SPOILER: Op kostscholen voor kleuters wordt de Tibetaanse cultuur uitgewistOm spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.
EV prijzenoorlog in China, ze hoeven geen/amper winst te maken op het voertuig want ze kunnen daarna op de software nog geld verdienen. De concurrentie zoals NIO en XPeng daarintegen niet...quote:
via een omweg gaat men toch de prijzen verlagen , er is teveel productie en steeds minder kopers, dat gaat zich ook in europa voordoenquote:Op maandag 17 juli 2023 22:57 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
[..]
EV prijzenoorlog in China, ze hoeven geen/amper winst te maken op het voertuig want ze kunnen daarna op de software nog geld verdienen. De concurrentie zoals NIO en XPeng daarintegen niet...
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Tesla is planning a new round of pricing strategy in China, the first step of which is to halt the Phase I battery production line at the Shanghai Gigafactory.
Although some industry views suggest this workforce reduction is due to the United States' restrictions on battery exports to China, insiders from Tesla revealed that batteries produced in the Shanghai factory primarily serve domestic models, and the two-shift production at the Phase II battery factory is already sufficient to meet the battery needs for vehicle production.
Thus, this action, which involves cutting about half of the 1,000-strong workforce, can be seen as part of Tesla's cost-reduction efforts at the Shanghai factory.
On July 6, 2023, 16 of the mainstream automakers in the Chinese market signed a "Commitment to Maintaining a Fair Market Order in the Automotive Industry" at the China Automotive Forum. The most eye-catching part of their commitment was to maintain a fair competition order and not to disrupt it with abnormal prices. In other words, they pledged not to cut prices. However, just two days later, this commitment was withdrawn under public pressure.
Klopt maar altijd afgevraagd waarom. Dat was in het oude China toch ook niet de norm.quote:
stoppen met woningbouw is het beste recept voor een forse recessie, materiaal , inrichting, alles hangt aan woningbouwquote:Op dinsdag 18 juli 2023 22:13 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
Vreedzaam protest van huizeneigenaren die hun huis niet hebben gekregen omdat Evergrande is gestopt met bouwen wordt met harde hand neergeslagen door de politie. Mensen worden gearresteerd, urenlang ondervraagd en gevangen gezet.
This video reveals the numerous halted construction projects of Evergrande in Kunming. Countless unfinished properties resemble ghost towns, which is truly chilling. The videographer asks, "Are any of these unfinished Evergrande developments in Kunming ones that you bought?"
The aforementioned unfinished properties by Evergrande are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to its halted projects.
In September 2022, Evergrande claimed to have 706 "halted projects" in hand, and here we only list a few of its most prominent ones.
is dit een herhaling van de crediet crisis 2008 ?quote:(Bloomberg) -- Mounting signs of financial stress at Chinese developers are again roiling the nation's dollar-bond market and adding to concerns about the health of the world's second-largest economy
quote:BEIJING (AP) -- China Evergrande, the property developer whose woes helped bring about a slump in the country's vitally important real estate market, has reported its debts rose further to about $340 billion by the end of last year..
China Evergrande reports its debt rose to $340 billion in 2022. It plans meetings with creditors
Wat staat hier?quote:Op woensdag 19 juli 2023 09:11 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
• Chinese Unemployed Female White-collar ‘Pretends to Work’ at Starbucks, Breaks Down in Tears for Fear of Being Exposed
• The Wave Of Layoffs In Internet Companies Continues, With Some On The Verge Of Being Hollowed Out
• Liao Yuan Citizens Fall Victim to High-Interest Temptation, Lose All Hard-Earned Money to Finance Bureau
• Sino-Ocean Group's Default Crisis Involves Social Security Fund, Real Estate Industry Crisis Spreads to State-Owned Enterprises
[*]Zhejiang Official Website Abruptly Removes Data: Surge in Cremated Remains Sparks Censored Hot Debate
In Nederland zie je goed uitziende jonge jongens die de hele dag gamen en geen vrouw aankijken dat zie je hier ook veel tegenwoordigquote:Op woensdag 19 juli 2023 13:41 schreef Gunnter het volgende:
Teveel mannen en te weinig vrouwen. Dan zijn vrouwen ook nog veel kieskeuriger en nemen ook nogeens minder kinderen. Waar doe je het dan nog voor je als gemiddelde (chinese) man nergens aan de bak komt. Dan blijf je liever LDAR'en achter je PC. Dit is een wereldwijd fenomeen. Van India, Japan tot diep in het westen.
