"The longest-running, least-read blog in the world" Peter Forsythe in Hong Kong
Sunday, 31 March 2024
Saturday, 30 March 2024
Dick Smith Fact checks the ABC on nuclear for Australia
(Dick Smith is a patron of Nuclear for Australia)
Dick Smith is a famous Aussie entrepreneur. i’m so glad he’s a patron of Nuclear for Australia.
From their email to me today:
Last Friday, the ABC posted a 'Fact Check' targeting Dick Smith.
In response, he fact checked the fact check describing the article as "full of lies", threatened to sue the ABC and wrote a complaint to ABC Managing Director David Anderson.
The ABC RMIT Fact Check addressed his claim to Ben Fordham that:
"No country has been able to run entirely on renewables"
In their fact check, Mark Jacobson suggested this claim wasn't true:
"There are four countries running on 100% wind-water-solar (WWS) alone for their grid electricity".
Those countries are Albania, Bhutan, Nepal and Paraguay who Dick noted were obviously not comparable to Australia.
He also pointed out that the ABC had deceptively only focussed on electricity rather than energy as a whole.
No country has been able to use renewables to cover their broader energy demands which in addition to electricity include areas like transportation and heating.
“U.S. must do better” | Steven Roach
Latest in what appears to be a series “America Bad”. After yesterday’s hit piece by Zhou Xiaoming.
This one from professor Steven Roach at Yale University. The U.S. “must do better” we are told. “Sinophobia is off the rails …”
I wonder if Roach, dumping on the U.S. from the comfort of his ivory tower at Yale, thinks his equivalent at, say, Tsing Hua University could do a similar broadside on China?
Anyway, picking nits. Quotes from the article indented:
“[Huawei] was accused of deploying digital back doors that could enable Chinese espionage and cyberattacks…”
Accusations were not from the U.S. alone, but also the U.K., Australia and the EU. They hardly beggar belief.
“The Department of Justice has just indicted a state-sponsored Chinese hacking group for allegedly taking aim at critical American infrastructure. Much has also been made of the purported risks of Chinese electric vehicles (EVs), construction and dock-loading cranes, and now TikTok.”
In his intro, Roach defined “Sinophobia” as an irrational fear and accused the U.S. of it. But the above are not “irrational” concerns:
- Concerns about attacks on U.S. infrastructure are well-documented, long-standing and apply not just to China. However, China has the most capacity for cyberattacks.
- On EVs it was China that first banned Teslas from what they deemed “sensitive sites” in China because they feared Tesla hacks. What’s good for the goose, ‘n all….
- On Tik Tok I’ve made the case for its banning, here and here. And “4 guys who know their stuff discuss the Tik Tok ban bill.”. The Congressional Committee passed it 50-0, virtually unprecedented unanimity.
“Not since the red-baiting of the early 1950s has America so vilified a foreign power.”
Why “red-baiting”? Why the mockery? The early fifties were barely post war. Stalin’s Soviet Union promptly gulped down Eastern Europe and the Baltic states. In the sixties Krushchev vowed to the west “we will bury you!” He meant it. The Kennedy-Krushchev face-off in Cuba was a real existential threat of global nuclear apocalypse.
So, yeah, the Soviet Union was vilified and more so than China today. I remember it personally. All we older Boomers do. Ronald Reagan did vilification best, when called the Soviet Union the “Evil Empire”. That’s not “red-baiting”; that’s being anti the takeover of the world by Soviet communism.
The intelligence community over-estimated the Soviets strength. And they may be overestimating Chinese strength today. But even if, it’s surely inarguable that China is vastly stronger than the Soviets ever were. Criticising them is not “vilification”.
Friday, 29 March 2024
“… John Lee vows to step up intelligence gathering, analysis for law enforcement after Article 23 legislation” | SCMP
Best to get in with promoting HK as International Financial Centre and less of defending Article 23 against alleged "foreign smears". That only keeps the Law in the news, the "Streisand effect".
Interesting that many other comments are critical.
It's odd that the government keeps on hammering away at overseas critics of Article 23 when they've said they want us and the world to focus on the economy. Same as recent hullabaloo over use of wrong anthem at international sporting events. Let it go! Remember Barbra!
“Climate the Movie"
Click above for the video |
Thursday, 28 March 2024
DUTY TO WARN - Seymour Hersh
Hong Kong: National Security Law. I’ve read it so you don’t have to...
A number of my Occasional Readers have asked, “what’s going on?” with the Article 23 law. So, here it is.
I was worried. And wrote that I was.
And now I’ve read the text, of the “Safeguarding National Security Law”, I’m not so worried.
Some points:
- Clarity and simplicity: the text of the Law is clearly written and easy to understand
- No worries about blogging: I was concerned that this blog, here for sixteen years, might breach the NSL. It does not. The relevant Clause is no. 22 and it strikes me as reasonable. At least more so than I’d feared.
