• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Serious THAAD Crisis: 3400 Patriotic Chinese Tourist Refused to get of Cruise Ship @Jeju

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
The Chinese Patriotic Tourists rejected Korea, in THAAD MISSILE CRISIS. They will cruise and tour elsewhere other than Korea. Clap Hands! Next will Samsung products get kicked ass out from Chinese Market?

https://m.sohu.com/n/483099818/?wscrid=1137_2

a5eoh00400897310003.JPEG



3400名中国游客韩国济州岛拒下国际邮轮
中国青年网 03-12 20:27 大
摘要韩联社报道截图据韩联社12日报道,正当中国发出“旅游禁韩令”持续发酵之时,韩国首次发生了乘坐国际邮轮来到济州的3400余名中国团体游客拒绝下......

这是国际邮轮从1990年代末停靠济州以来,20多年间首次有乘客集体拒绝下船事件发生。

今天,环环在韩国媒体上看到一条“大新闻”。


韩联社报道截图

据韩联社12日报道,正当中国发出“旅游禁韩令”持续发酵之时,韩国首次发生了乘坐国际邮轮来到济州的3400余名中国团体游客拒绝下船事件。

根据济州道方面传出的消息,11日下午1时,国际邮轮歌诗达邮轮赛琳娜号抵达济州外港。但该邮轮通报说,船上3400余名中国团体游客拒绝下船。当时济州方面的出入境、海关、检验检疫人员已经做好准备,因此对于中国游客的举动感到非常难以置信。


韩联社配图

韩国海运工会相关负责人表示,最近虽然也有部分中国游客拒绝下船,但如此大规模的全船人员拒绝下船事情还是第一次发生。当时码头上已经有80余台观光大巴在等候,济州免税店等购物场所和数十名导游也做好了接待准备,当得知中国游客聚集下船的消息,都感到白忙一场。

据韩媒报道,此次乘船的游客全部来自中国一家企业的奖励观光团,有分析认为,这或许与“萨德”有关。

“萨德报复成为现实”,韩国纽西斯通讯社12日的报道这样评价中国游客集体拒绝下船事件。报道称,作为应对部署“萨德”的反制措施之一,中国方面已经严控本国公民赴韩旅游,从3月16日以后,中国游客将从来韩的国际邮轮上全面消失。


韩国纽西斯通讯社报道截图

此次歌诗达邮轮赛琳娜号从日本福冈驶来,在经过4小时后,于11日下午5时离开济州,驶往下一目的地天津港。据了解,这是国际邮轮从1990年代末停靠济州以来,20多年间首次有乘客集体拒绝下船事件发生。

韩国媒体说,由于中国方面严格限制赴韩旅游,歌诗达下属的2艘游轮从本月16日至6月30日赴济州的停靠计划全部取消,总班次为26次。根据去年平均每艘歌诗达邮轮搭载中国乘客2300人计算,仅歌诗达邮轮方面就将少给济州带来12万中国游客。

有分析认为,今后邮轮取消赴济州的例子还将增多。


anigif_enhanced-buzz-17032-1355413750-16.gif
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Savages. They behave like locusts. Chief locusts say boycott, and they boycott. But its ok for them to put missiles on man made island on south china sea threatening smaller nations.
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
u will never see this kind of unity and loyalty among 3400 sinkies,each one is scared the others will abandone them so they abandon the others first,if crisis were to ever struck singapore u can be sure sinkies will scatter like cockroach and its every man for himself.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Every 'patriotic' chink I know would suck black dick if it would allow them to emigrate America or Canada. Every 'patriotic' chink I know is dishonest and has shifted lots of money out of China to tax-havens from Zikapore to Zurich.

Besides, what would the chinks be buying on Jejus besides their usual instant cup noodles?
 

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Every 'patriotic' chink I know would suck black dick if it would allow them to emigrate America or Canada. Every 'patriotic' chink I know is dishonest and has shifted lots of money out of China to tax-havens from Zikapore to Zurich.

Besides, what would the chinks be buying on Jejus besides their usual instant cup noodles?