In Japan hebben ze daar een naam voor: https://edition.cnn.com/2(...)e%20their%20bedrooms.quote:Op woensdag 19 juli 2023 13:45 schreef michaelmoore het volgende:
[..]
In Nederland zie je goed uitziende jonge jongens die de hele dag gamen en geen vrouw aankijken dat zie je hier ook veel tegenwoordig
zijn 28 en hebben nooit een blote vrouw gezien en er ook gene behoefte aan toaal A sexueel
Sinds China de lakens uitdeelt in sommige Afrikaanse landen, moet je daar opeens op de airport ook vingerafdrukken geven en paspoort scannen en facescannenquote:
Weet jij van wie dat Channel is?quote:Op donderdag 20 juli 2023 14:17 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
Recently, a large-scale law enforcement action targeting defaulting debtors is fervently taking place all over China. The protagonists of this action aren't those who owe a large amount of money. Instead, these are individuals such as someone who owes 55,000 yuan due to a private lending dispute, and another who owes a mere 70,000 yuan.
This is a fresh law enforcement action sparked by the new draft of the Civil Compulsory Execution Law. This new regulation grants the court a significant power: summoning defaulters who must attend the investigations. However, if they choose to shirk their responsibilities, ignoring the court summons and refusing to attend, law enforcement will intervene, forcing their attendance.
SPOILER: what is Falun GongOm spoilers te kunnen lezen moet je zijn ingelogd. Je moet je daarvoor eerst gratis Registreren. Ook kun je spoilers niet lezen als je een ban hebt.• Farmers in Henan suffered huge losses due to rain and alleged that compensation was insufficient
• School admission slots in Zhengzhou have been sold on the internet. Officials scold reporters and force them to remove the news
• Reports of forced blood testing have raised concerns about the CCP's live organ harvesting
• The 20th of July marks the 2nd anniversary of the Zhengzhou Flood in Henan and the 24th anniversary of the CCP's persecution of Falun Gong
[ Bericht 24% gewijzigd door slashdotter3 op 22-07-2023 11:05:51 ]
kan ook zijn dat ze van zeldzame bloedgroepen willen weten wie dat heeftquote:Op vrijdag 21 juli 2023 20:36 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
• Farmers in Henan suffered huge losses due to rain and alleged that compensation was insufficient
• School admission slots in Zhengzhou have been sold on the internet. Officials scold reporters and force them to remove the news
• Reports of forced blood testing have raised concerns about the CCP's live organ harvesting
• The 20th of July marks the 2nd anniversary of the Zhengzhou Flood in Henan and the 24th anniversary of the CCP's persecution of Falun Gong
zo maken ze van China een soort Noord Koreaquote:Op zondag 23 juli 2023 22:17 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
[ twitter ]
China should just give up on inbound tourism at this point. The fact that it's big news that foreigners can pay for things is maybe a sign that the country isn't set up for tourism.
Me, a resident of China, trying to book a short trip. Let's make sure the hotel accepts foreigners. Tickets for everything in the area can only be purchased with a shenfenzheng (ID). So I guess just show up in person and hope I can buy tickets to stuff.
Imagine if some Chinese person went to Las Vegas, was told they couldn't stay in the hotel they booked because they're foreign. And then couldn't book any tourist things because they didn't have a drivers license.
It was a diplomatic incident when some Chinese in Sweden were told they couldn't squat for free in a hotel lobby in Stockholm. Imagine if they were reguarly told they couldn't stay in a hotel because of their nationality.
A lot of things in China are simply at odds with tourism.
-Real name verification for everything
-Many apps/services only accept Chinese ID
-Great firewall
-Incredibly hard to sign up for WeChat
-Hotels that won't take foreigners/PSB 24 hour registration requirement
Those are unlikely to change because they're linked to security. But it also means a lot of people will just never visit China. The tourism spending doesn't matter. The bigger issue is people never seeing the country and life firsthand
Even checking into a hotel as a foreign resident is a pain. Check the passport, the visa/residence permit, entry stamp. Take a photo with webcam on the desk.
I put a post-it on the page with the latest entry stamp. No time for someone to look through 50 pages of stamps.
If you're not staying in a hotel, there is an anachronistic regulation that you have to register your presence with the local police station within 24 hours.