- Defence clauses. The NSL has specific clauses stating that that “this” or “that” can be a defence in the case of breaches alleged under the Law. I think is this good.
Of course there are concerns amongst the business community, like what about “receiving State Secrets” and being involved with “External forces”. Those concerns are understandable. And need to be monitored.
But overall consider what companies look for. Stability, clean government, clear laws, freedom of capital movement, rule of law and clean judiciary. All of these Hong Kong retains.
So, no, I don’t think that it’s “the end of Hong Kong”. Or that we are ended as a financial centre. We no longer hear of Chinese officials predicting the imminent victory of Shanghai or Shenzhen over Hong Kong. It’s all Hong Kong, with its common law legal system and free capital movements. They keep on stressing this over and over. They keep stressing that we’ll keep the “one country two systems” model and that we’ll keep the Common Law system. This Beijing says from top to bottom and it’s good for us.
ADDED:
Li Cheng of the Brooking’s Institute says the notion that Hong Kong is “finished” is “ludicrous”. Three main reasons he gives: (1) We are highly cosmopolitan (2) We are on the biggest financial centres in Asia and the world (3) Good education system, with several universities in the top ten of the world.
AND: Foreign companies have prepared themselves for the new law since the National Security Law of 2020, here.
Another thing: I think I’d be more likely to be arrested or fined if in Scotland, Ireland, or even Australia, under their Hate Speech laws. I could be arrested there for saying that there are two sexes and that there is no “gender spectrum”, on the basis of science. Not so in Hong Kong. I’m going to say it here to prove it: “there are, scientifically, only two sexes, male and female”. There is no “gender spectrum”. There.
Also: many posting out that most other countries, including western democracies, have similar national security laws. Alex Lo writes a fun piece pointing out the British National Security Law is more draconian than our new Supplementary Law, and was enacted to not much publicity just three months ago. I wouldn’t make too much of that as they’re operating in democratic systems. Still, it’s a point . As is mine about being caught by Hate Speech laws.
“America bad” | Zhou Xiaoming
- Marshall Plan for Europe,
- Democracy in Japan,
- Establish and majorly fund the United Nations, World Health Organisation, World Trade organisation…
- Defence of South Korea, of Berlin, of Kosovo,
- Keeping world seaways open,
- GPS for the world,
- Biggest aid donor in the world, including to UNRWA (!), WHO, etc…
But, you know, "America bad".
Wednesday, 27 March 2024
"5 Myths about the war in Gaza” | Sam Harris
...
“U.S. has lost the race” | Winston Mok
Today’s South China Morning Post |
Winston Mok quotes a lot of figures, many correct, a few incorrect, and some arguable. But I’ll be sad and chastened if in a few years, if I’m still around, I come back to this and find Mok was overall correct on the U.S. having “lost the race”. I don’t think so. At least, I hope not.
For I remain a Tesla bull. Elon Musk’s EV company has not only a range of Electric Vehicles - produced by comprehensively new technology— but also the latest Fully Self Driving software (FSD V12), which is unique to Tesla, is wowing customers and is near to taking a car unguided across the continent. Tesla’s Optimus Robots will be integrated into Tesla production lines and then sold worldwide. Tesla Solar and Battery-storage technology is at the cutting edge and Tesla AI technology is melding all this together. To Tesla bulls, it’s more of an AI company than an EV company.
Also: I wouldn’t count in Musk’s Tesla being “complacent” any time soon, as Mok suggests.
Well, “we’ll see…”.
Tuesday, 26 March 2024
“Why do smart people say stupid things?"
Monday, 25 March 2024
"Hong Kong braces for another sweltering year, with 5 to 8 typhoons predicted" | Emily Hung, SCMP 21 March
- The number of Tropical Cyclones per year in our region has dropped slightly from an average of 30 (1961-1990) to 27 (2000-22).
- The number of Typhoons per year in our region has dropped slightly from an average of 15 (1961-1990) to 13 (2000-22).
- The number of Typhoons per year affecting Hong Kong is steady, from an average of 6 (1961-1990) to 6 (2000-22).
“Letitia James should be disbarred” | Vivek Ramaswami
Click above for the video |
Sunday, 24 March 2024
Random fact-check: HK Observatory misinformation
From the article online here |
"… we expect a greater number of stronger typhoons”?
HKO figures |
Homosexuality in China: Passions of the “Cut Sleeve"
He would rather cut the sleeve of his sleeping partner, than wake him up |
I mention to Westy that China has traditionally been a very safe space for homosexuality, very tolerant. That it’s only in recent times — a hundred years or so — that China frowned on homosexuality.
