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DeH40 commented on Trump, advisers discussing options to acquire Greenland, US Military an option   reuters.com/world/trump-a... · Posted by u/amarcheschi
tizzy · 2 months ago
Hopefully we’ve learnt our lesson about appeasement
DeH40 · 2 months ago
The only thing we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history
DeH40 commented on Trump says Venezuela’s Maduro captured after strikes   reuters.com/world/america... · Posted by u/jumpocelot
GardenLetter27 · 2 months ago
Let freedom ring. Every Venezuelan I know is happy for the regime to fall.

Let's hope Iran, Cuba, North Korea and Russia follow soon.

DeH40 · 2 months ago
When will the US let freedom to ring in Saudi Arabia?

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DeH40 commented on Kimi K2 Thinking, a SOTA open-source trillion-parameter reasoning model   moonshotai.github.io/Kimi... · Posted by u/nekofneko
mullingitover · 4 months ago
These stories are from 2021.

China has been adding something like a 1GW coal plant’s worth of solar generation every eight hours in the past year, and the rate is accelerating. The US is no longer a serious competitor for China when it comes to energy production.

DeH40 · 4 months ago
The reason it happened in 2021, I think, might be that China took on the production capacity gap caused by COVID shutdowns in other parts of the world. The short-term surge in production led to a temporary imbalance in the supply and demand of electricity
DeH40 commented on Norway reviews cybersecurity after remote-access feature found in Chinese buses   scandasia.com/norway-revi... · Posted by u/dredmorbius
int_19h · 4 months ago
The invasion of Zhenbao island was "territorial defense", really?
DeH40 · 4 months ago
Before asking this question, can you Google "Zhenbao Island" first?
DeH40 commented on Dutch government takes control of Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia   cnbc.com/2025/10/13/dutch... · Posted by u/piskov
like_any_other · 5 months ago
I stand corrected. China has recently opened up (wisely only recently, protecting its native industries until they are able to compete globally). Yet the fact remains it is fiercely protective (as it should be. If only EU and US followed its example), and pursues an explicit, government-supported policy of taking over first local, then global markets:

China imposes more trade and investment barriers, discriminatory taxes, and information security restrictions than any other country by a vast margin. - https://ecipe.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/DTE_China_TWP_R...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Made_in_China_2025

And China also makes sure to appear open, using subtle instead of blunt tools, and concealing its influence operations - mister DeH40, with a 19 month old account, zero favorites or submissions, and a total of two comments, both in defense of China.

DeH40 · 5 months ago
Glad you can admit you were wrong. But defending your mistake with a biased report from 2017 is a weak move.

That data isn't just outdated, it's irrelevant. China's entire foreign investment law was rewritten in 2020. You're arguing against a reality that no longer exists.

And "Made in China 2025"? It's an industrial policy, like the US CHIPS Act or Germany's Industrie 4.0. It's only a sinister "takeover plan" when China does it?

Finally, drop the personal attacks. Attacking my account instead of the argument is a classic sign of a weak position. I'm not a state-sponsored bot, just a regular Chinese citizen who is tired of seeing these old myths spread around.

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DeH40 commented on Dutch government takes control of Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia   cnbc.com/2025/10/13/dutch... · Posted by u/piskov
like_any_other · 5 months ago
The question was, emphasis mine: "which firms in China are controlled by European entities?"

Western brands have investments, but are required by law to have a local partner, that learns the trade and eventually copies the product:

China bars foreign companies from participating on their own in many industries, but in some of those industries foreign companies can participate only by forming a joint venture with a Chinese partner. [..] Partnering with a Chinese business can be tricky for various reasons, so understanding to what you are agreeing is absolutely critical. This is especially true because the Chinese law, the Chinese government, and the Chinese courts will be heavily biased in favor of your joint venture partner in any dispute between your company and your China joint venture partner’s company. - https://harris-sliwoski.com/chinalawblog/china-joint-venture...

> Half the cars on the streets used to be European or American

And more than half the phones in Europe or America are Asian - what's your point?

DeH40 · 5 months ago
That’s a common misconception, but it's factually incorrect. European companies can, and do, acquire and control companies in China.

The legal framework and the reality on the ground show a very different picture.

1. The Law Explicitly Allows It: China's Foreign Investment Law (effective since Jan 1, 2020) clearly states that foreign investors are permitted to acquire the shares, equity, or other similar interests of domestic Chinese enterprises.

2. The "Negative List" System: China uses a "Negative List" model. This means any industry not on the list is fully open to foreign investment, often up to 100% ownership. This list has been shrinking every year, opening up more sectors. For instance, all restrictions in the manufacturing sector were removed. While there are still restrictions in very specific strategic areas (like news media or rare earth mining), this is not a blanket ban by any means.

3. Real-World Examples of European-Controlled Companies in China:

You don't have to search hard to find major Chinese operations controlled by European firms. Here are just a few high-profile examples:

Automotive: German automaker BMW raised its stake in its Chinese joint venture, BMW Brilliance Automotive, to 75%. This is a landmark case of a European company taking majority control of a major automotive manufacturer in China. Similarly, Volkswagen owns a 75% stake in its EV-focused Volkswagen Anhui venture.

Chemicals: Germany’s BASF is building a massive new Verbund site in Guangdong. It's a €10 billion project that is 100% owned and operated by BASF.

Retail & Consumer Goods: All IKEA (Sweden) stores in China are operated by its wholly-owned subsidiary. French beauty giant L'Oréal and luxury groups like LVMH and Kering all operate through wholly foreign-owned enterprises in China.

Finance: German insurer Allianz established Allianz (China) Insurance Holding, the very first 100% foreign-owned insurance holding company in the country.

So, the idea that a European company "wouldn't be allowed" to buy a Chinese company is a myth. While the process involves regulations (just like any country), it is legally possible and happens frequently across many industries.

DeH40 commented on America's reputation drops across the world   ipsos.com/en/americas-rep... · Posted by u/mrtksn
p3rls · a year ago
China has only one ally, North Korea. Singular. A real dream team of human flourishing.
DeH40 · a year ago
In fact, China pursues a policy of non-alignment, so it has no allies

u/DeH40

KarmaCake day7March 11, 2024View Original