Showing posts with label Burma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burma. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Chinese steel. It could be worse- glimpse into future

Disclaimer:- 
I avoided CIA clandestine ops recruitment as per my relatives request. The below is fantastical hodgepodge of scenario ideas for a movie. No Black ops  here.
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AKS-47 made in China. What could be worse than steel dumping is if China were to flood some of the oldest trade routes from Siberia to Africa with weapons. Then US special forces wouldn't need me, yours truly, to open American sponsored TPP trade routes to get weapons to their clandestine ops & troops. They also wouldn't have to bother to try and help me here in the USA (believe me they don't in any substantial capacity as I'm looking at well over $590,000k in clearances & licensing alone not including other startup funds while I remain homeless).

Japan, Korea, Russia, & China agree to set up a political sanctuary off the Kamchakta peninsula.

China decided to dump steel and then put sanctions on USA imports as an additional security measure. China entered into trade talks with ASEAN member countries.

US closed manufacturing in China due to cut subsidies for opening business overseas from 1999. USA tries to make shipments of such goods before an embargo takes hold in 2017 due to its inability to meet Trans Pacific Pact standards. China & the EU make a deal to take the embargoed goods and donate them for refugees as a eency weency part of USA debt repayment.

My experience in the States:- The USA valued itself above the totality of the rest of the world. The role I was asked to serve is to knowingly sponsor worldwide American terrorists who belong to a variety of terrorist groups as diverse as the National backgrounds that can be found in the USA Homeland. Some had American military above top secret clearance and still want weapons to "play with Asian politics". The USA only spoke of their ability to fight the war on terrorism as a means to gain access to crucial, & strategic trade routes that are some of the oldest trade routes from Asia to Africa. The future looks bleak from the USA side to me. 

Friday, January 29, 2016

ASEAN banks MUST open in USA- TPP efforts being sunk by BIG USA Banks

At the Dawn of the Beginning or the End of the TPP on Feb. 4, 2016 USA banks have already plummeted efforts to the pits of the USA debt load. It has been ongoing for most of the past 10 years/ decade. And, with oncoming USA presidential elections;- what USA banks do in the interim will affect the outcome of the TPP (Trans Pacific Protocol) that has been largely booed by the American public (already experiencing the beginnings of big block store closures).

That is irregardless of the Obama Administration's Patriot Act. The Patriot Act itself inspired overt racism, discrimination of National Origin, and encouraged Feds and State and local politicians and their livid followers to devestate the lives of otherwise normal Asian-Americans particularly on the Eastern USA seaboard. It changed the face of Foreign Policy  made all that was said internationally a farce.

Just as America's banks made a huge domestic effort to turn against musicians with PEACEFUL statements. America's banks have been making a huge domestic effort to turn the political tides against persons who have overseas interests in the TPP and other Export-Import ventures. It seems that even the Large cap American banks such as Citicorp have executives in their conglomerate midsts who want to pillage the remnants of Japanese held USA debt and try to turn the tides against Japan. They won't hold their own heiled domestic standard accountable for the National Debt;- instead they are trying to eliminate all the competition that has any notable ties overseas.

Everything from failed credit protection systems, erroneous banking fees, forced closures of accounts, and letting local authorities (as well as newly hired electronic security) violate personal privacy and allowed them to commit fraud at the local level has occured in over 10 years.

Around 1980, when I was about 6years old, my father (ex USAF OSI ) said to me -- the CIA will force you to be a thief or a terrorist;- take your pick, we took pot-bets that you won't live till you're 26.

It's not just that I can't sleep many nights knowing how much they have actively damaged my life in the USA, even being born as a dual citizen. Its that they are horrendous at this point;- and my overseas family in Keiretsu is not showing they have any power or authority to handle the damage that they have done.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Rambo & Untraceable- Please don't support Violence

Over the weekend I caught up on movies with the wretchedly disgusting Untraceable only paralelled by the recent release of Rambo in grotesque violence. Though even after being invited to and attending a talk given by a Burmese monk on Burma at Cornell University (approximately the same time when Japanese reporter Kenji Nagai was killed); - at least Rambo is somewhat progressive in communicating how brutal Burma can be. see an example of real-life footage on Kenji Nagai Though, my Japanese upbringing still tells me that I should not support violence. It is still a hyper politically charged issue to financially support violence in any way. It's not a matter of "turning-away" so much as it is a matter of cutting of financial support that sustains that environment.
Boycotts are normal in the consumer world. In the political & financial world of global commerce the same type of "boycott" action is taking by cutting funding to those terse and ill regions. There is still more that can be done; - none of which is a humane approach to solving the problem. Like rat poison;- people are affected by everything they come in contact with. Weather it kills the enemy or weakens them;- everything is fair in war. Cutting funding to the plight is the best action in entirety. I can also speak from personal experience on that here in the U.S. however- it is an entirely different and seperate matter from attending a talk on Burma. During the talk provided by the Burmese monk, I was thankful that my exposure to Asian languages helped me understand the talk more than what the translator presented to us in English. Somehow all those nuances are lost and people get the "soundbite"version of what is going on without the descript storytelling impacting them at the time of the talk. Then you couple that with some photos after a 2 hr. session and you have one long-arse version of a Cnn report. I'll clean up this article in a bit.