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Interview with Bill Powell, Time and Fortune Magazines (pt. 2)
from China Business Blog and Podcast on November 20, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 21:17 Download audio file (20091118_a_bill_powell_pt2.mp3) We are in the middle of a discussion with Bill Powell, senior writer for Time and Fortune magazines. In the first part, we talked about China and the rest of the world, how we try to make comparisons to what is happening in China with what we have seen in the past. In this Podcast, I wanted to start off by getting Bill’s take on the challenges of covering China. I prefaced my question by saying that, in our consulting practice at Technomic Asia, we are very careful not to talk about “THE” China market … there are, in fact, MANY China “markets” taking into account big cities, small cities, northern cultures, southern cultures, urban and rural, etc. I asked him to talk about the practicalities over covering such a vast subject and the challenges he finds in trying to do so …
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Video Dispatch: In China, the Currency Debate Continues
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta) on November 16, 2009
Duration: 139
Duration: 139
STRATFOR : http://www.stratfor.com : The United States continues to push for a revaluation of China's currency, as President Barack Obama makes his first visit -- but analyst Jennifer Richmond says to expect a "go-slow" approach from Beijing.
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An Interview with Bill Powell of Time and Fortune Magazines
from China Business Blog and Podcast on November 15, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 17:29 Download audio file (20091115_bill_powell_pt1.mp3) Over the past 4 years of the China Business Podcast we’ve done many interviews with business people in China, typically leaders of companies or operations. We’ve talked about the intricacies of doing business here, the opportunities and challenges, and specific strategies and tactics that have worked for them. Well, I would like to take a chance to back up a bit and view the China environment from a different perspective through an interview with someone who has been reporting on the action, not only in China but around the world. Bill Powell is the senior writer for Time and Fortune magazines and is based in Shanghai. We’ve known each other for a couple of years and he calls every now and then to bounce around some ideas and perspectives. I have always appreciated his perspective and I thought he would make a great interview … and I was right. Here is part one of that interview …
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Safety in China (??)
from China Business Blog and Podcast on November 11, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 6:43 Download audio file (20091106_safety_in_china.mp3) I was in Los Angeles a couple of weeks ago for a conference. I flew from Shanghai to LAX, landing there at about 11:00 in the morning. By noon I was on the road in my rental car. But it wasn’t until about 12:45, driving 70 mph on the 405, when I remembered that, in the U.S., the lines on the road are more than just mere suggestions … you are expected to stay between them and other drivers get upset when you drift aimlessly. And some of those other drivers are armed and in a very bad mood too! My inability to cross traffic cultures aside, this raised in my mind an important point about safety in China … and frankly, things are still a bit loose here. While it is better here in Shanghai than it used to be, cars don’t always stay between the lines, on their side of the street or even off the sidewalk. If a driver doesn’t know where they are, they stop, wherever they happen to be, to consider their options. They will stop in the middle of a street, an intersection or even the elevated highway. They are not thinking about safety … they just don’t want to be lost. While I admire their commitment to truth and knowledge, if they are not careful, they will soon know very well where they will end up … on a stainless steel table in the morgue! Pedestrians here will only stop at a crosswalk when there is a traffic cop to shame them into waiting the 12 seconds required for the light to turn. And if you are on a bicycle, scooter or motorcycle, you can – and will – just go right through any intersection and any light. Apparently, no traffic rules apply to you and cops, in general, won’t even try to stop you. Its as if the presence of two wheels under you gives you superpowers of invisibility, Kevlar underwear and a get-out-of-jail-free card. So when I saw a New York Times article a couple of days ago titled “Salute All Cars, Kids. It’s a Rule in China”, I was intrigued. In a nutshell, the article tells how Chinese education officials are encouraging children in the countryside to, literally, salute all cars on their walks to and from school … the purpose of which is to get these kids to pay attention to traffic and notice when cars are coming and to stay out of the way. However, what I thought