Generational Dynamics World View News

Discussion of Web Log and Analysis topics from the Generational Dynamics web site.
John
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

** 23-Sep-2019 World View: Trump's strategy with China

For months, I've heard so-called "experts" on television criticize
Donald Trump's use of trade sanctions with China.

It's now been generally agreed worldwide that a way must be found to
curtail China's hostile and illegal trade practices (cyber intrusion
into business networks, forced technology transfers in exchange for
market access, intellectual property theft). So those who want to
criticize Trump without criticizing the objectives have to criticize
the way Trump did it.

What I've been hearing for months was some variation of the following
strategy:
"It's necessary to curtail China's forced technology
transfer and intellectual property theft, but Trump is doing it
all wrong by imposing unilateral sanctions, isolating the United
States. What he should have done is formed a coalition with other
countries -- Canada, the European Union, Japan, South Korea, and
so forth -- and negotiate China's trade practices as a
group."
I've heard different versions of this for months, and it's a widely
accepted view among certain groups of analysts. The problem is that
the above strategy is so clearly disastrous that we can only assume
that any journalist, analyst or politician expressing this view is
truly ignorant, is truly an idiot, and probably can't find China on a
map.

The first and most obvious problem is that forming such a coalition is
impossible. Several European countries would balk, and at most one or
two countries would join the coalition before it fell apart
completely, making Trump look like a loser. Indeed the proposed
strategy would violate many concepts in "The Art of the Deal," and so
it's almost impossible that Trump would adopt it.

But let's suppose Trump DID adopt this policy anyway. This would be a
complete disaster. China's media would portray it as a revival of the
"century of humiliation" and the imposition of new "unfair treaties."
They would particularly point to the Versailles Betrayal, when all the
Western countries, including Japan, ganged up on China and forced them
to accept the terms of the Versailles Treaty after World War I. This
triggered extreme nationalism and the May Fourth movement, and led to
adoption of Soviet Communist "theory."

So it's absolutely certain that this strategy, which I've heard
"experts" propose repeatedly for the last few months, would fail
disastrously.

Instead, Trump followed a strategy apparently recommended by John
Bolton: He began by imposing tariffs that affected all of America's
allies, including the EU, Mexico and Canada, with a 25% tariff on
imports of steel and 10% on aluminum from these countries. After
that, he could pose unilateral tariffs on imports from China, without
being open to the accusation that everyone in the world was ganging up
on China. Ironically, the perception was (and is) that everyone in
the world is ganging up on Donald Trump, but that seems to be Trump's
strategy.

"https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-44426442"

Once again, this is what I mean. I see this every day -- different
"experts," usually young and pretty, who really know absolutely
nothing about anything, who believe that they know everything, who
believe that history always begins this morning, making really
incredibly stupid statements. If Trump had followed the pretty boy's
strategy, it would have been a disaster, but by following Bolton's
strategy, there are actual negotiations going on. (Although, as I
always point out, the world is headed for World War III with 100%
certainty, no matter what Trump does.)

Yesterday, National Interest online posted an article by Ali Wyne and
James Dobbins called "How Not to Confront China." The authors are
described thus: "Ali Wyne is a policy analyst and James Dobbins is a
senior fellow at the nonprofit, nonpartisan RAND Corporation."

https://nationalinterest.org/feature/how-not-confront-china-82356

Here are their pictures:

Image
Image
  • Ali Wyne (top) and James Dobbins (bottom)


So Wyne is pretty enough, and Dobbins is definitely not, and is old
enough and from the venerable Rand Corporation, so he should know
better, but this shows that even old people in the Rand Corporation
have no clue what's going on in the world.

