Friday, May 21, 2010

Is the 21st Century an Asian Century?

With the rise of China and India with double the speed of growth that US and Europe have or have had in past 200 years and even growing at a faster pace, with Both India and China have Nuclear Stealth Capability and Space Research capability and large Foreign Reserves, with more technologies being patented by Chinese and Indian companies, and more European and American companies being bought by China and India, and with the worlds second and third largest army, third and fourth largest air force and third and fifth largest navy, are these countries going to be the next superpowers replacing Europe and American at centres of Power? And with Europe and America caught in a war with more spending on war than on economic recovery, is it that the rise of China and India as the center of world politics with Japan and South East Asia not far behind go unprecedented or will the bubble burst? Is this the beginning of the Asian Resurgence and an Asian Century?

Is the 21st Century an Asian Century?
21st Century is Uniquely NWO !





More Tech Transfers To China %26amp; Bush Uses Al-Qaeda


http://www.rense.com/general76/morethc.h...





The administration and the media regularly bemoan the fact that the US suffers a huge trade deficit every year with China. This growing deficit is being used to push China to open her markets to more US goods. That's all good and proper, except that China only wants American high tech/military related imports. After all, that's one of the main reasons for communist China opening up her markets to capitalist investments.





As the AP reported, "The Chinese government has repeatedly said that China wants to buy more goods from the US as an effort to narrow the trade gap, but Washington refuses to ease restrictions on exports of high-tech products to China." Well, that isn't exactly true. There is a division within the Commerce department that has been facilitating these high tech transfers to China for years. It's really a matter of China always wanting to push the envelop of what is permitted, and the Bush administration wanting to not make it obvious that it is selling out our own national security to both Russia and China.





Last December the administration gave the go ahead to sell China a state of the art nuclear reactor, which has a lot of technology applicable to China's growing nuclear powered fleet of ships. If the national security issue wasn't bad enough, the Bush White House decided the sale was going to be financed by the US taxpayer (Export-Import Bank), supposedly because it was going to mean "jobs for Americans." China has billions in reserves. Why do we continue to insist on giving China government loans?"





The Hastening American Decline: Transfer of the American Industrial Base


http://www.gooff.com/news/read.asp?ID=14...





The transfer of the American industrial base to remote regions of the planet continues, especially to China. It is inescapable that the militarization of some of those regions to protect the prodigious capitalist investment must logically follow. In particular, the transfer of the American industrial base to China has already enabled them to radically improve their military strength, very often with American technology. This is a very ominous development for the American people and progressive societies everywhere. Globalysts are enemies of western democracies and have strong fascist tendencies. The Chinese economic model is the dream of all capitalists and the nightmare of everybody else.





Transfer of Industrial Base backfires on US


http://www.rense.com/general39/trade.htm





Well, let's see. The US Government turned its back on manufacturing thirty years ago, and kept raising taxes on both companies and individuals to feed the uncontrollable debts, thereby raising the cost of goods and services produced in the United States to the point where they can no longer compete with goods and services produced in foreign nations, and only NOW do they realize there is a problem (but it's someone else's fault, of course).





Booming China Trade Wrankles US





Trade deficit with China, now running at $120 billion a year, surpasses the total


US trade gap of six years ago.
Reply:Its going to be a ugly century.


The world population is outpacing the ability of the planet


to sustain said population.


There will be mass hunger and unrest.





We went from 5 billion to 6 billion pretty fast.


We will be at 7 billion even quicker.





This century will be constant conflict over a dwindling set of resources. There will be constant warfare.





So I don't think this century belongs to anyone race in particular.
Reply:No
Reply:China and India are experiencing amazing success. They are major powers. But the future is much harder to predict than projecting the present.





Some thoughts:





1. Manufacturing of goods will move closer to location of the market. Why? Manufacturing will be automated much more so than it is now. The labor advantage of third world countries will diminish.





2. The pressure for a better standard of living will force wages up in India and China.





3. There is no evidence that America's preeminence in higher education will go away. The center for the highest levels of innovation will likely stay here.





4. Culturally, Americans have more of an entrepreneurial attitude. China and India can change dramatically their business processes, but a country's culture changes very, very slowly.
Reply:I believe it's a Global century...


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