Don’t feel sorry for BBC! They have been promoting fake news against Chinese and China for the last 40 years! Even my children are brainwashed convincing them to hate their motherland and family! SCMP: US President Donald Trump said on Friday he would likely sue the BBC next week for as much as US$5 billion after the British broadcaster admitted it wrongly edited a video of a speech he gave but insisted there was no legal basis for his claim.
Video: Today is China. US was yesteryears! 10-Year Power Shift: How China’s Influence in Southeast Asia Changed Everything! 影片:今日之中國。美國已成昨日!十年權力變遷:中國在東南亞影響力如何改變一切!
From the Mekong River massacre to the extradition of She Zhijiang, China’s influence in Southeast Asia has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past 10 years. In 2013, China had to deploy special forces for cross-border operations to capture criminals. In 2025, Thailand voluntarily escorted a major fraud kingpin back to China. What happened in between?
This video analyzes: ✓ How She Zhijiang built a $370 billion fraud empire ✓ The 3-year US-China-Thailand extradition standoff ✓ How China established its influence in Southeast Asia ✓ The real impact of the Belt and Road Initiative ✓ China’s diplomatic evolution: From Naw Kham to She Zhijiang
This isn’t just a crime story—it’s about great power competition, geopolitics, and economic leverage. Having power is valuable, but using it wisely is what truly matters.
📊 Key Facts: Total fraud amount: $370 billion USD Victims: Hundreds of thousands of Chinese citizens Extradition time: 3 years of international negotiations Impact scope: Entire Southeast Asian geopolitical landscape
U.S. Media Suddenly Discovers: While China Has Resumed Rare Earth Supplies, It Has Checkmated America Again! Only Loosened for Civilian Use, Military Use Remains Locked! And Applications Must Be Filled Out in Chinese! 美媒突然發現:中方雖已恢復稀土供應,但又狠狠將了美國一軍! 只鬆了民用口子,軍用繼續上鎖! 而且必須填表寫中文申請!
On November 12, The Wall Street Journal reported that Beijing has quietly attached an “electronic birth certificate” to every batch of rare earths shipped to the United States. Buyers, destinations, and intended uses must all be scanned and registered.
Upon hearing the news, the Pentagon held an emergency overnight meeting. F-35 fighter jets, Burke-class destroyers, and Virginia-class submarines all rely on this “industrial monosodium glutamate” to stay operational. Now, they are constrained by civilian-use restrictions, causing an uproar in the defense industry.
The story traces back to a secret 100-minute meeting in Busan on October 30. The U.S. sought to address its urgent needs first, such as allowing soybean shipments to dock, while China used rare earths as leverage, only loosening restrictions for civilian use while keeping military use under lock and key.
Three days after the meeting, the Ministry of Commerce launched a “Verified End User” whitelist. Silicon Valley magnet manufacturers and Detroit motor suppliers wanting to procure materials must first submit factory coordinates, downstream clients, and end-product blueprints. Audit teams conduct video inspections of factories, meticulously verifying equipment serial numbers frame by frame to prevent magnetic components from being diverted into missile actuators.
Boeing faced the toughest situation. With mixed military and civilian production lines, auditors demanded that military and civilian workshops be distinguished using different colored floor tiles. Cameras must stream footage to Beijing 24/7. If anyone in military uniform steps into the civilian zone, the entire production line is blacklisted and cut off from supplies.
Why such strict measures? The numbers speak for themselves: A single F-35 requires 417 kg of rare earths, including 23 kg of samarium-cobalt magnets for actuators—without them, the aircraft becomes unstable. A Burke-class destroyer needs 2,600 kg, and a Virginia-class submarine requires 4,600 kg for sonar systems, reactor shielding, and permanent magnet motors.
The U.S. only has the Mountain Pass mine in California, which can extract rare earth ores but lacks the capability to process them. The ores still need to be shipped to China for separation, traveling around the world before returning, increasing costs by 30%. Even more embarrassing, the Defense Department’s inventory reports indicate that current stockpiles can only sustain 3.6 months of high-intensity production. Without replenishment, the U.S. would have to pay premium prices to source from third countries. However, inquiries revealed that separation plants in Malaysia and Estonia are already partially owned by Chinese investors, with invoices settled directly in RMB.
