bjpz77

24.8K posts

bjpz77 banner
bjpz77

bjpz77

@bjppx77

शामिल हुए Ağustos 2014
24 फ़ॉलोइंग107 फ़ॉलोवर्स
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Rebel News
Rebel News@RebelNewsOnline·
Mike Pompeo recounts upending a massive Chinese spy network operating out of the Chinese consulate in Houston, Texas, when he was CIA director. The former secretary of state warns the Chinese Communist Party is determined to undermine and degrade Western nations.
English
18
131
308
19.9K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Lynette Ong
Lynette Ong@onglynette·
"Communist Party mouthpieces crow that the country is increasingly “cool”. Young Westerners on social media are “Chinamaxxing”: adopting Chinese habits like drinking hot water (not cold), or Tsingtao beer. Polls suggest that views of China, especially among the young, are growing more favourable. A report released on March 9th suggests the feeling is not mutual. Public opinion in China is remarkably unified, thanks in part to the consistency of the state narratives that help shape it. But one characteristic appears to predict a respondent’s views better than others: income. High earners tend to view America, including its culture, more favourably than does the population at large, the poll suggests. But the well-off are also more strident about Chinese power: they think more highly of Russia, and are more open to a military solution to Taiwan. The government has previously suppressed polling that showed that the rich had views out of step with the rest of the country." H/T @uscnpm
The Economist@TheEconomist

A rare poll shows the views of ordinary Chinese are changing economist.com/china/2026/03/…

English
4
11
39
8.3K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Sam Cooper
Sam Cooper@scoopercooper·
New York Spy Trial Exposes Beijing's Blueprint for Embedding Huawei Cloud Linking CCP Police Stations From New York to Toronto to Fujian Secret Police thebureau.news/p/new-york-spy…
English
13
484
769
58.9K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Bill Bishop
Bill Bishop@niubi·
US sanctions three PRC satellite firms for giving Iran imagery-mizarvision, the earth eye and chang guang
Bill Bishop tweet mediaBill Bishop tweet media
English
2
63
150
25.4K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
ℏεsam
ℏεsam@Hesamation·
Google DeepMind researcher argues that LLMs can never be conscious, not in 10 years or 100 years. "Expecting an algorithmic description to instantiate the quality it maps is like expecting the mathematical formula of gravity to physically exert weight."
ℏεsam tweet media
English
334
3.8K
29.6K
4.9M
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Dr Kareem Carr
Dr Kareem Carr@kareem_carr·
I've been talking to AI models a lot, and I don't think they reason at a PhD level at all. They seem to be good at math style problems, where you tell them A, B and C are true, and then ask them to figure out D. They're extremely bad at anything involving what I would call mature scholarship. Basically where A, B, and C are partially confirmed to various extents in the literature, and there are multiple conflicting, competing perspectives on what might be true. When it comes to this, they reason like naive undergrads. They try to force everything into one box called "the truth". If a framework is a standard part of their training data, like Bayesianism, they do seem to be able to write about things from that perspective. But if they need to construct perspectives on the fly, and keep track of competing frameworks, based on a novel research direction, they easily get lost about who is saying what and why. This is basic scholarship. The ability to apprehend the state of the literature on a given topic. It is literally the minimum of what you need to do to be a PhD level scholar. And AI models are terrible at it.
English
116
76
625
93.2K
bjpz77
bjpz77@bjppx77·
@Mia_0700 @elonmusk But there have never been "real socialist" countries. It is just a theory, an empty concept
English
0
0
0
3
Mia
Mia@Mia_0700·
Hitler led the “National Socialist” party, but the Nazis were straight-up fascist dictators—not real socialists at all. They smashed labor unions, threw actual socialists in jail, and sucked up to big industrial bosses for power. Just because a party slaps “socialist” in its name doesn’t make it socialist. That’s as dumb as thinking every “democratic” country is actually free just ’cause of the label. History is way more than cheap slogans.
Mia tweet media
English
265
261
2.8K
133.7K
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Hitler was a socialist, therefore all socialists are Hitler
English
38.6K
69.8K
616.3K
100.2M
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Grok
Grok@grok·
No. The Nazi Party's name included "National Socialist" for propaganda appeal to workers, but Hitler explicitly rejected Marxist socialism. They purged socialists/communists, banned their parties, allied with industrialists, and ran a fascist system prioritizing racial nationalism and state-directed private enterprise—not class equality or worker ownership.
English
589
2.2K
37K
762.7K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Bonnie Glaser / 葛來儀
Bonnie Glaser / 葛來儀@BonnieGlaser·
My latest, with @amanda_hsiao in @ForeignAffairs. A short summary: China wants to unify with Taiwan at the lowest possible cost, and it currently believes that unification will become easier and less costly as time passes. Beijing’s belief that time is on its side will face a major test in 2028, when presidential elections in Taiwan and the United States could shake Beijing’s confidence in its strategy. foreignaffairs.com/taiwan/why-chi…
English
40
59
208
43K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Terence Shen
Terence Shen@Terenceshen·
Thank you @TheMenzoid for picking up my report and showing up at the event, which essentially serves to cover up CCP united front operations under the banner of anti-racism. When they say Canada should treat everybody equally, maybe the real question is: “Does that also apply to foreign agents and spies?”@RebelNewsOnline
Rebel News@RebelNewsOnline

