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Thursday, February 28, 2013

CHINADA'S SOVIETIZATION (China + Canada = Chinada)



China Dragon

CHINADA'S SOVIETIZATION
(China + Canada = Chinada)

Canada is in the mouth of the dragon, Oligarchical Collective/Corporate Communist  China and also in the mouth of the wolf, Oligarchical Collective/Corporate Communist  Russia. The USA and UK are also being similarily devoured but like here, no one over there, is talking about it. I was in the UK this past summer [2004] and not a word of criticism was spoken or written regarding Newcastle importing coal from the USSR and major soccer teams being bought by rich Russian government gangsters. It was also very difficult to find anything that wasn't MADE IN CHINA and although the quality was cheap the price-tag was expensive.
But back to sheepy old Canada, land of the fleeced, where not a bleat of critical comment is uttered as the aforesaid dragon and wolf devour our nation's resources in broad daylight.
Here are the links to the particular stories I'm referring to today:
CHINA DEVOURING CANADA'S METAL and CANADA BUYING USSR'S GAS
To learn what Orwell meant by Oligarchical Collectivism and what I mean by Corporate Communism go to my essay CORPORATE COMMUNISM. And to learn what's behind the western world's cozy relationship with the eastern world go to CHINESE TAKE-OVER. This is all about selling Canadians, Brits, Aussies and Americans into slavery to totalitarian tyrants run by Big Brother, also known as One World Government. ~ Jackie Jura

watch Canadian people say China biggeset threat to national security, CBC, Oct 25, 2012
Over the past couple of months, we've been inundated with stories about the proposed CNOOC takeover of Nexen, the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA) and about Chinese citizens coming to British Columbia to work in a mine. The polls tell us that Canadians are saying no, no and no. Nanos Research released the results of another survey on Wednesday, claiming that Canadians believe China is the biggest threat to our national security — even more so than Iran. The Prime Minister says it's Iran. Do Canadians agree? The anti-Chinese rhetoric is also evident in the media. Well-respected B.C. political analyst Bill Tielman wrote a column earlier this week, opining about how Canada will deal with the "China challenge to our national sovereignty". "It may be the most important question facing the country, with far more dire consequences than the election of a separatist provincial government in Quebec," he wrote for The Tyee. "Is Canada sleepwalking towards a future day when a communist-ruled undemocratic China has significant control of key parts of our economy? The evidence is mounting."...

Jeremy Paltiel, a professor of political ­science at Carleton University, says the Sino-phobia is misguided. "My concern is with the ignorant projections that associate "China", "state-owned", "Communist party" and "takeover" with nightmarish fantasies of the People's Liberation Army marching down Jasper Avenue in Edmonton", he wrote for the Financial Post. Former finance minister and foreign affairs minister John Manley admits that there are significant 'threats' but says that shouldn't stop us from doing business with the Asian superpower. "It's a popular belief now that China's a big threat rather than a big opportunity", he said at a Vancouver Board of Trade luncheon on Wednesday. "I don't quite see it that way. I don't dismiss the fact that there's a threat — there are issues around international property protection, there are issues around whether or not China be recognized as a market economy", he noted. "But we're going to have to do business in China...It's fundamentally the re-balancing of the global economy that we have to deal with." Manley, who is now the president and CEO of the Canadian Council of Chief Executives, says the anti-China sentiment is also prevalent in the United States.... Certainly, the 'West' needs to safeguard itself against the potential threats from China. But the reality is that Canada needs to do business with China, a country that within a few years will have the world's largest economy. The sooner we accept that, the better off we'll all be.

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