Yahoo! Allegedly Helps Beijing Arrest a Third Reporter 219
reporter writes "According to a damning press release from Reporters without Borders, Yahoo has
helped Beijing to locate, arrest, and imprison a 3rd reporter.
This latest incident occurs about 2 months after Yahoo testified,
under oath in front of Congress, that the company regrets being
'forced' to help Beijing." From the article: "'We hope this Internet giant will not, as it has each time it has been challenged previously, hide behind its local partner, Alibaba, to justify its behaviour. Whatever contract it has with this partner, the email service is marketed as Yahoo !' the organisation said. According to the verdict, Yahoo! Holdings (Hong Kong) confirmed that the email account ZYMZd2002 had been used jointly by Jiang Lijun and another pro-democracy activist, Li Yibing."
Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:5, Interesting)
Because these 'safeguards' will work both ways. They protect you but they also identify you by your access information (and worse) machine IP address stored in server logs. "Federal Regulations" here in the states means your identity should be protected (but we've all seen that start to ebb) while in China it probably means just the opposite. There, the government is a government 'of the people' which means it has a right to all information and property of the people. Without arguing against too much Marx & Engels here, I'm just going to say that it's not aligned too closely with my beliefs of a government's limitations.
As Reporters without Borders states, the solution is obvious: move your servers to a country where "federal regulations" protects rather than ousts the end user. Yes, it's going to be slightly more expensive for Yahoo to host it out of the United States and there will be more network load for the internet. This would most certainly be a slap in the face to the Chinese government, however. Not as bad as moving the servers to Taiwan but still bad. I think that we should all watch this quite closely. If Yahoo moves the servers, then they are concerned about the Chinese citizens who want better human rights. If they leave them there and continue to allow the Chinese government to mine their servers
Honestly, the Yahoo! logo is colored red. It's missing a star or maybe a hammer and sickle
Have search engines become government whipping boys? Will Google kneel before the Bush administration while Yahoo! raises the population of the gulags?
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:2, Interesting)
The and I am sure the Chinese Government is willing to use that as a threat to prevent Yahoo from doing such a thing.
Money is always the deciding factor, lives are usually the last thing on the mind of executives. Just look at Ford and the Pinto fiasco.
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:3, Interesting)
A little of both. Desire for money justifies (not really but for Yahoo!) compliance with the hammer and sickle rule of law.
What's a shame is that people in opressive countries see these companies - Yahoo!, Google, etc. as bearers of the American brand of freedom - as idealistically as they may see it. So Yahoo! and Google and the like make their money
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:3, Insightful)
I have a considerable amount of exposure to people in the PRC, and here is some good news for you: nobody there is seeing American companies as bearers of freedom. Nobody is expecting American companies to do that. People are expecting American companies to give them the worldly conveniences that people in America are enjoying right now.
But whatever is the case, you're definitely right on one point: Anything for that next dollar. And believe me, the people in China
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:2)
Foreign governments can and do request information from each other for criminal investigations. In most countries there are no privacy laws that will protect you from a search warrant.
There was a US law (I don't know if it passed) to attempt to permit the US government to force American companies to disclose any information to the US government irrespective of where the information is
Re:Privacy Policy? What Privacy Policy? (Score:3, Insightful)
It is a known phenomenon that when companies become large and influential enough in an important sphere, they essentially become branches of government.
Look at Boeing, AT&T, MicroSoft, ExxonMobil, Lockheed-Martin. All claim to be private entities, yet there's not a single honest man who could stand up and say out loud that they are not as intimately connected, if not more, with the US Government as a state body such as the IRS or the department of heal
Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:4, Insightful)
Companies exist to make money. Period. Reporters Without Borders can plead with Yahoo! to end their collaboration with the PRC all they like, but as long as China has that big juicy carrot of marketshare dangling in front of Yahoo!'s nose, Yahoo! will do whatever the PRC wants.