was going to be an article about improving traffic safety in China turned into a diatribe about the ridiculous edicts that come from the government here and the citizen outrage that often accompanies it. The journalist cited numerous examples of silly government pronouncements – such as forcing people to purchase local cigarettes and liquor to inflate the state-owned enterprise sales figures – and the fact that ordinary Chinese are fighting back. Fair enough … its good to see that voices are being raised against government silliness, something we’ve known how to do for a long time in the U.S. (however, we haven’t quite figured out how to actually END the government silliness). Unfortunately, what gets lost in article, buried at the very end, is that this edict, no matter how silly it may seem, actually seems to be reducing traffic accidents, at least in the mountainous village where the journalist did their interviews. And that, I think, should be the point … in Shanghai where I live in MORTAL fear of hitting some kid that runs out into traffic, finding some way … ANY way … of teaching kids to respect traffic is OK in my book. Teaching civil behavior in China has been an issue ever since … well, ever since there was society here. And China has one of the world’s oldest civilizations so you do the math … but its been awhile. Chinese leaders over the years, from Meng-zi to Mao, have been seen not only as political leaders, but social leaders as well. The big phrase in China over the past couple of years has been an encouragement from President Hu Jin-tao to work together to create a “he2 xie2 she4 hui4”, a “harmonious society.” They started it leading up to the Olympics when they expected airplane loads of tourists to descend upon China and the leaders wanted to put on their best face … kind of like when you were a kid and were told to “go wash up, Aunt Marge will be here any minute” and you were dreading that dry, moth-bally kiss and the comments on how big you’d grown and isn’t it cute at how they grow up so fast, but really, can’t you do something about that acne and … well, no need to drag you into my adolescent nightmare. Let’s just say that the Harmonious Society campaign has gone over about as well here. So maybe teaching kids to salute cars isn’t so silly after all. And c’mon, admit it … isn’t EVERY country’s teaching of civil society a bit ridiculous? Imagine you are sitting in the pitch meeting for the Woodsy the Owl campaign … “OK, J.R., here is how I see it … we don’t want people to throw garbage on the ground, right? Makes the place look like a dump, right? OK … so picture this … a grown man, dressed in a cheesy owl costume … and he says ‘Hoo … Hoo … Give a Hoot, Don’t Pollute!’ Huh? Huh? Is that great or what??” Yea … I know I am guy of limited taste and erudition, but I don’t think I would have signed off on that one. I think that China is reaching a tipping point in matters of public safety and I really think that the government should – and CAN – step in and start to move public opinion and behavior. Private cars are proliferating like bunnies in the dark here, but car seats for children are not and Junior is playing Red Rover between the front and the back seat. Start putting some pictures at the car dealerships of what happens if Junior goes through the front windshield … guaranteed there will be a lock down pretty fast. And maybe adults will actually start using their own seatbelts as well instead of just draping them across their laps whenever they drive by a policeman. Seriously, taxi drivers do this all the time! And people are still dumping garbage out their windows here. Sure, there are tons of municipal workers running around with brooms to sweep the streets, but polluting for the sake of fuller employment doesn’t make sense to me. So I say, bring on the saluting if it helps teach kids to respect a ton of speeding death metal on the road. Heck, get them to bow, curtsey and say “By your leave, m’lord”, I don’t care! Just keep them from being human speed bumps! And bring on the animals teaching moral lessons … in the U.S. we had our Woodsy, Smokey and G’ruff, China should have theirs. Imagine the pitch meeting for that one, “OK … Wang … here’s how I see it. We want to get people to stop throwing garbage on the ground … so let’s dress up some guy in a cheesy panda costume and have him say, ‘Polluters should be nearly extinct … like me!’ Huh? Huh?? Is that great or what???” Yea … maybe I will just stick to Podcasting. Thanks again for listening … remember our motto: “In China, everything is possible but nothing is easy.” We’ll see you next time on the China Business Podcast.
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China M&A – An interview with Dr. Kim Woodard (part 3)
from China Business Blog and Podcast on November 07, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 16:50 Download audio file (20091106_kim_woodard_pt3.mp3) OK we are on to Part 3 of our interview with the newest addition to the Technomic Asia team, Kim Woodard. In this section, we get down into the nitty-gritty of doing deals in China. Enjoy!