I tell Westy the story of a mate of mine, a gay Aussie guy, who’d lived in Shanghai and was now in Taipei. I spoke to him one night in a Taipei pub.He told me that even though homosexuality is legal in Australia, and is illegal in China, he had a better amd easier time as a gay man in China than he’d had in Australia. (At the time Australia still had “poofter bashing” going on).
I should have stressed this more to Westy: not just that China has long been fine with homosexuality. But also that it was only after the western missionaries came to China, and taught about the “evils” of homosexuality, that China changed. Therefore Zhong, a China patriot, ought to take that on board and ought to view the anti-gay thing as being part of western-Christian imperialism (as it is!) and the pro-gay thing as being traditionally Chinese.
It reminded me of the book that I bought a while back, but had forgotten about: “Passions of the Cut Sleeve”, by Bret Hinsch. I should have told Westy about this.
Here’s a clip from the Introduction:
Homosexuality in China dates back to “at least the Bronze Age” |
Westy”s partner, Zhong, ought to become truly traditional Chinese themself and go full-on pro-gay.
Become fully traditional Chinese. Come out! Get with the passion! Cut the sleeve!
Saturday, 23 March 2024
Camo dog
Why do people keep ignoring the fact that it’s HAMAS that’s against the two states solution?
Why does everyone keep ignoring the fact that HAMAS and the Palestinian Authority are both implacably *opposed* to the two-state solution? Only now, since October 7, are the Israelis opposed. Before that, since 1947 Israel offered a two-state solution at least ten times, all rebuffed. Why the constant pressure on Israel?
Ed Miliband is full of crock on the Green Economy
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Friday, 22 March 2024
Greenpeace’s 10 favourite myths about nuclear energy, refuted
Random fact-check: NO, HK streets are NOT unsafe.
Bernard Chan’s article today, here. |
To the extent that there’s been a crimping of freedoms since 2019 — and I won’t say there hasn’t been — it’s all for one and one for all. 男女老少, Nánnǚ lǎoshào, as the Chinese say — “man, woman, old, young”. i.e. why specifically women? (Later: well, ok, it turns out the article was written for International Women’s Day).
To say that the streets are dangerous here in Hong Kong is arrant nonsense. We have amongst the safest streets in the world. Women and children and men and elderly can walk around anywhere day or night. The murder rates, as example, is one-twentieth the World average; one-eighth Asia’s average; one-seventh Europe’s; one-third that of the U.K., one tenth of the U.S.. It’s even just a half the rate of good ol’ safe Oz. Other non-murder violent crimes have a similar pattern.
By the way, we know this from our own personal experience of wandering the streets. When I was looking for sites for our schools, I went everywhere in Hong Kong. It’s safe everywhere. It’s so safe that we have to remind ourselves when we go overseas to beware. When we went to Chicago fifteen years ago, we weren’t careful — we were in Hong Kong mode — and found ourselves in South Chicago — “you don’t go there!” people told us later — where we got mugged at the first gas station….
Liz Truss and Ian Duncan-Smith are way off the mark. It’s what Beijing would call a “smear”. And they’d be correct.
[Source of data: United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime]
Mollie Hemingway sticks the boot in on Christine Blasey Ford, the slanderer of Brett Kavanaugh, Trump's SCOTUS nominee
Mollie Hemingway comments on an ABC interview with Christine Blasey Ford. She who claimed that the 2017 Trump nominee for the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh had sexually molested her some thirty years ago. Or fifty. Or ten. Or maybe. Or maybe not.
Thursday, 21 March 2024
“A two-state solution is dead” | Khaled Hassan
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Wednesday, 20 March 2024
"Fiery debate over TikTok ban puts America’s culture wars in spotlight” | SCMP
2. China does not allow the U.S. version of Tik Tok inside China. It uses something different and with algorithms that trend to educational and science.
3. Facebook and Instagram are also problems amongst youth: eg, see books by professor Jonathan Haidt. They are, however, US-owned, not China-owned.
4. Reciprocity: I believe US should pursue reciprocity with China. Whatever China doesn't allow in from the U.S., the U.S. should not allow in from China.
5. The draft anti-Tik Tok Bill passed 50-0 in Committee, unprecedented unanimity. It passed with huge margins in the full House, 352-65. This is not a partisan issue.
6. Many countries have passed full or partial bans on Tik Tok, indications of widespread global concerns about security and dangers of rogue algorithms.
ADDED: Jonathan Haidt talks to Joe Rogan about his latest book, a lot about why it is that Tik Tok is dangerous, to youth especially and even to national security. He includes Facebook and Instagram in the dangers affecting young kids. At around 25 minutes in he gives some proposed solutions. He points out that smoking used to be common, is no longer, so norms can be changed.
Jonathan Haidt is a social psychologist, professor, and author. His latest book, "The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness," will be available March 26. Video here
Haidt starts talking Tik Tok, mainly from here. (10’ in). My other comments here.