One cannot expect Yahoo! to turn away from such a lucrative market any more than one can expect a scorpion not to sting. It's what they do.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2, Informative)
Not that hard to do. It just takes balls on the part of the President.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:5, Insightful)
The only possible responses are to sit there and take it, or launch a military counter strike, Does anyone really think there is an invasion plan for China that doesn't involve nuclear wepons?
The US is in no position to push China around, in spite of the massive superiority complex we've been cultivating for the past 175 years.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
And that's not all (Score:2)
Apple would be unable to sell a single Mac, for example.
This would be an adequate demonstration of power, without destroying the entire US economy.
Re:And that's not all (Score:3, Insightful)
A slowly escalating conflict would be in China's favor, slowing shipments, increasing price of goods, liquidizing US holdings a little bit (billions) at a time. Moving on Taiwan throws us into immediate heated conflict which keeps China from milking us for years.
Besides blockading Taiwan might crush the elec
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
We have each other by the balls... they need us just as much as we need them.
Them slowing/shutting off shipments will hurt them as much as it hurts us because as everyone on
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Yes, China would also suffer some, especially since they are importing lots of raw materials. The west is however a lot more dependent on asia than vice versa.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:4, Insightful)
Has anyone stopped to think that Reporters without Borders might be blowing this out of proportion? I'm definitely against the previous Yahoo shenanigans, however, it's extremely likely that the informant just handed over his password to the Chinese government, who logged in on their own without any Yahoo knowledge. Of course, the way the chinese legal system works, we will probably never know if it was Yahoo that provided the information or the informant.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2, Insightful)
You're quite right (and using a scorpion as an example is a great one - as neither a scorpion nor a company are capable of understanding morality)
You seem to be implying however, that a company should not be criticised for its actions within China anymore then a scorpion should be criticised for stinging. Am I correct in thinking this?
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:3, Insightful)
'Criticised' is a rather ambiguous term...to clarify the issue, I believe some clearer terms are required.
A company, like a scorpion, is by design incapable of understanding morality, and so cannot be held responsible for conducting business in an amoral matter.
However, that is not to say that the company cannot be held accountable for its actions, if they are judged by moral beings to be immoral. If a dog mauls a child, we destroy it. Why? Is this a punishment to the dog? Revenge for the child and his/
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Fair enough. I guess we'll have to rely on external regulation to keep companies in check.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2, Insightful)
As business you're right, Yahoo! cannot be expected to turn away from such a lucrative market. However, as a group of human beings who make up the staff of Yahoo! they can be expected to conduct themselves in an ethical, moral, and responsible manner
Sadly though, in capi
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:3, Interesting)
Corporations are obligated to make money, though not through any means possible. They also have a moral and ethical standard to which they are obliged, yet a lot choose to ignore them whenever the mighty dollar is on the line.
I can guarantee that if this ever hits the mainstream press, it will definitely chill Yahoo!'s business in the US, and that could be far more damaging than their 'potential' lucrative Chinese market... after all, they're probably making a nam
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Yeah, because in communist countries human rights are so well respected. Give me a break.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Shockingly enough, we don't live in an unfettered capitalist society. There are laws and regulations. Try starting and running your own business and you'll find that in many cases there is entirely too much regulation.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Saying the buisness has to do it is to throw up our hands and declare it inevitable, the buisness can't be reasoned with, and surely there isn't some being with moral responsibilities dierecting its behavor.
Sometimes our over-zealous anthropomiphization can be useful, as in, "Lets see what the economy is doing today." But more often it i
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2, Interesting)
One of my friend's dads made a profound statement about this when confronted wi
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2, Insightful)
Believe me, collaborating with repressive governments whethe
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:3, Insightful)
Indeed, and customers have a right to choose which companies they do business with. When Yahoo! operates in China, it should comply with Chinese law, no matter how evil it is. It is clear to us that Yahoo!'s Chinese customers prefer their service to no service at all (no-one made them sign up, probably, even if it's China).
