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Default A spot of trouble for China?


Dell looking outside of China for 'safer environments,'
according to Indian PM


The Hindustan Times cover this morning has a generous space dedicated to
Google's exit out of China and related efforts at redirecting mainland
users to its Hong Kong hub, but couched cosily inside that story is
perhaps an even bigger one. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is
quoted as saying that Dell is considering taking its $25 billion's worth
of business elsewhere, possibly India:

"This morning I met the chairman of Dell Corporation. He informed me
that they are buying equipment and parts worth $25 billion from China.
They would like to shift to safer environment with climate conducive to
enterprise with security of legal system."

Michael Dell's outfit already has one manufacturing plant in India, and
the man himself has been on a charm offensive in the country this week
meeting and greeting local officials. It could well be, however, that
Dell is just seeking to play China and India off one another to get
itself the most favorable manufacturing deal, but it's still interesting
to find such a high profile protestation against the supposedly
enterprise-choking climate and uncertain legal system in China. It
appears that Google's wrangle with the Middle Kingdom's leadership has
forced consumer electronics execs to reevaluate their strong reliance on
China, and the (very) long-term effects could indeed be a shifting, or
at least diversification, of manufacturing away from Yao's homeland.

--Hindustan Times


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.
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Default A spot of trouble for China?

hk wrote:

Dell looking outside of China for 'safer environments,'
according to Indian PM


The Hindustan Times cover this morning has a generous space dedicated to
Google's exit out of China and related efforts at redirecting mainland
users to its Hong Kong hub, but couched cosily inside that story is
perhaps an even bigger one. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is
quoted as saying that Dell is considering taking its $25 billion's worth
of business elsewhere, possibly India:

"This morning I met the chairman of Dell Corporation. He informed me
that they are buying equipment and parts worth $25 billion from China.
They would like to shift to safer environment with climate conducive to
enterprise with security of legal system."

Michael Dell's outfit already has one manufacturing plant in India, and
the man himself has been on a charm offensive in the country this week
meeting and greeting local officials. It could well be, however, that
Dell is just seeking to play China and India off one another to get
itself the most favorable manufacturing deal, but it's still interesting
to find such a high profile protestation against the supposedly
enterprise-choking climate and uncertain legal system in China. It
appears that Google's wrangle with the Middle Kingdom's leadership has
forced consumer electronics execs to reevaluate their strong reliance on
China, and the (very) long-term effects could indeed be a shifting, or
at least diversification, of manufacturing away from Yao's homeland.

--Hindustan Times


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Racist
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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 08:38:05 -0400, anon-e-moose
wrote:

hk wrote:

Dell looking outside of China for 'safer environments,'
according to Indian PM


The Hindustan Times cover this morning has a generous space dedicated to
Google's exit out of China and related efforts at redirecting mainland
users to its Hong Kong hub, but couched cosily inside that story is
perhaps an even bigger one. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is
quoted as saying that Dell is considering taking its $25 billion's worth
of business elsewhere, possibly India:

"This morning I met the chairman of Dell Corporation. He informed me
that they are buying equipment and parts worth $25 billion from China.
They would like to shift to safer environment with climate conducive to
enterprise with security of legal system."

Michael Dell's outfit already has one manufacturing plant in India, and
the man himself has been on a charm offensive in the country this week
meeting and greeting local officials. It could well be, however, that
Dell is just seeking to play China and India off one another to get
itself the most favorable manufacturing deal, but it's still interesting
to find such a high profile protestation against the supposedly
enterprise-choking climate and uncertain legal system in China. It
appears that Google's wrangle with the Middle Kingdom's leadership has
forced consumer electronics execs to reevaluate their strong reliance on
China, and the (very) long-term effects could indeed be a shifting, or
at least diversification, of manufacturing away from Yao's homeland.

--Hindustan Times


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Racist


Who is this idiot? Seems like a good candidate for plonking.
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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On 3/24/10 12:15 PM, jps wrote:
On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 08:38:05 -0400, anon-e-moose
wrote:

hk wrote:

Dell looking outside of China for 'safer environments,'
according to Indian PM


The Hindustan Times cover this morning has a generous space dedicated to
Google's exit out of China and related efforts at redirecting mainland
users to its Hong Kong hub, but couched cosily inside that story is
perhaps an even bigger one. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is
quoted as saying that Dell is considering taking its $25 billion's worth
of business elsewhere, possibly India:

"This morning I met the chairman of Dell Corporation. He informed me
that they are buying equipment and parts worth $25 billion from China.
They would like to shift to safer environment with climate conducive to
enterprise with security of legal system."