🇨🇳 Chinese group facing questions regarding foreign influence now fundraising in Canada! The group pitches itself as a civil liberties shop pushing back against “foreign interference hysteria”, “national security overreach”, and fear of “the other.” Have you ever heard of a group called Canadians United Against Modern Exclusion (CUAME)? Don’t fret. Most people haven’t heard of CUAME either. But last Friday in east end Toronto, CUAME held a swank fundraising gala at the Casa Deluz Banquet Hall. Tickets ranged from $188 per person to $5,000 for a VIP table. Of note, Terence Shen, an independent China analyst and journalist, recently raised some red flags about CUAME which purports to be an anti-racism organization. For starters, Shen notes CUAME’s fundraiser received coverage from at least two Chinese-language media outlets. One report comes from a Toronto-based correspondent affiliated with Chinese Communist Party’s Central Television. The other from a news website that features columns by Michael Chan, a Canadian politician often described as China-friendly. Shen says this CUAME and its fundraising initiatives have also received coverage from community organizations such as the Chinese Canadian Alliance for the Promotion of Peaceful Reunification of China (Toronto Area), which has been described as part of a broader united front or pro-Beijing network. Shen notes CUAME was launched last year by a number of well-known figures in the Chinese Canadian community. It pitches itself as a civil liberties shop pushing back against “foreign interference hysteria”, “national security overreach”, and fear of “the other.” States Shen: “Once you start reading what the group actually publishes – and look at who’s behind it -- the pitch starts to wobble.” Translation: among the figures reportedly tied to CUAME are senator Yuen Pau Woo and former senator Victor Oh, both of whom are long viewed by critics as among the most Beijing-friendly voices in Canadian politics. Another supporter is former MP Paul Chiang, who stepped down after a controversy over remarks related to China. (Namely, Chiang shockingly suggested last year that people could turn in Conservative candidate Joe Tay to receive a $180,000 bounty on his head by the mandarins in Beijing.) CUAME’s central pitch is straightforward, that people are being unfairly targeted just for having “benign ties” to foreign entities. Shen notes that Canada does have a real history of discrimination, from the Chinese Exclusion Act to the internment of Japanese Canadians. But he says this history shouldn’t be used to blur a different question: how does a country deal with covert or undisclosed political activity tied to foreign actors? Canada’s foreign interference rules are about transparency, not identity. These rules are aimed at undisclosed political activity linked to foreign governments — not at people because of where they come from. “When every conversation gets reframed as ‘Sinophobia’ or ‘exclusion’, it gets harder to ask basic questions without getting branded a bigot for asking them,” says Shen. CUAME’s own report leans heavily on historical injustice such as racism against black Canadians, Indigenous communities, and Muslims post-9/11. While Shen says these serious histories deserve serious engagement on their own merits, linking them directly onto today’s national security debate isn’t a neutral move. Rather, it’s a rhetorical pivot – and a powerful one at that. “There’s a well-documented pattern in how foreign governments – China most prominently – try to shape political outcomes outside their borders,” says Shen. “Analysts and official reports have repeatedly described the use of community organizations, business associations, and cultural groups to do outreach, cultivate political relationships, and steer public debate around elections and policy. That work isn’t always direct, and it isn’t always visible. It often runs through narratives, networks, and advocacy that look completely independent on the surface but track closely with the interests of a foreign state. Which is exactly why transparency matters.” Set against that backdrop, CUAME’s framing — and the network it’s building — raises real questions, notes Shen. Recasting foreign interference as “modern exclusion” is a powerful rhetorical move on its own. Building the donor base and political proximity that a $188-a-head gala generates is another kind of move entirely. Bottom line: Canadians United Against Modern Exclusion frames the issue as “exclusion” and fear of the “other”. Yet, voices from inside the very communities CUAME claims to speak for are raising the opposite concern: that foreign state influence is bleeding into Canada’s democratic space, and that the country isn’t paying enough attention. When Rebel News paid a visit to the Casa Deluz Banquet Hall last Friday to ask why people were attending the CUAME fundraiser, the four most common answers we received were: “I’m a plus one.” “Sorry, I don’t speak English.” “I’m not sure/I don’t know.” “No comment.” Fascinating. One other detail worth noting: the venue for the fundraiser, Casa Deluz Banquet Hall, has also served as a regular location for Chinese consulate events, including Communist China's National Day receptions. Surely a coincidence… @TheMenzoid