If Yahoo!'s pulling out of China would put pressure on the government to allow more dissidence, it would be good, but I doubt it: if Yahoo! pulled out the Chinese government would for
Guten morgen, herr Eichmann! (Score:2)
And when IBM operated in Germany, it should have given all possible assistance to the government in the vital work of efficiently rounding up Jews and sending them to death camps, right?
Re:Guten morgen, herr Eichmann! (Score:2)
Nope -- my point was that if Yahoo! is to operate in China, they should follow Chinese law. I'd say that IBM should not have operated in Germany. Similarly I don't think Yahoo! should operate in China under the current conditions (one reason why I don't have a Yahoo! account). I still think Yahoo! pulling out won't help the people of China any, but it's a small step.
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Indeed, and customers have a right to choose which companies they do business with. When Yahoo! operates in China, it should comply with Chinese law, no matter how evil it is.
No.
It is morally wrong to obey a bad law. It would be wrong of me to turn in an escaping slave back in 1810. It would be wrong of me to point out unregistered jews back in 1940. It would be morally wrong of me to turn over my Japanese-descendant friends back at the same time, and it would be wrong of me to cooperate with the poli
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:3, Interesting)
> of China -- what about the Freedom of the Press and Due Process rights of Chinese
> people in the US?
Actually, you could s/Chinese//. I'm sure the Chinese people in the USA aren't particularly ill-treated. At least I haven't heard of any stories to that conclusion.
I'm not an American, and I don't know enough of them to understand their thinking, but I'm always under the impression that they find it necessary to point
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
I think you're exactly right that Chinese people can choose whether or not to use Yahoo and Google services. They can decide whether it is worth the risk to gain the benefits. One caveat is the fact that when Chinese citizens choose to use Yahoo, they may not be aware of the fact that they may be subject to disclosure to the government. Remember, a lot of what the Chinese government does against dissidents is not widely known in China. T
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2)
Since when has the Supreme Court been bound by the Constitution?
Re:Can't blame a wolf for eating rabbits... (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously, the US recognises China as a major potential threat (banning all arms sales and getting very irritated with the EU when we were talking
And... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And... (Score:3, Insightful)
I do have to agree with Google that they are not being evil for flagging that data has been censored. If that is truely the worse that that they do, then they are not evil.
I do have to wonder how much MS and Yaho
Blind eyes (Score:5, Insightful)
This bright shining city on the hill is now as bad as any Chamberlain or Frog. Unwilling to stand up to evil when it arises, and quick to appease enemies in the name of free trade.
Free trade without political freedom is not free.
Re:Blind eyes (Score:2)
Americans don't. Everyone complains about the Chinese communist government in a story like this, when a) China isn't even close to communist, and b) the capitalists are fully complicit, happily doing anything, no matter how distasteful, to keep the dollars flowing.
"When we hang the capitalists they will sell us the rope." I'm sure the Chinese have heard this one. You cannot give absolute loyalty to both freedom and capitalism at t
Re:Blind eyes (Score:3, Interesting)
The only way we can defeat capitalism is to confront and suppress the capitali
Re:Blind eyes (Score:2)
Re:Blind eyes (Score:5, Insightful)
See the difference?
Re:Blind eyes (Score:2, Funny)
Cubans!
Re:Blind eyes (Score:2)
Don't forget the well trained torturers.
Maybe when they've finished their work for the government they can open up shops in neighborhoods across the US.
Re:Blind eyes (Score:2)
-Kurt
Re:Blind eyes (Score:2)
Boycot Yahoo (Score:5, Interesting)
Death threats and bomb threats (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe its time we started boycotting Yahoo? This would mean amongst other things replacing people replacing own their Geocities pages with a boycot message.
I hate to say it, but Yahoo is asking for a lot more than a boycot. When you start imprisioning and threatening the livlyhood of people over free speech - it takes things to a whole different level. I wouldn't be supprised at all if people started calling in death threats to Yahoo execs and bomb threats to Yahoo offices. People know darn well that th
Corporations suck (Score:2)
Someone replied asking if it did not mattered if the country laws where broken to what I answered that no, it did not mattered.