Michael Dell's outfit already has one manufacturing plant in India, and
the man himself has been on a charm offensive in the country this week
meeting and greeting local officials. It could well be, however, that
Dell is just seeking to play China and India off one another to get
itself the most favorable manufacturing deal, but it's still interesting
to find such a high profile protestation against the supposedly
enterprise-choking climate and uncertain legal system in China. It
appears that Google's wrangle with the Middle Kingdom's leadership has
forced consumer electronics execs to reevaluate their strong reliance on
China, and the (very) long-term effects could indeed be a shifting, or
at least diversification, of manufacturing away from Yao's homeland.

--Hindustan Times


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Racist


Who is this idiot? Seems like a good candidate for plonking.



Loogy, one of the two established and ranking morons here, also played
the "racist" card. Perhaps the two of them are one and the same. I
really don't get how those boys connect my disdain for the PRC
government and its exploitation of its workforce with "racism" on my
part. When the Soviet Union was still around, I had a strong dislike for
the Soviet government and its exploitation of the workforces in the
countries it ruled. I suppose in Loogy's little bitty mind, *that* was
racism, too. But...but...but...a high percentage of my
not-born-in-America ancestors were Russians...so...

Well, you can see where Loogythink leads you...

:)



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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On Mar 24, 12:26*pm, hk wrote:
On 3/24/10 12:15 PM, jps wrote:





On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 08:38:05 -0400, anon-e-moose
*wrote:


hk wrote:


Dell looking outside of China for 'safer environments,'
according to Indian PM


The Hindustan Times cover this morning has a generous space dedicated to
Google's exit out of China and related efforts at redirecting mainland
users to its Hong Kong hub, but couched cosily inside that story is
perhaps an even bigger one. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is
quoted as saying that Dell is considering taking its $25 billion's worth
of business elsewhere, possibly India:


"This morning I met the chairman of Dell Corporation. He informed me
that they are buying equipment and parts worth $25 billion from China..
They would like to shift to safer environment with climate conducive to
enterprise with security of legal system."


Michael Dell's outfit already has one manufacturing plant in India, and
the man himself has been on a charm offensive in the country this week
meeting and greeting local officials. It could well be, however, that
Dell is just seeking to play China and India off one another to get
itself the most favorable manufacturing deal, but it's still interesting
to find such a high profile protestation against the supposedly
enterprise-choking climate and uncertain legal system in China. It
appears that Google's wrangle with the Middle Kingdom's leadership has
forced consumer electronics execs to reevaluate their strong reliance on
China, and the (very) long-term effects could indeed be a shifting, or
at least diversification, of manufacturing away from Yao's homeland.


--Hindustan Times


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Racist


Who is this idiot? *Seems like a good candidate for plonking.


Loogy, one of the two established and ranking morons here, also played
the "racist" card. Perhaps the two of them are one and the same. I
really don't get how those boys connect my disdain for the PRC
government and its exploitation of its workforce with "racism" on my
part. When the Soviet Union was still around, I had a strong dislike for
the Soviet government and its exploitation of the workforces in the
countries it ruled. I suppose in Loogy's little bitty mind, *that* was
racism, too. But...but...but...a high percentage of my
not-born-in-America ancestors were Russians...so...

Well, you can see where Loogythink leads you...

:)- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Yes, bigoted. Who the hell are YOU to tell a leading industrial
country how to run their govern, and how their work laws should be
used? Now, again, you totally forgot to answer this question I've
posed to you twice:
Are you certain that in everything you own, there is nothing that is
produced in China?


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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On Mar 24, 6:43*am, hk wrote:

Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Ever the bigot, huh? Where is every chip in that Apple computer you
have made? How about every chip in your TV? How about every chip in
you non-union made in Japan Toyota?
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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On 3/24/10 8:56 AM, Loogypicker wrote:
On Mar 24, 6:43 am, wrote:

Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Ever the bigot, huh? Where is every chip in that Apple computer you
have made? How about every chip in your TV? How about every chip in
you non-union made in Japan Toyota?



You're so stupid you think my disdain for manufacturing done in the PRC
is based on race? Race is not relevant. What is relevant? The oppressive
PRC government, the near slave labor wages and working conditions under
which most Chinese are forced to work in that country, the offshoring of
jobs to the PRC from more enlightened countries, et cetera. If Dell
actually moves its manufacturing base from the PRC to India, it will be
a step up on every level. India is not the United States, but it is a
democracy. It isn't a workers' paradise, but it is a far sight better
than the PRC.

