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China on our doorstep

China’s property slump is also affecting overseas housing markets, including Australia. While it is difficult to get capital out of China, households hoarding savings that they would have previously spent on Chinese real estate are now eyeing investments in countries such as Australia, research shows.

Real estate firm Juwai IQI says Australia now tops the list of overseas markets such as Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States for Chinese investors. This is also being driven by an exodus of China’s wealthy due to last year’s COVID-19 lockdowns and Xi’s common prosperity policies.

A report by Juwai estimates about 712,000 people from the country will migrate to the US, Canada and Australia from this year to 2025. Australia expects about 70,000 new migrants from China in the next two years...

... and

 

We're going to have to build some ginormous internment camps in the next 10 years.
 
This week saw the release of the 2023 edition of China’s “standard map”.
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Note that what used to be known as the 9 Dash map now has 10 dashes. Bits of India and far eastern Russia have been incorporated as well as pushing close to Philippines, Malaysia and Vietnam.
 
How much of a risk do we face from the widespread use of Chinese surveillance technology ? This is pretty disturbing story.



LIDAR mapping technology, provided by Chinese company Hesai, as seen from a self-driving Kodiak truck in the U.S. (Photo via Kodiak Robotics, Inc.)

Is That a Spy in Your Car?


America is already beholden to China for antibiotics, lithium batteries, and 5G equipment. Now they are cornering the market on an important technology used in self-driving vehicles.

By Nadia Schadlow

September 18, 2023

 

Could be the horror story from hell.
 
It would seem that foreign direct investment into China is somehwat subdued.

Mick

EDITED: I presume the #SAFE means Simple Agreement for Future Equity - usually for new startups.
 


Deterrence is still the best form of defense, but it is getting expensive and risky. But what other method do we have available to us?

Aggression is increasing across the globe.
Russia invaded the Ukraine without fear.
China is building the largest armed force ever seen since WWII and they are threatening to take Taiwan a democratic and free country.
The Middle East is armed to the hilt and have a philosophy that teaches their children that the West is evil and Jewish people need to be annihilated.
Iran is on the verge of producing nuclear weapons.

Sadly, we need to spend vast amount of money to defend the future. We need to choose a side, one that believes in freedom, or one that dictates and rules by an elite class.

To prepare for a potential war over Taiwan, the U.S is increasing its military presence in Australia to a level not seen since World War 2. Taiwan is regarded by China as part of its territory and Beijing has vowed to take control of the island by force if necessary. What advantages does Australia’s geography offer the U.S. in a potential fight in the Asia-Pacific region?​

 
There is a discussion about democracy happening in the EV thread, and so as not to anger those over there I have put this here in the hope that they follow.

The extreme left is growing, they are favouring political systems that control all aspects of humanity.

I think that there is a hidden agenda.

Group thought has changed, large groups in democratic countries have reached a dilemma: how to stop the decline of fauna, flora, nature?

They believe that limiting humanity's natural tendency of individualism is the answer. They are looking at government control similar to China's.
China’s debt trap...A case in point is Sri Lanka’s experience with the Chinese infrastructure loan for the development of the Hambantota Port. The Sri Lankan government, unable to repay the loan, was compelled to concede the port to China on a 99-year lease in 2017.
In 2021, US President Joe Biden... expressed that US-China rivalry is part of a broader competition between democracy and autocracy. To...unite nations that uphold democratic values, and address the challenges that democracy faces in the contemporary world.

In the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), China appears to be leading a coalition of nations that lack robust democratic institutions. This coalition includes countries like Russia, Iran, North Korea, and Myanmar.
Xi Jinping currently serves as the President of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). His policy shift, dubbed “striving for achievement,” represents a departure from Deng Xiaoping’s strategy of “keeping a low profile and biding time...Securing his third term of leadership during the 20th Party Congress in 2022, Xi amended the country’s constitution in 2018 to eliminate term limits for the presidency, thereby paving the way for potential lifelong rule.[10] Consequently, Xi Jinping has ascended to become China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong, the founder of the PRC.


 
or another one
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And the brits have handed the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.

 
I would agree with much of the foregoing re China's expansion worldwide via purchase of ports and assets to exert influence and in some cases control of maritime areas and supply routes. I feel that Australia should not just be cognisant of the big picture stuff but more importantly just look after the small picture stuff at which we excel.

We are a small nation with a proven ability to be unwise in our management of military assets, the 2036 Submarine being the latest. We are good at being tactical, the E.Timor action at the time was a brilliant fending off of Indonesia for a generation. Let us work small and intelligently.

My argument is that we should stick at what we are good at. We can do that by more wisely spending and deploying our military, by getting friendly nations more on side particularly the USA and by ridding ourselves of active anti-Australian segments within our borders masquerading as peaceful protestors within the poorly defined limits of democracy.

Our immigration policy needs constant upgrading and particularly in limiting the entry of people from regions which do not share our values. So immigration from China and the Middle East needs to be limited to small triple digit figures annually and carefully monitored.

Some may accuse me of racism and I am in so far as I believe that many Chinese scientists are better for Australia than our home grown ice injecting bogans and that many in the Middle East make good citizens as long as they leave Allah out of their considerations as to where Australia should be going, better than some yahooing Christians in name only who make good in politics.

Paul Keating made a very good point about China. why should they spend billions of dollars and millions of troops invading and occupying Australia when they can peacefully import our iron and coal. There is always a trade off.

And then there is Kevin Rudd sitting in New York warming his ass on our Federal Government salary throwing insults at the next POTUS. He is more dangerous to Australia than any Chinese buying a port or two in the middle of nowhere ( but not in Darwin ).

gg
 
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