Last weekend I saw a movie called "The Corporation", I recommend it a lot. After watching it I changed my point of view. I hated corporations before watching it (I was 100% against Sony in the rootkit thing and started a
Re:Corporations suck (Score:2, Funny)
Well, then I suggest you follow your beliefs (Score:2)
The world is not black and white, you need to grow up and see the world as it is.
It's not Yahoo's Job. (Score:2, Insightful)
It isn't Yahoo's job to change the political climate in China, no more than it is Googles. Change in China will occur once the people demand it and other nations (not companies) apply pressure and lend support.
http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]True (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:True (Score:3, Insightful)
You sure have a strong opinion but I bet the cloths you are wearing and half the stuff in your house was made in China you hypocrite.
Nope (Score:2)
Re:It's not Yahoo's Job. (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe I am cynical, but (Score:4, Insightful)
Trafficing marijuana is likewise illegal here in the U.S. Sure some folks claim its a naturally growing plant that is one of God's creations. Nevertheless if I was corresponding back and forth with all of my contacts in Mexico I sure as hell wouldn't be doing it through GMail.
It's good that these stories are being told... (Score:2)
Remember that it was not that many years ago that you would have heard ZERO about this kind of stuff. Will China change? Ultimately yes, and they will change when they realize that suppressing human rights will not ultimately serve them to make $$$
And besides gravitational physics, it's indeed money that makes the
Re:It's good that these stories are being told... (Score:2)
But they ARE in the world arena, and they ARE getting away with it. That 1.5 billion person marketplace has businesses and governments falling over each other to keep China happy.
Remember that it was not that many years ago that you would have heard ZERO about this kind of stuff. Will China change? Ultimately yes, and th
Re:It's good that these stories are being told... (Score:2)
I'm not sure why China should stop suppressing human rights when the greedy, brown-nosing behaviour of some corporate potentates effectively tells the Chinese government that it's OK to suppress human rights. Indeed, when pressure is applied, as in this Yahoo case, the potentates will actually help the Chinese authorities to suppress human rights. Historically,
You makes your choices and takes your chances (Score:2)
Obviously there is an ethical argument that maybe Yahoo should not be doing business in China but in the absence of any US laws prohibiting them from operating Chinese search engines and given the fact China represents a huge market its easy to see why Yahoo has decided to do business there.
If Yahoo did pull out of China
Laws and ethics (Score:2)
So, it's okay to help a totalitarian regime wrongly imprision people, as long as you do it for money?
I'm not sure you really understand what an "ethical argument" means.
Re:Laws and ethics (Score:2)
Since the Yahoo! shareholders have allowed them to operate in China and since the US government is happy to allow US companies such as Yahoo! operate in China, both of whom we could consider are aware of the ethical argument against doing so, then by all rational judgement Yahoo! is do
Re:Laws and ethics (Score:2)
I agree to some extent, but at the same time, Yahoo! is directly complicit and is, in this case, part of the problem. Your statement is correct that other people are also part of the problem, but I really don't think that it excuses Yahoo's behavior in any way.
Re:Laws and ethics (Score:2)
Maybe you set your personal ethics to match whatever the majority decides, but I don't.
Re:Laws and ethics (Score:2)
Let me translate the first part into a less biased statement.
So, it's ethically and legally justifiable to provide legally compelled evidence to the appropriate government bodies, under the appropriate legislation when that information is used as evidence to try and potentially convict or imprison those found guilty of an offense.
There are other governments which are wrongly imprisoning people. In some cases
this IS big news (Score:3, Funny)
Thought process (Score:2)
"Hmmm...Yahoo has previously turned over information about my fellow dissidents. I wonder what service I should use for e-mail, or if I should encrypt the content of the e-mails I send. Nahhhh...too much trouble. Hey, Li, someone's knocking really hard on the door...go see who it is."
Attention any dissidents that may be reading this. There are more secure ways to communicate than Yahoo Mail. Nothing against Yahoo Mail - I've used it for years, but I'm not a dissident.