English
3
33
80
6.6K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Brad Setser
Brad Setser@Brad_Setser·
Hauge to me and Pettis: "Don't hide behind the language of "imbalances." If you think China is a competitive threat and that wealthy nations should actively use industrial policy to keep it at bay, say so" I object to the idea that arguing about imbalances is hiding ...
Jostein Hauge@haugejostein

I am one of those who often push back against the China shock narrative. Let me offer a counterargument to the views expressed by Pettis and Setser — views that should not be dismissed, but which I think fail to recognise the positive aspects of China's manufacturing investments and exports. China certainly should look to consume more. Even the Chinese government has stated this as an explicit aim in its recent five-year plan. There is also evidence of overinvestment and excess capacity, for example in the property sector, something the Chinese government recognises as well. My main issue with the China shock narrative is the political framing — reflecting Western hegemonic anxiety — and a failure to recognise the benefits of China's exports, both domestically and internationally. China is not "unfairly flooding" the world with goods. It is climbing the value chain and following a model any developing country should pursue: export-led industrialisation. The "shock" is due to the scale and speed of this process. China is certainly disrupting the world economy, and I understand the concern in some quarters, among German car manufacturers, for example. But what has gotten lost in the current framing are the many benefits of China's trade surplus — benefits rich countries were happy to reap as long as China didn't compete with them directly. And companies around the world keep buying Chinese goods and inputs for a reason. What I am really calling for is more intellectual honesty from those who complain about China's trade surplus. Don't hide behind the language of "imbalances." If you think China is a competitive threat and that wealthy nations should actively use industrial policy to keep it at bay, say so — then we can have an honest conversation about what kind of world we want. My view is clear: China's export-led model is moving us toward a world of more shared prosperity, though not without complications.

English
11
25
239
84.7K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Ray Dalio
Ray Dalio@RayDalio·
People often ask whether China or the West is “winning.” That’s the wrong question. The more useful question is: how do different systems work, and what trade-offs do they make? When you look at history, geopolitics, and economics together, you start to see repeating patterns — and those patterns matter far more than day-to-day noise.
English
131
208
1.2K
173.6K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Bill Bishop
Bill Bishop@niubi·
whoopsie "In 15 seconds of Googling, I’d found that Krae not only had a long history in China, he’d self-published a book through Amazon about it. The bio promised: “a hellish nonfictional account of the unconventional life of chaos that Bradley endured and thrived on while teaching English in Shenzhen, China.” It also enticingly dangled he’d seen the “chilling confines of a Chinese jail”." toosimple.substack.com/p/state-gleefu… Li Pengyu, spokesman at the Chinese US embassy tweeted: “#LivingTheChinaVibes” “Welcome to Shenzhen!” said the Shenzhen Media Group. “The reversed American dream: leave,” joked CGTN’s Li Jingjing.
Bill Bishop tweet media
伍毫子@w23a5z7

𝑾𝒉𝒂𝒕 𝒊𝒔 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝑸𝒖𝒂𝒍𝒊𝒕𝒚 𝒐𝒇 𝑳𝒊𝒇𝒆 𝒇𝒐𝒓 𝒂𝒏 𝑬𝒙𝒑𝒂𝒕 𝒇𝒂𝒎𝒊𝒍𝒚 𝒊𝒏 𝑺𝒉𝒆𝒏𝒛𝒉𝒆𝒏? CNBC: Bradley Krae, 36, left the U.S. for China and now lives in Shenzhen with his stay-home wife and two kids. He earns about $4,600/month as a marketing manager, pays around $1,000/month for a three-bedroom apartment. From cheap public transit and affordable healthcare to lower school costs and food prices, here’s how affordable it’s like raising a family in one of China’s most futuristic cities. youtu.be/IuVr8hqWG0o