So let's take a look at some of the claims in the article.
"First, the administration is undercutting America’s
ability to form a coalition that can manage China’s resurgence. It
has expressed little interest in continuing negotiations on a
Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership with the European
Union (EU) and has abandoned the Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP). ... Even before it imposed its first tranche of tariffs on
China, in July 2018, the administration had penalized exports from
Canada, the EU, Japan, Mexico and South Korea."
I read this and I have to laugh at how naïve it is, for the reasons
already explained. By first penalizing exports from other countries,
Trump has avoided the accusation that the West was ganging up on
China, as in the "unfair treaties" and the Versailles Betrayal. If
Trump had gotten together with Canada, the EU, Japan, Mexico and South
Korea to demand that China change its trade practices, the result
would have been explosive. The real question is: Why don't these
so-called "experts" -- Ali Wyne and James Dobbins -- already know
that? It's bad enough not knowing what you're talking about, but you
have to be really stupid to not know that you don't know what you're
talking about.
"Second, while the present configuration of
technological entanglement between the United States and China
indeed presents significant security risks, the Trump
administration’s push to decouple the two countries’ economies and
derail companies such as Huawei and ZTE could redound to Beijing’s
benefit. China now feels compelled to accelerate its drive towards
indigenous innovation, find alternative suppliers of high-tech
inputs and reroute exports that were headed for the United
States."
This is just babble. At least they recognize that Huawei and ZTE
present security risks. But blocking them from taking control of much
of the global internet is not the same as "decoupling the two
countries' economies."
"Third, in withdrawing from the Joint Comprehensive
Plan of Action with Iran and making sanctions a central component
of its foreign policy, the Trump administration has incentivized
friends and competitors alike to probe more intensely for means of
circumventing the reach of the dollar, which is one of the
foundations of U.S. preeminence. The EU, China, and Russia are
partnering to develop special purpose vehicles, and a growing
number of individuals who shape monetary policy are calling to
reduce the dollar’s centrality. Even Bank of England Governor Mark
Carney proposing a digital reserve currency to “dampen the
domineering influence of the U.S. dollar on global
trade.”"
I've been hearing about these attempts to circumvent the dollar for
decades, and so far all attempts have failed. This is an empty threat
that has nothing to do with current round of sanctions. Furthermore,
most countries have quietly expressed agreement with Trump's sanctions
on China, since everyone agrees that China's illegal trade practices
have to be confronted. They may dislike Trump, but they know that
he's the only one who can do it.
"Fourth, while sharply criticizing core elements of
China’s geoeconomic agenda—often with good cause—the Trump
administration seems unable to offer a coherent one of its own,
thereby making its criticism seem less like an expression of
concern for its longstanding partners than a manifestation of
anxiety about its own competitiveness. That signaling reinforces
China’s twin narratives: that Beijing is confident and ascendant,
while Washington is nervous and declining."
More silly babble. Nobody believes the narrative that Beijing is
confident and ascendant, while Washington is nervous and declining.
Only a nevertrumper would say something so stupid.
"Fifth, and perhaps most fundamentally, while it has
undertaken a series of notionally competitive measures, the Trump
administration has not explained what it ultimately hopes to
accomplish. In seeming to countenance what Claremont McKenna’s
Minxin Pei calls “an open-ended conflict, with no measurable
indicators of progress,” there is an increasing risk that the
United States could focus more on a highly improbable quest to
contain China than on an eminently achievable effort to renew
itself."
This certainly is the "most fundamental" of Wyne's and Dobbins'
mistakes. Like most people in the media, they're totally baffled by
Trump's policies, and they blame it on Trump rather than their own
stupidity.

Trump's objective -- and it's been succeeding as far as I can tell --
is to disrupt critical places in China's economy in order to stop or
slow its headlong rush to launch a war with Japan, Taiwan and the
United States.

China was on a path where it could pour as much money as possible into
its war machine, supplemented by all the intellectural property and
technology that it could steal from the west, all the intelligence it
could steal through cyber attacks on the West's business and military
sites, and with complete control of a significant part of the global
internet through Huawei.

All of those Chinese plans are now in shambles, but of course they are
simply slowed down. China will start again on all those plans, until
finally some event triggers a new war. That's why I say that World
War III is coming with 100% certainty, no matter what Trump does.
John
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

** 23-Sep-2019 World View: Greta Thunberg

This actually makes me want to vomit:



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYqtXR8iPlE


Hey guys! Line up! She might be looking for a husband!
She would make a wonderful wife!
JCP

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by JCP »

I can't believe no one has hired you to do analysis. Trump should have you on a secret payroll. This is why the civilized world is going down the drain.
Guest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Guest »

"I can't understand why Hollywood wants to destroy robots," shrugged Ishiguro, who in 2007 was named one of the top 100 living geniuses by global consultants firm Synectics.