Hey, what's that knocking at m
Re:Thought process (Score:2)
they have come for your uncool niece
What's wrong with Slashdotters? (Score:5, Insightful)
Everytime I read through another instance of China putting the kibosh on freedom and liberty, people here start picking up the "businesses make money, China has money, therefore businesses will screw anyone and everyone to make money" line of reasoning? Businesses aren't some unnatural entity that sprang forth, they are a collection of man-power, and resources, working towards a common goal. There is a *person* somewhere, saying "Toss the guy to the Chinese authority."
The more people blindly accept the justification that "that's just how it is, I can't change anything," the less you ACTUALLY can change things. Don't give your power away to multi-national corporations, don't give it away to the goverment.
I guess I just don't see what your policy advocacy says. Do we let Yahoo! off the hook for hosing people? Are you saying this just isn't newsworthy? That too much of your valuable time has been wasted or learning that Yahoo! is pulling some shady deals in China? Just let them get away with it, and stop talking about it because we're wasting our breath?
Can't people speak out against a perceived injustice and have it mean more than a wasted breath? Sheesh, usually I'm considered the cynically one, but next to the average Slashdotter, I'm dancing in the land of fairies and make-believe and butterflies and rainbows.
Quit shrugging your shoulders about a problem as fundamentally restrictive as this. The more people speak, the more can be done.
Re:What's wrong with Slashdotters? (Score:2)
I don't understand your position, on the one hand you seem annoyed that Yahoo! have to adhere to Chinese law and on the other hand you tell us to refuse to give any 'power' to the either companies or the government and thus deprive them of their power to do an
Re:What's wrong with Slashdotters? (Score:2)
The US Government is the responsibility of the US people and if they don't like the way companies are being encouraged to go ahead and make the most of the vast profit opportunities in China then they should do something about their government. A good start would be to stop
Re:What's wrong with Slashdotters? (Score:2)
Instead of whining on slashdot, maybe you should do something as well.
Like. Abolish capitalism, because capitalism is all about corporations making money as fast and as efficient as possible. Here's why: the "common goal" in capitalism is to make money. Nothing else, unless some other goals eventually make you money too.
I guess you need to learn some logic. Capitalism and "making people do the right things" are logically inconsistent.
Re:What's wrong with Slashdotters? (Score:2)
Now this is not a troll, but my understanding is that, this line of reasoning is very close to the one Americans, the denomination of most Slashdotters, had for slavery when it was legal in that country.
The workers/slaves are given a "better life" by being ex
Standard Interview Question (Score:2, Interesting)
I once had a prospective employee answer Yahoo! I should have known that she was a bad apple just from that answer, but she was otherwise qualified so I hired her. What a big mistake. Turns out that she wasn't nearly as good as her references suggested, and she left with one days notice.
Now I know: never hire anybody who claims to use Yahoo! as a seach engine.
Can they resist? I doubt it... (Score:2)
So what happens when the government requests information? It is given. Here we can appeal there I would imagine you can't. You could resist but you'd get in trouble and probably hauled off to jail.
Hmm what would you do as a manager in China at Yahoo? Risk your life or give up the information? Sure Yahoo could just kicked out of China but I'd bet
Re:Can they resist? I doubt it... (Score:2)
how about accept a slightly lower share price in return for not dancing with the devil?
Who else is boycotting China? (Score:2)
But I just have to ask, since we are so demanding of Yahoo why are we not asking the rest of the companies in the US to also boycott China in the name of human rights? Why single out Yahoo?
We need this FCPA-2 (Score:5, Insightful)
Just as the FCPA [wikipedia.org] currently prohibits US companies from certain behavior abroad (primarily -- bribing foreign officials) -- FCPA-2.0 should also prohibit the anti-human rights disclosures, like the ones Yahoo! was forced to make.
It is not going to be easy to make this law, but something is needed to give these companies a backbone and help them weather a foreign government's hostile action. Something like a threat of sanctions against the country demanding an American company's cooperation in an unjust (in USA's view) prosecution. Such sanctions ought to be automatic only requiring a US federal judge's approval.