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The Bilionaire Bailout Society 1/2 - RussiaToday
from YouTube :: Tag // milton-friedman on November 05, 2009
Duration: 353
Duration: 353
Author: enslavetherich Keywords: obama economy crisis bailouts united states america USA wallstreet bailout banks peter schiff ron paul federal reserve housing market cdo cds FED dollar euro yen yuan gold silver inflation deflation unemployment social security war on terror al qaeda osama bin laden russiatoday blacklistednews Added: November 5, 2009
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The Bilionaire Bailout Society 2/2 - RussiaToday
from YouTube :: Tag // milton-friedman on November 05, 2009
Duration: 366
Duration: 366
Author: enslavetherich Keywords: obama economy crisis bailouts united states america USA wallstreet bailout banks peter schiff ron paul federal reserve housing market cdo cds FED dollar euro yen yuan gold silver inflation deflation unemployment social security war on terror al qaeda osama bin laden russiatoday blacklistednews Added: November 5, 2009
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China M&A – An interview with Dr. Kim Woodard (part 2)
from China Business Blog and Podcast on November 02, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 17:54 Download audio file (20091102_kim_woodard_pt2.mp3) We are in the middle of a Podcast interview with Dr. Kim Woodard, the newest addition to the Technomic Asia team here in Shanghai. Kim’s background includes setting up A.T. Kearney in the early days of China business and running his own boutique M&A consulting firm. We brought Kim into Technomic to fill out our ability to provide end-to-end services for our clients doing deals in China. While we saw a bit slow-down in 2009 for M&A in China (and, in fact, around the world), we see that things are really going to pick up in 2010 as companies are looking for aggressive growth opportunities. In this Podcast, I talk with Kim about the practical do’s and don’ts of doing deals in China …
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China M&A – An Interview with Dr. Kim Woodard (part 1)
from China Business Blog and Podcast on October 28, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 17:03 Download audio file (20091028_kim_woodard_pt1.mp3) Unless you have been living in a hole or the dark side of the moon for the past year, your life has somehow been impacted by the global economic slowdown. You, a friend or a family member have lost a job; your municipal budgets are being cut; heck, your OWN budget is being slashed. It has not been a fun year, even here in China where things are still moving along at a pretty good clip. Though there are signs that things are getting better, I am not convinced we are totally out of the woods yet. But just because we have no guarantee of where things might be going, that doesn’t mean we can crawl back into our hole or retreat to the backside of the moon … no, we need to keep moving forward. And at Technomic Asia, that is exactly what we are doing. For many years, our consulting practice has been involved with foreign companies doing all kinds of alliances in China: from joint ventures to licensing to distribution to acquisitions, we have helped our clients put their alliance strategy together and then execute it. Up until about a year ago, we had been seeing a real upturn in acquisitions in China: the government rules for acquiring companies were loosening up and foreign companies were looking to China for new growth opportunities. Then the bottom fell out of the economy and companies put all that activity on hold. However, as things settle around the globe, multinational companies are looking for ways to grow and China seems a very good place to look for that growth. And one of the methods they are returning to is growth through acquisition. To capture this wave, we have brought in a new team member to Technomic Asia: Dr. Kim Woodard. Kim has had over 30 years of experience in China, first coming here in the 70s in the earliest stages of China’s opening to the West following Nixon’s “Ping Pong Diplomacy”. Armed with a Ph.D. from Stanford, Kim was soon a respected leader of foreign companies’ earliest advances into China. Kim helped establish A.T. Kearney’s China practice and then went on to help big names such as John Deere and AMP establish their China operations. Most recently, Kim had his own firm, Javelin Investments, to assist Western multinationals with acquisitions in China. We wanted to bring Kim in to Technomic Asia to give us the ability to provide a complete M Attached is the first in a series that we will roll out in the coming weeks. I hope you enjoy it!