"Look at Japanese cartoons and animations -- robots are always friendly. We have a totally different cultural background," noted the professor.

It's not just Hollywood that has concerns over AI.

Tesla's Elon Musk has called for a global ban on killer robots, warning technological advances could revolutionise warfare and create new "weapons of terror" that target innocent people.

But Ishiguro insists there is no inherent danger in machines becoming self-aware or surpassing human intelligence.

"We don't need to fear AI or robots, the risk is controllable," he said. "My basic idea is that there is no difference between humans and robots."
A.I. need not be feared, according to scientists...in Japan...

https://news.yahoo.com/japan-roboticist ... 05749.html
John
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Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 12:10 pm
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

JCP wrote: > I can't believe no one has hired you to do analysis. Trump should
> have you on a secret payroll. This is why the civilized world is
> going down the drain.
Thanks for the wishes but as you say, the world is getting crazier
every day.
John
Posts: 11501
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 12:10 pm
Location: Cambridge, MA USA
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

** 24-Sep-2019 World View: Apes and Robots
> But Ishiguro insists there is no inherent danger in machines
> becoming self-aware or surpassing human intelligence.

> "We don't need to fear AI or robots, the risk is controllable," he
> said. "My basic idea is that there is no difference between humans
> and robots."
Guest wrote: > A.I. need not be feared, according to scientists...in Japan...

> https://news.yahoo.com/japan-roboticist ... 05749.html
I'm sure that at one time the apes were chatting with one another and
said, "We don't need to fear humans. They're controllable. There's
no difference between apes and humans."
John
Posts: 11501
Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 12:10 pm
Location: Cambridge, MA USA
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25-Sep-19 World View -- The Brexit comedy continues as the UK Supreme Court repudiates Boris Johnson

Post by John »

25-Sep-19 World View -- The Brexit comedy continues as the UK Supreme Court repudiates Boris Johnson

The default solution: No-deal Brexit

** 25-Sep-19 World View -- The Brexit comedy continues as the UK Supreme Court repudiates Boris Johnson
** http://www.generationaldynamics.com/pg/ ... tm#e190925



Contents:
The Brexit comedy continues as the UK Supreme Court repudiates Boris Johnson
The intractable Ireland land border
The default solution: No-deal Brexit


Keys:
Generational Dynamics, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Brexit, EU, UK,
Boris Johnson, Irish backstop
utahbob
Posts: 138
Joined: Tue Aug 09, 2011 8:10 am

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by utahbob »

25-Sep-19 World View -- The Brexit comedy continues as the UK Supreme Court repudiates Boris Johnson

John,
Good analysis. I lived in England back in 2003-05 and part of my family lives in Northern Ireland, Ireland and the United Kingdom. One of the things is not linked together in the media is that the UK has a healthy economy and a good tax/rate base compared to the majority of the EU. I remember seeing Jacques Chirac, then the French PM, saying that the British need to open the Exchequer/Treasury to help pay for the bail out of the PIGS. With France now sliding into massive debt, a few of my family members (who lived in the UK) said they should not ultimately pay for everybody’s debt and bailout the German banks , who are holding the bag for the majority of the bad loans of the PIGS.
You are correct with the ruling (political/corporate) class in the entire developed world are pretty bad.
A no deal exit would be in the best interest for the UK. They can negotiate a good deal for their country. The EU needs the UK more than the UK needs the EU. Outside the London, the average British citizen wants out of the EU. The US can negotiate a bilateral trade agreement that links the City with Wall Street and limited customs union with the commonwealth or five eyes countries.
John
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

** 25-Sep-2019 World View: Northern Ireland
utahbob wrote: > 25-Sep-19 World View -- The Brexit comedy continues as the UK
> Supreme Court repudiates Boris Johnson