I'll be very glad to see such a law condemned as "imperialist" and US accused of "twisting" the tyrants' arms with it.
Re:We need this FCPA-2 (Score:2)
1. Who gets to determine if a suspect is having his human rights violated? What happens while they are deciding?
2. It would put a company in jeopardy of having to decide which of 2 laws to violate -- the Chinese law or the US law. What makes us think they're more likely to violate the Chinese law, when they're operating in China? I think they're
Re:We need this FCPA-2 (Score:2)
Re:We need this FCPA-2 (Score:2)
That sounds good. But we already have sanctions against countries violating human rights. We just can't have too many sanctions, because we still want the benefits of trade with China.
Re:We need this FCPA-2 (Score:2)
Re:We need this FCPA-2 (Score:2)
Yahooligans! (Score:2)
Yahoo, for all your tyrannical needs!
Any info about what these activists are about? (Score:2)
The sad truth is, the one sure way to win a lot easy sympathy
It's not a companies job to protect peoples rights (Score:2)
Re:It's not a companies job to protect peoples rig (Score:2)
I learned at school in Germany that companies are responsible for the politics they support by their actions and that this is one of the lessons to learn from my countrys past.
But obviously my teachers were wrong.
I'll go investing into some company dealing with the organs of executed chinese people now.
k2r
The big problem with Yahoo! in China (Score:5, Insightful)
When Chinese authorities come and ask for personal information on an account suspected of criminal activity, Yahoo! doesn't know whether the suspect:
1) raped kids and made profit from child pornography
2) disagreed with the Communist Party of China
3) was a serial killer who concentrated on women and cute puppies
Believe it or not, Chinese government doesn't actually clarify what they want the data for and how it will be used.
That explains it (Score:2)
The logo [putfile.com]
Please reuse it, and/or make a better one.
would happen here (Score:2)
Suppose Yahoo were to receive a demand in the U.S. that was legal under U.S. law. What do you suppose they would do? . . . Perhaps they'd file an objection, but if it was overruled, they'd turn over the information in the U.S., too.
The only difference, if any, between what Yahoo would do in China and what they would do in the U.S. is in what info the government can demand.
Humanity in the service of the economy (Score:3, Insightful)
Comments about if you want to do business there you need to abide to their laws. Correct... so by doing so, you have decided money is more important then human rights. And in my eyes you are wrong. It's not a very solid defence really for Yahoo!. It basically says making a profit is more worthwhile then human rights. Because China is an economic powerhouse it has the rights to do whatever it wants.
I guess those posters here also had no problems with companies like IBM supporting the Nazi's and doing business with the Nazi's when the US was wat war with Germany? Because hey, if you want to do business there, you need to accept their laws and as such you become absolved of any blame.
So perhaps do business there, as long as you can do it on your own terms, those that respect human rights and decent moral values (don't tell me the mass executions and torture are just another set of moral values we should respect and it's all "culture"). China is not really a communist country, it's just a good old fashioned dictatorship, with the most executions of any country in the world almost. Who torture their prisoners and who do imprison people for simply opposing the government. When it's some minor (compared to China) dictator like Saddam we all cry havoc, when that dictatorship temps us with money it all becomes alright.
So if your wife, husband (woops this is slashdot.. sorry wife's and husbands?
Re:Corporate Responsibility (Score:2)
What, china? Also about the world's poorest. They'd be better off concentratting on the US where people earn a hundred times as much and putting more effort into making this country even greater than it is (if that's possible!!)
Re:Corporate Responsibility (Score:2)
Here in the real world, a huge portion of your investors are successful middle class pe
Re:boycotting yahoo, not buying chinese goods, etc (Score:2)
"people will not adopt our style of government and our values unless they want to, they cannot be forced."
If only people who profess in "helping China" understood that. And for your information, most people in China had enough of "revolutions" for now, if you understand what I mean. And despite that I agree with you on the point I quoted above, I have reservations on the other points that you've raised (not that I think I really understand them though).
I technically live i