在读不懂华语的老外的部落格上留言和留龌龊网页的网址。
Last year, Jeffrey R. Immelt of G.E. complained to a meeting of business leaders in Rome that it was getting harder for foreign companies to do business in China, and he expressed a growing irritation that China was protecting its own national companies at the detriment of American companies.
American multinational corporations, experts said, are hurt by Chinese regulations that openly favor Chinese companies over foreign ones for government contracts. These rules, which are intended to stimulate technological innovation in China, have the effect of cutting American and other non-Chinese companies out of many of the big contracts there.
"U.S. companies have issues with China in many different business sectors,” said John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council in Washington. “But if I were to point to one single issue over the last year, it has been China’s innovation policies and how they link to government procurement.”
While nationalistic rules that favor Chinese companies affect technology and entertainment giants, China’s cheap currency undercuts tens of thousands of small-scale American manufacturers — companies that still make their products at home.This is the argument for China to float the Renmimbi. NZ went through that process 20 years back. Frankly, I don’t think that we have suffered as a nation, or as an economy. Quite the reverse in fact. Would we have the likes of Rakon and Fonterra if we had not had open border trading? Quite unlikely I think. Remember that Rakon started as a “Ma and Pa” company, Fonterra still is (at its roots) a co-operative of NZ farmers.
“The small mom-and-pop companies, which are getting crushed by the renminbi, you never hear from them,” said Nicholas R. Lardy, an expert on the Chinese economy at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “They don’t really have a voice. They just shrink and go out of business.”
Author, contrarian academic and web entrepreneur Denis Dutton died yesterday, aged 66.
The professor of philosophy at Canterbury University had been diagnosed with prostate cancer but continued working until his health deteriorated quickly a week ago, his son, Ben,said.
Professor Dutton was due to retire early next year.
"I think that he has been an incredibly passionate advocate for ideas and truth and a wonderful father and husband," his son said.
Born in California on February 9, 1944, Professor Dutton was educated at the University of California Santa Barbara and joined the University of Canterbury staff in 1984.
He gained a significant public profile for the Arts and Letters Daily website he established in 1998, which was sold to the United States-based Chronicle of Higher Education in 1999.
Professor Dutton continued as editor of what some dubbed "the best website in the world".
His recent work focused on Darwinian applications in aesthetics, which he explored in his bestselling book "The Art Instinct: Beauty, Pleasure and Human Evolution".