Who wouldn't want to migrate to America or Canada?Even ur beloved MiW that u worship all day will leap at the chance if I gave them a free green card.only fools will choose SG over
 

ChineseDog

Alfrescian
Loyal
Every 'patriotic' chink I know would suck black dick if it would allow them to emigrate America or Canada. Every 'patriotic' chink I know is dishonest and has shifted lots of money out of China to tax-havens from Zikapore to Zurich.

Besides, what would the chinks be buying on Jejus besides their usual instant cup noodles?

good job my fellow Chinese dog, we chinks suck black dick to migrate and are dishonest!
 

ChineseDog

Alfrescian
Loyal
Who wouldn't want to migrate to America or Canada?Even ur beloved MiW that u worship all day will leap at the chance if I gave them a free green card.only fools will choose SG over

good job my fellow Chinese dog we chinks choose USA over Singapore!
 

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
Savages. They behave like locusts. Chief locusts say boycott, and they boycott. But its ok for them to put missiles on man made island on south china sea threatening smaller nations.

Don't try to flatter the tiny ASEANs, the PLA missiles are meant for USA. Now not even Japan can match PLA, 75% of their main air force model F-15J are 20 years old, and falling apart on the airbases, can not cope with PLA's new and advance and numerous fleet. Jap tried in their past to state police of 1:4 ratio to confront and escort PLA air patrol passing the straits, they are not only far out numbered now, far outdated as well as far out scheduled, that PLA can fly continuous consecutive sorties of different fleets in and out, Japs can only have lesser jets to take off and cope, in older poorer planes, more tied pilots, and smaller numbered. That is when missiles are not fired. When missiles files, the Japs missiles are far inferior than PLA's. Essentially poor useless old and expensive junks from USA.
 

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
Every 'patriotic' chink I know would suck black dick if it would allow them to emigrate America or Canada. Every 'patriotic' chink I know is dishonest and has shifted lots of money out of China to tax-havens from Zikapore to Zurich.

Besides, what would the chinks be buying on Jejus besides their usual instant cup noodles?


Chinese majority are fully aware that the West especially US & EU are bankrupted horrific beggars states, only those who are wanted criminals in PRC, or divorced, in dispute with families, betrayed by spouses, etc, will flee to the Ang Moh beggar lands or SG52.
 

condom_loong

Alfrescian
Loyal
Nicely, Make China Great Again!



Next please smash and crash and burn all the Korean products and businesses in China! Samsung LG Hyundai Kim Chi ...

Upto-40-Discount-on-All-Korean-Cosmetics.jpg



images


samsung-lg-tv-brands.jpg


Korean-car-brands-logotypes.png



carry_brands.gif


Korean food, music, video, cosmetics, garments, everything! 宁可杀错不可放过!
 
Last edited:

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-southkorea-china-idUSKBN16H0GR


Cruise control: China squeezes South Korea as boats and planes stay away

left
right
1/2
left
right
2/2
By Adam Jourdan and Cynthia Kim | SHANGHAI/SEOUL

Pressure in China on travel firms forced airlines and cruise operators to cut routes to South Korea, as the fallout spread on Friday from a diplomatic row over Seoul's plans to deploy a U.S. missile defense system against Beijing's objections.

China Eastern Airlines Corp Ltd (600115.SS) and Spring Airlines Co Ltd (601021.SS) stopped offering flights on their websites between the eastern Chinese city of Ningbo and popular South Korean tourist island Jeju from next week.

Korea's Eastar Jet said it was halting flights between the South Korean cities of Cheongju and tourist hotspot Jeju with various Chinese cities including Ningbo, Jinjiang and Harbin.

This followed Carnival Corp's (CCL.N) Costa Cruises and Royal Caribbean Cruises (RCL.N) cutting South Korean visits by their China ships. Royal Caribbean cited "recent developments regarding the situation in South Korea".

The moves reflect a more aggressive and blatant stance against South Korean business in China, although Beijing has not directly said it is targeting South Korean firms.

An internal South Korean government document seen by Reuters said Chinese authorities gave a "7-point" verbal instruction to travel firms to curtail or ban trips to South Korea.

These included a ban on tour groups visiting South Korea from March 15, cruise ships not being allowed to dock in South Korea ports and a warning that those who violated the guidance would face "severe punishment".

Reuters could not immediately reach China's tourism administration for comment. China Eastern and Spring Airlines did not respond to requests for comment.