Staying with a friend for 2 days and don't register with the PSB? Technically breaking the law.
Admittedly, it's not enforced often. But I've gotten in trouble and fined for it.
Inbound tourism:
Apply for an expensive and visa. Then take expensive flight. Hour in queue at Pudong immigration and health declaration.
Need WeChat. But someone needs to verify you. Need SIM card, but requires your passport. Link your WeChat to your credit card.
Message friends/family that you arrived safely. Everything (FB/whatsapp/insta) is blocked. Hopefully spent extra money on a VPN.
Download Didi and go the hotel. Hotel doesn’t take foreigners. Stay with friend, but technically need to go the PSB tomorrow morning to register.
Book a nice sightseeing tour. App is only in Chinese, but fine, Google Translate (if you have a VPN). Buying a ticket requires a Chinese ID number.
This isn't a good time to have nuanced takes on China. It's frustrating that it's difficult for tourists and even foreign residents in China.
But it's frustrating because it should be easy for people to come here and see the country.
Best klassiek David en Goliath.quote:Op dinsdag 11 juli 2023 14:31 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
Onderstaande tweet doet mij denken aan de aanstaande oorlog met Taiwan.
Wat gaat Taiwan doen als China met duizenden speedboots met elk 4~6 soldaten ofzo het water oversteekt? Het gaat a) waarschijnlijk veel te snel voor een anti ship missile en b) de anti ship missiles zijn eerder op dan dan de spotgoedkope speedboots... c) omdat er maar 4~6 man op zit is elk bootje afzonderlijk een low value target om uit te schakelen met een schaarse missile 🤔
[ twitter ]
Als ik dit zo lees dan ben ik blij dat ik in 2013 gegaan ben. Was ook gedoe maar een stuk makkelijker.quote:Op zondag 23 juli 2023 22:17 schreef slashdotter3 het volgende:
[ twitter ]
China should just give up on inbound tourism at this point. The fact that it's big news that foreigners can pay for things is maybe a sign that the country isn't set up for tourism.
Me, a resident of China, trying to book a short trip. Let's make sure the hotel accepts foreigners. Tickets for everything in the area can only be purchased with a shenfenzheng (ID). So I guess just show up in person and hope I can buy tickets to stuff.
Imagine if some Chinese person went to Las Vegas, was told they couldn't stay in the hotel they booked because they're foreign. And then couldn't book any tourist things because they didn't have a drivers license.
It was a diplomatic incident when some Chinese in Sweden were told they couldn't squat for free in a hotel lobby in Stockholm. Imagine if they were reguarly told they couldn't stay in a hotel because of their nationality.
A lot of things in China are simply at odds with tourism.
-Real name verification for everything
-Many apps/services only accept Chinese ID
-Great firewall
-Incredibly hard to sign up for WeChat
-Hotels that won't take foreigners/PSB 24 hour registration requirement
Those are unlikely to change because they're linked to security. But it also means a lot of people will just never visit China. The tourism spending doesn't matter. The bigger issue is people never seeing the country and life firsthand
Even checking into a hotel as a foreign resident is a pain. Check the passport, the visa/residence permit, entry stamp. Take a photo with webcam on the desk.
I put a post-it on the page with the latest entry stamp. No time for someone to look through 50 pages of stamps.
If you're not staying in a hotel, there is an anachronistic regulation that you have to register your presence with the local police station within 24 hours.
Staying with a friend for 2 days and don't register with the PSB? Technically breaking the law.
Admittedly, it's not enforced often. But I've gotten in trouble and fined for it.
Inbound tourism:
Apply for an expensive and visa. Then take expensive flight. Hour in queue at Pudong immigration and health declaration.
Need WeChat. But someone needs to verify you. Need SIM card, but requires your passport. Link your WeChat to your credit card.
Message friends/family that you arrived safely. Everything (FB/whatsapp/insta) is blocked. Hopefully spent extra money on a VPN.
Download Didi and go the hotel. Hotel doesn’t take foreigners. Stay with friend, but technically need to go the PSB tomorrow morning to register.
Book a nice sightseeing tour. App is only in Chinese, but fine, Google Translate (if you have a VPN). Buying a ticket requires a Chinese ID number.
This isn't a good time to have nuanced takes on China. It's frustrating that it's difficult for tourists and even foreign residents in China.
But it's frustrating because it should be easy for people to come here and see the country.
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