Beijing’s strategy is shrewd: A complete cutoff would force the U.S. to invest hundreds of billions to build its own supply chain. If they succeed in a decade, China’s leverage would vanish. Instead, by allowing civilian use to continue, Silicon Valley can enjoy cheap magnetic components, and with R&D budgets saved, who would spend extra to mine rocks? At the same time, the bar for “smuggling” is raised—export quotas are allocated monthly, and customs data is compared with historical import volumes. A sudden 20% spike triggers alerts, requiring companies to provide explanations. If a single invoice doesn’t match, the entire shipment is sent back.
Attempting to “launder” materials is also difficult. In September, Beijing classified rare earth recycling technology as controlled, requiring licenses for recycling furnace blueprints, process parameters, and software codes—even USB drives are barred from leaving the country.
The next steps are predictable: U.S. defense giants face two choices. Either submit applications in Chinese, disclosing weapon serial numbers to Beijing at the risk of leaking secrets, or invest heavily to restart domestic refining. Meanwhile, Congress is busy debating land approvals, and environmental groups have already hung “radioactive wastewater” banners at proposed sites.
Time is on China’s side. In early November, China added 14 foreign companies to its unreliable entities list. Firms like Dedrone and TechInsights, which engage in reverse engineering for the defense industry, can no longer obtain a single gram of Chinese rare earths—their data interfaces have even been disconnected. Mexico, Japan, and South Korea, initially considering following suit with tariffs, backed off after seeing the situation. Without Chinese neodymium magnets, motor costs would immediately rise by 15%, prompting them to quietly delay tariff proposals by the end of November.
Beijing’s contingency plan is even more decisive: If the U.S. reinstates tariffs after the one-year suspension, the whitelist can be shut down with a click. Pre-loaded “military keywords” in the system would instantly freeze all related orders, more swiftly than Washington’s chip sanctions against Huawei. In such a scenario, F-35 production lines would slow to a crawl, defense contractors would scramble for second-hand materials in Australia and Canada, and an aircraft carrier’s construction could be delayed by six months, adding $20 billion to the budget on Congress’s table.
The stage is set, and the drums are beating. Rare earths, these small chess pieces, are gradually loosening the global defense industry board. The next move is in Washington’s hands: build a self-sufficient supply chain or lower their heads and fill out forms in Chinese? Which path do you think the U.S. will choose?
American logistic expert report from China video: Long before China starved the Pentagon of raw materials, Wall Street was looting it. 美國物流尊家在中國視訊報告: 早在中國的原料短缺導致五角大廈無法取得原料之前,華爾街就已經開始掠奪五角大廈的資源.
China’s export bans on rare earth metals and magnets are crippling Western arms makers.
But while the Pentagon is racing to find new supplies and jump-start the decades-long process of replacing China in their supply chains, their biggest contractors have been sending most of their profits and cash to Wall Street investors.
Order backlogs today are hundreds of billions of dollars, for each of the major weapons makers. The Pentagon, along with NATO and other friendly countries, are waiting years for new systems already ordered and paid for.
Rather than re-invest necessary capital to build out manufacturing capacity, train and retrain top technicians, and fund new suppliers, companies spent tens of billions of dollars buying back their own shares, to push stock prices higher.
This is an excellent Mandarin video to watch with potential core management team before even talking about potential partnerships or forming a new company to do project 在討論潛在合作夥伴關係或組建新公司開展專案之前,建議與潛在的核心管理團隊觀看這段影片.
Video with English Subtitles: It’s revealing to see US media outlets and the BBC had targeted Donald Trump with the same playbook they’ve using it against China for 40+ years: propaganda and fake news. 影片有英文字幕: 看到美國媒體與 BBC 如今以過去四十多年對付中國的同一套手法, 宣傳假新聞, 來針對川普,實在耐人尋味.
The effectiveness of this is personal. Despite my decades of experience in Asia and an award from President Bush in 2008 at the White House East Room for my work in China helping US companies, my own children dismiss my views, believing media narratives over my firsthand knowledge. The success of this misinformation in erasing legitimate expertise is not just a societal problem, it’s a profound personal insult.