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America let's go shopping 2009
from Favorites of dabfly on October 25, 2009
Duration: 660
Duration: 660
Please rate subscribe and pass on. Thank you and wake up. First a big thank you to the channel where I saw this: http://www.youtube.com/hijackednation Also a special thank you to: http://www.youtube.com/therealweeklynews ...who sent me the video. By the way, both of these channels are excellent if you wish to subscribe to them, I did. God bless you everyone, enjoy your Sunday in the States. it is Monday here in New Zealand. THE USE OF ANY COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL IS USED UNDER THE GUIDELINES OF FAIR USE IN TITLE 17 § 107 OF THE UNITED STATES CODE. SUCH MATERIAL REMAINS THE COPYRIGHT OF THE ORIGINAL HOLDER AND IS USED HERE FOR THE PURPOSES OF EDUCATION, COMPARISON, AND CRITICISM ONLY. NO INFRINGEMENT OF COPYRIGHT IS INTENDED. Orders for Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine States began placing orders for vaccine with CDC on Wednesday, September 30. Vaccine ordered on September 30th is expected to arrive at vaccination sites by Tuesday, October 6. Approximately 3 million doses of LAIV are currently available to order. A total of 6-7 million doses are expected to be available to order by the end of next week. Additional vaccine will be produced and available to order on a regular basis thereafter. During the first two weeks in October 2009, states will be able to place orders for 15 microgram pre-filled syringes licensed for use in children age 4 and older, multidose vials, as well as additional LAIV. As of October 1, 2009, 47 United States jurisdictions have ordered a cumulative total of 1,378,200 doses of the nasal-spray Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine (LAIV), which include: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California,Chicago, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota,Mississippi,Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey,New York,New York City,North Carolina, North Dakota,Ohio, Oklahoma,Oregon,Pennsylvania,Philadelphia,Rhode Island, South Dakota,Tennessee,Texas, Utah,Vermont, Virgin Islands, Virginia,Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin
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Life in China IS Reality TV
from China Business Blog and Podcast on October 24, 2009
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Download this podcast Length 6:14 Download audio file (20091025_china_reality_show.mp3) I woke up this morning with two words running through my head: “Reality TV”. Kind of a scary thought, huh? But what got me thinking about Reality TV is not the content, per se, but the business model: find a bunch of people, average schlubs, and film them acting as such; edit the content to highlight the schlub-iest moments and then put it on prime time television. Violà… instant ratings. Like all great ideas, I am kicking myself that I did not think of it first. Why, you might ask, should I consider myself so forward-looking as to think I should/could come up with that idea? Well, because what they call “Reality Television” I call “the average day in China.” China is a country of “watchers”: people sitting around and simply studying other people being…well…people!?! One of the things that foreigners have to get used to here is what we would call “staring” … many here would call, simply, “observing the behavior of those around them.” I suppose that makes sense … there are so many people there that free content is always available. Several decades ago, just being a foreigner in China attracted attention. Go to the market, let a couple of Chinese words slip out of your mouth and you gained such a crowd on interested onlookers that you could put up a tent and charge admission. Now, certainly, things have changed over the years. But many years ago, I was a spectacle, even in a big city like Shanghai where foreigners were not very common. I once asked a Chinese friend why everyone stared at me and he said, “Well, for thousands of years, all we’ve had to look at is other people who look like us … you are REALLY different, so we want to have a look!” That was tough to argue with, I must admit. So I have spent countless hours entertaining local residents here over the years. I should have had an agent negotiate a contract for me, thusly: “Mr. Kedl is willing to shop for vegetables every Tuesday and Thursday and to mispronounce a minimum of 17 Chinese words while doing so. The neighborhood will provide no less than 83 gawkers, at least 11 of whom will attempt to help Mr. Kedl negotiate the transaction and another 6 will comment on the proceedings. Mr. Kedl will receive 10% of the front end and two points on the gross plus all residuals on local TV news footage.” Not much has changed over the years in terms of the spectacle I create when shopping. The modern hypermarket has made for some great leaps in shopping