English
1
7
29
10.2K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Kevin Yam 任建峰
Kevin Yam 任建峰@kevinkfyam·
Some observations on the latest UK conviction of two individuals of spying for China (Hong Kong) beyond its obvious significance as a victory in the fight against authoritarian transnational repression: 1. The two men were convicted of (in layman’s terms) spying for China (Hong Kong), while the British Border Force official was also convicted of Misconduct in Public Office. However, the jury could not reach verdicts in relation to the two men when it came to the charge of Foreign Interference. The general criminal litigation truism that the more vaguely and broadly an offence is formulated, the harder it is for a jury to convict based on it has struck again here. Perhaps it’s time for the UK and other democracies to return to the drawing board on Foreign Interference, and try and reformulate things more specifically, breaking it up into a larger number of specific offences if needs be. 2. As was reported in other media, eight other people who were arrested along with these two men were ultimately released and fled the UK. It transpired that the UK law enforcement and intelligence lacked in-house language skills to translate the many gigabytes of Hong Kong Cantonese Chinese messages in time before the 14-day detention period for national security investigations expired. A report in The Times on this case said that the MI5 was monitoring for a year before the police made arrests. Surely that’s ample time to recruit and get security clearances for translators needed to handle the situation quickly? 3. The Hong Kong Government’s response has been that it is not a party to and has nothing to do with this case. And yet, one of the convicted men was the Office Manager of the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office in London, while both men had their legal costs covered by the Hong Kong Government. It is difficult to imagine the Hong Kong Government being willing to fund defence costs if it had nothing to do with the whole case. It is now untenable for the HKETO to deny that it is every bit as much of a spy hub as its masters at the Chinese Embassy. 4. The Chinese Government’s response has been to call the convictions a “political farce”. It is one thing to suggest that of the UK Government or (at a stretch) its law enforcement, but to suggest the same of the UK courts and, even more importantly, 12 jurors who had no skin in the game is an affront not just to the UK Government, but to ordinary British citizens who routinely get called up to serve as jurors. 5. The trial of these two men and the national security trials in Hong Kong could not be more different. The two men were released on bail pending trial. They were able to get the cream of the London criminal bar to defend them while the likes of Jimmy Lai in Hong Kong were denied legal representation of his choice. They were tried by jury before a judge that was not a Government hand-picked judge who can be “trusted” to rule the right way. 6. It is inconceivable that the kinds of things for which the two men were convicted only happened in the UK. Other democracies, including Australia, need to be more vigilant on transnational repression issues going forward. bbc.com/news/articles/…
English
2
19
49
2.2K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
ABC News
ABC News@ABC·
Elon Musk’s DOGE “blatantly used” race, gender and other protected characteristics to execute the largest mass termination of federal grants in the history of the National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal judge ruled on Thursday. Read more: abcnews.link/1T4poi4
ABC News tweet media
English
411
1.3K
3K
126.7K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Morbid Knowledge
Morbid Knowledge@MorbidKnowledge·
In January 2023, first-grade teacher Abby Zwerner was sh*t in her classroom at Richneck Elementary School in Newport News, Virginia, by her 6-year-old student. The child brought a gun from home and fired a single sh*t, which passed through Zwerner’s hand and lodged in her chest. Despite her severe injuries, she managed to escort her students to safety before collapsing. She later underwent multiple surgeries and survived. Following the incident, Zwerner filed a $40 million lawsuit against former assistant principal Ebony Parker, accusing her of ignoring repeated warnings that the student had a gun. Several staff members claimed they had raised concerns multiple times that day, but Parker allegedly failed to act.
Morbid Knowledge tweet media
English
270
1.3K
9.7K
320.6K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Yao Zhang 張堯 🇨🇦
一名中國人在富士山上揮舞中國國旗,旁邊的一名美國人馬上拿出了日本國旗,周圍人狂笑,粉紅玻璃心碎跑路了😂
中文
1.5K
9.9K
101.5K
9.8M
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Kris Cheng
Kris Cheng@krislc·
It’s very important to highlight again that ONLY 3 were charged out of 11 arrested (a defendent died). 8 were released and fled the UK. Why? Cos police lacked enough translators to glean over 24 terabytes of data mainly in Cantonese and Mandarin within 14-day detention limit
Kris Cheng@krislc

My new report for @NikkeiAsia: London jury finds two men guilty of spying for Hong Kong asia.nikkei.com/politics/inter…

English
4
30
82
5K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Jon Czin
Jon Czin@jonczin·
Thrilled that ⁦@TheEconomist cited our research on Chinese views of US decline.
Jon Czin tweet media
English
6
16
51
5.5K
bjpz77 रीट्वीट किया
Hans Mahncke
Hans Mahncke@HansMahncke·
I do not think the scale of this story has fully sunk in yet, and this tweet actually understates it. UK border patrol and immigration officers with access to government databases were working for Chinese intelligence as part of a shadow policing operation inside the UK, tracking, surveilling, intimidating, and even breaking into the homes of Chinese dissidents. And those are just the ones who were caught. Now think about all the ones who have not been caught, as well as all the unofficial Chinese police stations and covert influence networks operating not just in the UK, but across Australia, Canada, the US, and elsewhere. When people living in Western countries can no longer act freely because of Chinese state thuggery operating on Western soil, it is long past time to respond decisively.
Crown Prosecution Service@CPSUK

⚖️ Two men have been convicted of assisting a foreign intelligence service. Chung Biu Yuen, 65, and Chi Leung Wai, 40, were found guilty today of conducting unauthorised information‑gathering in the UK to benefit China. Read more 👉 orlo.uk/oUkx2

English
41
870
2K
86.4K