Let there be no doubt remaining why you haven't gotten anyway in life.
You're just too stupid to succeed.




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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On Mar 24, 11:59*am, hk wrote:
On 3/24/10 8:56 AM, Loogypicker wrote:

On Mar 24, 6:43 am, *wrote:


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Ever the bigot, huh? Where is every chip in that Apple computer you
have made? How about every chip in your TV? How about every chip in
you non-union made in Japan Toyota?


You're so stupid you think my disdain for manufacturing done in the PRC
is based on race? Race is not relevant. What is relevant? The oppressive
PRC government, the near slave labor wages and working conditions under
which most Chinese are forced to work in that country, the offshoring of
jobs to the PRC from more enlightened countries, et cetera. If Dell
actually moves its manufacturing base from the PRC to India, it will be
a step up on every level. India is not the United States, but it is a
democracy. It isn't a workers' paradise, but it is a far sight better
than the PRC.

Let there be no doubt remaining why you haven't gotten anyway in life.
You're just too stupid to succeed.


Haven't gotten anything in life?? YOU are the one that has to lie
about every aspect of your miserable life, I don't. Tell us more about
your Yale degree, your Dr. Dr. wife, your lobster boat, your rounding
the horn twice, and your father's fireboat welcome in NYC. Right after
you answer my question. Do you know where every chip in everything you
own was made?
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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 11:59:13 -0400, hk
wrote:

On 3/24/10 8:56 AM, Loogypicker wrote:
On Mar 24, 6:43 am, wrote:

Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Ever the bigot, huh? Where is every chip in that Apple computer you
have made? How about every chip in your TV? How about every chip in
you non-union made in Japan Toyota?



You're so stupid you think my disdain for manufacturing done in the PRC
is based on race? Race is not relevant. What is relevant? The oppressive
PRC government, the near slave labor wages and working conditions under
which most Chinese are forced to work in that country, the offshoring of
jobs to the PRC from more enlightened countries, et cetera. If Dell
actually moves its manufacturing base from the PRC to India, it will be
a step up on every level. India is not the United States, but it is a
democracy. It isn't a workers' paradise, but it is a far sight better
than the PRC.

Let there be no doubt remaining why you haven't gotten anyway in life.
You're just too stupid to succeed.


Bigoted against Chinese?

How about: concerned about the amount of money they take from us each
year, their relative position as an emerging superpower (that's ruled
by a corrupt communist regime) and the ownership of our country?

In Idiotaland, that must mean we're bigoted.

Maybe he should call us protectionists?
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Default A spot of trouble for China?

On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 06:43:12 -0400, hk
wrote:


Dell looking outside of China for 'safer environments,'
according to Indian PM


The Hindustan Times cover this morning has a generous space dedicated to
Google's exit out of China and related efforts at redirecting mainland
users to its Hong Kong hub, but couched cosily inside that story is
perhaps an even bigger one. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is
quoted as saying that Dell is considering taking its $25 billion's worth
of business elsewhere, possibly India:

"This morning I met the chairman of Dell Corporation. He informed me
that they are buying equipment and parts worth $25 billion from China.
They would like to shift to safer environment with climate conducive to
enterprise with security of legal system."

Michael Dell's outfit already has one manufacturing plant in India, and
the man himself has been on a charm offensive in the country this week
meeting and greeting local officials. It could well be, however, that
Dell is just seeking to play China and India off one another to get
itself the most favorable manufacturing deal, but it's still interesting
to find such a high profile protestation against the supposedly
enterprise-choking climate and uncertain legal system in China. It
appears that Google's wrangle with the Middle Kingdom's leadership has
forced consumer electronics execs to reevaluate their strong reliance on
China, and the (very) long-term effects could indeed be a shifting, or
at least diversification, of manufacturing away from Yao's homeland.

--Hindustan Times


Well, speculative to be sure, but a hopeful sign. Anything that craps on
the PRC's business/labor/safety/legal dealings is good for the rest of
the world.


Agreed. It'd be great if we could spread a little of our
manufacturing GDP (as it were) around to other sources. Walmart gives
China enough business already.

Maybe Michael Dell will find a country that supports Democracy instead
of Communism? That'd probably upset the Jim and Herring crowd as they
are "conservatives" and they don't like change.


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