> John, Good analysis. I lived in England back in 2003-05 and part
> of my family lives in Northern Ireland, Ireland and the United
> Kingdom. One of the things is not linked together in the media is
> that the UK has a healthy economy and a good tax/rate base
> compared to the majority of the EU. I remember seeing Jacques
> Chirac, then the French PM, saying that the British need to open
> the Exchequer/Treasury to help pay for the bail out of the
> PIGS. With France now sliding into massive debt, a few of my
> family members (who lived in the UK) said they should not
> ultimately pay for everybody’s debt and bailout the German banks ,
> who are holding the bag for the majority of the bad loans of the
> PIGS. You are correct with the ruling (political/corporate) class
> in the entire developed world are pretty bad. A no deal exit
> would be in the best interest for the UK. They can negotiate a
> good deal for their country. The EU needs the UK more than the UK
> needs the EU. Outside the London, the average British citizen
> wants out of the EU. The US can negotiate a bilateral trade
> agreement that links the City with Wall Street and limited customs
> union with the commonwealth or five eyes countries.
If there's a no-deal Brexit, then the hated border controls will
be restored between Ireland and Northern Ireland.

What do your family in Ireland and Northern Ireland think of that?
Do they think that "the Troubles" will start all over again?
John
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Joined: Sat Sep 20, 2008 12:10 pm
Location: Cambridge, MA USA
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

** 25-Sep-2019 Response to feedback
tg63 wrote: > John, just a bit of feedback - as a longtime lurker I have enjoyed
> reading your threads for years; however your increasingly
> patronizing tone and ability to turn every comment that isn't
> supportive into a personal attack have made you completely
> unreadable, to me at least. If you want to have any kind of a
> diverse reader base you might want to consider changing that. Or
> don't ... whatever.
One thing that comes with age is that I care less and less what people
think of me.

So after more than two years of seeing the loony left make one sleazy
accusation after another against Trump, not to mention the sleaziest
accusations against Kavanaugh -- and each sleazy accusation was
described as "explosive" and "the end of Trump's presidency" -- and
each sleazy accusation was obviously just a lie -- and each sleazy
accusation just disappeared the next day and was replaced with another
sleazy accusation -- after over two years of that, I'm just sick of
it.

One of worst sleazes was Adam Schiff, who kept claiming to have
ironclad proof, but never did -- one sleazy lie after another, from a
sleazy piece of garbage Adam Schiff.

After the Mueller report completely humiliated and disgraced the loony
left, a lot of people, including myself, hoped finally it would be
over.

But now it's still going on with these new sleazy accusations about
the phone call, when anyone who reads what's going on can see that it
was Biden and his son taking hundreds of millions of dollars in an
extortion scheme backed by Obama, and Trump asked Ukraine to look into
the extortion scheme, which to me was a perfectly reasonable thing to
ask.

And this morning, I watched a half-hour press conference by sleazebag
Adam Schiff, playing his usual role of spewing garbage.

And this didn't start with Trump. For years, the left has been
inciting violence against the Tea Partiers, whom they addressed with
the epithet "teabaggers," which is as bad as the n-word, and have been
doubling down on inciting violence since Trump became president. The
Ku Klux Klan was the military arm of the Democratic party for a
century after the end of the Civil War, formed because the Democrats
wanted slavery to continue, and now Antifa is the new military arm of
the Democratic party, but instead of targeting 12 million blacks,
they're targeting 60 million Trump supporters.

So I'm just totally sickened and disgusted by all this. But if you
really don't want to read about this, then don't. There are plenty of
other threads in this forum, not to mention a whole internet full of
stuff.

As an aside, thousands of people read my web site every day, about a
thousand people read the Generational Dynamics forum every day, and
about 700 people are on my mailing list. So there are people who are
as sick and disgusted as I am, and who want to read about what's going
on in the world, from the technical, non-ideological methodology that
I provide.

P.S.: I commend pbrower2a for having the guts to challenge what I've
written. The vast majority of people, on both the left and right, are
total cowards, and wouldn't dare.
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