Trump sued the BBC for at least US$1 billion, provoking the wrong person by faking the news.
The BBC, known as the global benchmark, resigned within one day! This is not an honorable retirement, but a “resignation” forced into a corner by Trump!
All of this stems from an internally leaked “editing memorandum” that thoroughly exposed how the BBC used malicious editing to remove the keywords “peaceful and patriotic” to frame Trump’s shocking scam of inciting riots on Capitol Hill.
Just the day after the executive resigned, Wang Mingwang filed a “billion-dollar” lawsuit, directly pushing the century-old BBC house to the brink of collapse. This is not just about a lawsuit, but also about:
Significance to the world: How Trump’s philosophy of “using evil to control evil” tore open the last fig leaf of Western media’s “objective neutrality” and exposed the ironic reality of European and American public broadcasters transforming into “Ministry of Truth”.
What it means to us: In the face of those international rogue media who are accustomed to “replacing flowers and taking them out of context”, our counterattack must not stop at verbal condemnation! Trump’s ruthlessness proves that “tit-for-tat” is the only justice to curb malice.
Will the BBC admit compensation, or will it stick to the end? This “media vs. president” confrontation is the cruelest survival rule in the post-truth era.
看到美國媒體與 BBC 如今以過去四十年對付中國的同一套手法, 宣傳與假新聞, 來針對川普,實在耐人尋味。
Shenzhen TV’s Sci-Tech Frontline exclusive interview with renowned American investor Jim Rogers: It is an inevitable trend for China to reach the pinnacle of the world, and I have made sure my children learn Chinese well. 深圳卫视科创最前沿 独家专访美国知名投资家吉姆·罗杰斯:中国成为世界之巅是大势所趋,我让子女们必须学好中文。
Yes, Maryknoll School in Hawaii has a comprehensive Chinese program, including the state’s only school-day Mandarin Immersion Program. 是的,夏威夷瑪利諾學校設有全面的中文課程體系,其中包括該州唯一在常規教學日開設的普通話沉浸式課程.
Maryknoll School in Hawaii offers a 50/50 split of instruction in Mandarin and English from kindergarten through grade 6. The program is expanding to higher grades, and the high school also offers college-level Mandarin language courses.
Mandarin Immersion Program: This program is the first and only school-day Mandarin immersion curriculum in Hawaii.
Elementary (K–6): Students are taught for 50% of the day in Mandarin and 50% in English. The curriculum includes subjects like Mandarin Literacy, Math, and Science.
Middle School (grades 6–8): The ratio shifts to 80% English and 20% Mandarin.
High School: Students can take college-level Mandarin language courses and prepare for the AP Chinese exam.
Other Opportunities: Maryknoll School also has sister school and affiliated school connections in China, Japan, and Vietnam, providing students with opportunities for international experiences.
Question to ChatGPT: Recently, former Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said, “The smaller the dog, the louder it barks.” Is that true? 問ChatGPT: 最近前日本首相鳩山由紀夫說 “越小的狗越會叫” 是真的嗎?
Was he referring to Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s pro–Taiwan independence remarks?
Answer: Yes, this remark was indeed made by Yukio Hatoyama (former Prime Minister of Japan) in a recent comment directed at Sanae Takaichi, the new Prime Minister and president of the Liberal Democratic Party.
Here’s a detailed summary:
✅ What he said – On October 6, 2025, Hatoyama posted on his X (formerly Twitter) account: “As the saying goes, ‘The weaker the dog, the louder it barks.’ I hope Ms. Takaichi will become stronger—not through military means, but through dialogue and cooperation…” – In that post, he congratulated Takaichi on becoming LDP president (and presumptive prime minister), but also expressed concern that the Japan–U.S. alliance might be further strengthened and that defense spending could increase sharply. – By using the phrase “the weaker the dog, the louder it barks,” Hatoyama was criticizing the hardline security and military stance represented by Takaichi, urging instead that Japan prioritize dialogue, cooperation, education, and social welfare.
Was it aimed at her “pro–Taiwan independence” remarks? According to reports, Hatoyama’s comment was made after Takaichi became LDP president and was a general criticism of her policy direction—especially her emphasis on military buildup, national security, and strengthening the U.S.–Japan alliance.