convenience: too many choices are jammed into too little space at too high prices and NO room to negotiate. The beauty about shopping in China is that total strangers will feel very free to look into your cart and check out what you are buying. Many of them will feel even freer to comment on your purchases, particularly if they don’t think you can speak Chinese: “Hmmm….look at that foreigner…what in the world would he need with a toaster oven, a pile of hangers and three apples?? And he should get himself a real nose instead of that two-car garage he has holding up his glasses now!” I was at my local hypermarket recently when one elderly lady tried to convince me – in animated sign language reminiscent of Helen Keller doing liturgical dance – that the milk I was purchasing was NOT the right milk and that, if I bought the one she was buying, I could get 2-for-1. I explained to her that my kids preferred this type of milk, but thanks for the advice. She walked away a bit confused, mumbling to her shopping companion “Why in the world wouldn’t he by the cheapest kind…and it almost sounded like he spoke Chinese!!” But having a foreigner as the center of attraction is not necessary. Almost any activity on the street will garner attention from passers-by. The other day a motorcycle cop stopped a guy on a bicycle carrying a load (looked like three sofas and a cage of ducks). The cop dismounted his bike, sauntered over, Ponch-style, to the offending cyclist and stared at him. Immediately, a gaggle of pedestrians gathered around the two of them to see what would happen next. Not able to resist peer pressure, I joined the throng (it felt good to be the gawker as opposed to the gawkee). And you know what happened? The biker got a ticket. The crowd went away happy, but I was left unfulfilled. No fight broke out. No blood was spilled. No threat levels went to Orange. A TV news anchor didn’t show up with his helmet of hair and don’t-believe-me-at-your-peril voice to intone, over a dramatic graphic sequence, What It All Means and Why You Should Be Very, Very Afraid. The dude just…got a ticket. The West is trying to convince China that they need to change, to upgrade themselves to the “modern world”. Personally, I think China is doing OK, for the most part. However, if I were to be honest, I think China could add a bit more excitement to what is, essentially, a reality show here. I mean, if all of life is open for others to sit around and stare at, you should really go for it …you know, punch it up a bit, get better ratings and maybe raise ad rates. Cops shouldn’t just give someone a ticket: apply a little OJ and first have a slow-motion chase through downtown (actually, it would be slow-motion here in Shanghai because you’d never get over crawling speed through the traffic). An overloaded vehicle tips on the highway? Splash around some fake blood and have five people go at it, Jerry Springer style. Over-crowding on the subways could be solved if we could all vote someone off every stop (my choice would be the guy with the scary comb-over taking up two seats) or the guy who keeps losing his mobile phone signal and keeps shouting “Wei? Wei?” into his dead phone. But I think the ultimate Reality Show here would be to demonstrate just how helpless some foreigners are here. We could put a collection of them in a row house off Chang Le Lu, give them only CCTV, no access to DVDs or any restaurant that ends in “on the Bund”, take away their Ayis, drivers and secretaries and see who lasts the longest. Guaranteed to make Survivor look like summer camp for sissies.
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Prison refuse l’assistance médicale à Chen Guanchen
from Dailymotion - most recent videos on October 24, 2009
Duration: 131
Duration: 131
La prison refuse le droit à l’assistance médicale à un avocat aveugleEn Chine, un avocat chinois aveugle des droits humains purge une peine de prison dans la province septentrionale du Shandong,l'assistance médicale lui ai refusé. Sa femme a écrit à l'Union mondiale des aveugles la semaine dernière, afin d'exposer sa situation. Author: NTDTV Tags: prison refuse droit l’assistance médicale avocat aveugle Chen Guanchen Yuan Weijing Posted: 25 October 2009 Rating: 5.0 Votes: 1
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Liberty Conspiracy - 10-21-09 Bernanke n china, Obama n Constitution, Bloom n Mao, Watson n Cuba
from Liberty Conspiracy on October 22, 2009
Duration: 3223
Duration: 3223
In this Liberty Conspiracy production, the Conspiracy explores how collectivists couch their meaning, break their word, don't understand economics, want to coerce people, and even admire bloodthirsty thugs like Fidel Castro and Che. Each of the people cited here is currently in a position to influence someone else through FORCE. In other words, each is in political power. We want to change that. Be Seeing You. www.libertyconspiracy.com
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