China is *not* your friend
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I hate the CCP, I have nothing against the Chinese people.
China would have become THE superpower, if they would have used Taiwan or Hong Kong as a model. I guess that's a "duh" statement.
The Chinese people do hate the U.S., from what I've ascertained. Mainland Chinese seem to be in a system where the government tells the people whom to hate, and why. Once again, "we're number 1!"
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@George-K said in China is *not* your friend:
Note they interspersed cats and dogs, otherwise half the people would have been too offended to forward it.
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Put this story in the light of "had we done something sooner..."
https://apnews.com/3c061794970661042b18d5aeaaed9fae
Throughout January, the World Health Organization publicly praised China for what it called a speedy response to the new coronavirus. It repeatedly thanked the Chinese government for sharing the genetic map of the virus “immediately,” and said its work and commitment to transparency were “very impressive, and beyond words.”
But behind the scenes, it was a much different story, one of significant delays by China and considerable frustration among WHO officials over not getting the information they needed to fight the spread of the deadly virus, The Associated Press has found.
Despite the plaudits, China in fact sat on releasing the genetic map, or genome, of the virus for more than a week after three different government labs had fully decoded the information. Tight controls on information and competition within the Chinese public health system were to blame, according to dozens of interviews and internal documents.
Chinese government labs only released the genome after another lab published it ahead of authorities on a virologist website on Jan. 11. Even then, China stalled for at least two weeks more on providing WHO with detailed data on patients and cases, according to recordings of internal meetings held by the U.N. health agency through January — all at a time when the outbreak arguably might have been dramatically slowed.
WHO officials were lauding China in public because they wanted to coax more information out of the government, the recordings obtained by the AP suggest. Privately, they complained in meetings the week of Jan. 6 that China was not sharing enough data to assess how effectively the virus spread between people or what risk it posed to the rest of the world, costing valuable time.