For the record: “HK wraps up ‘historic mission’” | SCMP
The new “Safeguarding National Security Law” signed into law today, here in Hong Kong. Done as a requirement under Article 23 of our Basic Law.
So, after 27 years, it’s done in a jiffy.
And the South China Morning Post is going full-on pro Beijing. As in spruiking for it.
The SCMP has pussy-footed around its potential downsides. It’s had not a single letter to the editor about the it, not even my elegant epistle (when they’ve published most all of my previous contributions). Not a single one. Are we supposed to think that people are so sanguine that no-one wrote in about it?
I’m not going to tone down any of my comments. Even if there’s concerns that mocking the government, like calling the bureaucrats above, the apparatchiks, a bunch of “appalling old wax works” could be seen as mocking the government. And that’s an offence punishable by jail time….
Tuesday, 19 March 2024
Four tech guys who know their stuff, debate the proposed Tik Tok ban bill
Click above for the video |
I’m of the Chamath bent. His points resonate, with me, at least. Especially the one on Reciprocity.
Sachs makes a good point about potential dangers in the draft legislation. He thinks it’s too loosely worded and could be used to go after other companies the government decided it didn’t like. For example, they could to after Elon Musk’s X, based on that fact that Musk has business in China, which could be read to be that he’s “under the direction of China”.
That’s certainly a concern.
Given what’s happened to Trump under Letitia James and the absurd half a billion bond he’s been forced to put up, one can’t rule anything out. Therefore I’d be in favour of the moves to divest or ban Tik Tok, but cleaning up the wording of the Bill. That might happen in the Senate.
Monday, 18 March 2024
“How would Donald Trump end democracy” | Rich Lowry
“How would Donald Trump end democracy?”
That’s what I’ve been wondering for a long time. When the Democrats say “democracy is on the ballot” just what do they mean? What do they expect if Trump wins in November?
… the stuff of a Philip K. Dick novel and, in the right hands, would make a compelling dystopian Netflix series. It’s not remotely plausible.
From “How exactly would Trump end American democracy?"
ADDED: we were studying the life and times of Philip K. Dick (PKD) the other day as we’d just re-watched Minority Report. Still a good movie, based on PKD’s book. As are, by the way, Blade Runner and Total Recall.Sunday, 17 March 2024
“Australia and ASEAN” | Fact checking the Aussie haters
From here |
There’s heaps of Aussies working at the South China Morning Post I guess because they’re editors and journalists. Whenever there’s an Australia-China article there come the China trolls, attacking Australia. It’s a given, heaps of clicks, heaps of hate.
Most articles about Oz are negative on Oz.
Maybe because of the China trolls and maybe also because those Aussie editors and journalists are kind of leftie anti-Oz.
Whatever: mostly anti-Oz. As in the familiar tropes. Australia is a white colonialist enterprise, as if we hadn’t ditched an exclusivist White Australia policy last century. And as if we are not the most multi-cultural, multi-ethnic country in the region. Certainly China is exclusionary to Chinese; Japan to Japanese; Korea to Koreans.
Another trope: we’re not engaged enough in Asia. That’s also wrong. Australia has deep engagement economically and also militarily. We are one of the largest militaries in the region.
So the bit here:
Australia was 85% of ASEAN in 1980 but is now only 50%.
So what?
In 1980 ASEAN was only 5 countries and is now 10. Three of those were communist and communism makes nothing but barbed wire and tins of cabbage.
On a per capita basis, Australia is >TEN times that of ASEAN: Australia $US 60,517 per head; ASEAN $US 5,371.
Saturday, 16 March 2024
"Douglas Murray’s Raw Opinion on the Israel-Gaza Conflict” | Living with L'chaim
Click above for the video |
“We can forgive, perhaps, your killing our children. But we cannot forgive you for making us kill your children”.
"American empire strikes back at China via economic warfare” | Tik Tok ban bill
1. Tik Tok has 170 million subscribers in the U.S., but the US has only 22 m teenagers, so clearly it's not just "silly teenagers" using Tik Tok. [This is to the Lo point that “it’s only teenagers posting stupid vids, so why worry?”]
3. Other countries have banned Tik Tok, including India, Pakistan… and China itself! ADDED: Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Taiwan, the UK and EU governance bodies have all banned or partially banned the app. [Ref]
5. It's not just security. There's also the algorithms. These are controlled by China. (See 2 above). We would be naive to imagine they do not tweak the algorithms to suit China needs.
6. Facebook, etc, being similar to Tik Tok is irrelevant. Because: (a) we are also worried about them, and (b) They are not Chinese-owned.
7. The Bill was passed by overwhelming majority in the Reps.
8. The Bill does not aim only at China, but also Russia, North Korea and Iran. These are countries that have been clear in their enmity to the US. (Eg, Iran: "Death to America!”).
“World on the brink” | Peter T. C. Chang
Online here |