The crackdown has sent a chill across South Korea's retail and tourism sectors, which rely heavily on China trade, and prompted South Korea to say it will consider filing a complaint against China to the World Trade Organization.

South Korea sold $124 billion worth of goods and services to China last year, about five times the amount it exported to nearby Japan and double the amount it shipped to its second-biggest overseas market, the United States.

Tourism is a particularly sensitive sector, with official South Korean data showing almost half of the visitors to the country come from China.

Asked about cruise operators cancelling South Korean port visits, an official from South Korea's Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy told Reuters the ministry was checking if any WTO rules have been violated.

"If we are to launch a dispute, we still need to make sure if anything has been ordered by Beijing," the official said.

"RELEVANT DEPARTMENTS"

Political risk analysts said the widespread actions against South Korean firms pointed to centralized coordination.

Princess Cruises, also owned by Carnival, said in a statement on Friday it would remove visits to South Korea from routes after talks with "relevant departments".

"Due to the current situation, Princess Cruises' China team has been in close dialogue and prudent discussions with relevant departments," the firm said. "All routes which involve South Korea have been altered."

The diplomatic problems with its biggest trade partner have come at a difficult time for South Korea.

On Friday, South Korea's Constitutional Court removed President Park Geun-hye from office on Friday over a graft scandal involving the country's conglomerates.

Analysts said the upheaval had given China the opportunity to put pressure on Park's possible successors to ditch or delay the installation of the U.S. Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) missile system.

"I think they'll keep up this pressure well into the period where we get a new government in South Korea," said Andrew Gilholm, director of analysis for China and North Asia at risk consultancy Control Risks.

"Possibly the reason they're pushing so hard is that they are trying to influence whatever policy the next government in Seoul takes."

Meantime, South Koreans living in China have been advised by business groups to adopt a low profile, while residents and shopkeepers in a Shanghai neighborhood where many South Koreans live told Reuters of a growing sense of anxiety.

"I feel wherever I am people are watching me. On the street, in the car and at restaurants, I don't feel I can freely speak Korean," said Seo Lan Kyung, 48, a housewife who said she has been living in China for 18 years.

"I want to keep living here but increasingly there's a feeling of impending crisis."

(Additional reporting by Christian Shepherd and Muyu Xu in BEIJING, Alexandra Harney in SHANGHAI, Heekyong Yang and Hyunjoo Jun in SEOUL; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
 

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...s-spread-to-air-travel-as-some-flights-halted



China-Korea Tensions Spread to Air Travel as Some Flights Halted
Bloomberg News
March 10, 2017, 3:47 AM EST

Korea’s Eastar stops services to Harbin, Ningbo, Jinjiang
South Korean firms feeling heat over missile shield deployment

China Aims to Diffuse Tensions Over North Korea

Escalating tensions between China and South Korea over the deployment of a U.S. missile defense system are now threatening to engulf air travel as some carriers start to suspend popular services between the two countries.

Eastar Jet, a South Korean budget airline, said on its website that flights from Cheongju to China’s Harbin, Ningbo and Jinjiang will be stopped temporarily starting as early as March 15 through Oct. 28 because of “worsening relations.” Seoul-based Jin Air, a unit of Korean Air Lines Co., said it is reviewing its flights from Jeju to Shanghai and Xian and preemptively restricted bookings to avoid disruptions.

Spring Airlines Co., China’s biggest budget carrier, canceled flights from Ningbo to Jeju March 15 through 26, and a spokesman said it was due to “changing market conditions.” Jeju Air, a Korean low-cost operator, said the airline’s request for charter flight in March to Ordos in Inner Mongolia was rejected by the Chinese authorities.
The most important business stories of the day.
Get Bloomberg's daily newsletter.

Travel curbs imposed by China on mainlanders with plans for a vacation in South Korea are likely to cut revenue at airlines, travel agencies, package tour operators and cruises by about $5 billion, according to estimates by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. The China National Tourism Administration verbally ordered local travel agencies to stop selling tours to South Korea starting March 15, the state-run Korea Tourism Organization said last week.

More than 8 million Chinese visited South Korea last year and Chinese make up 85 percent of tourists to the resort island of Jeju.
Costa Cruises

Some sea-cruise operators are also pulling back. Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. said Thursday on its Chinese website that it will cancel port calls to South Korea and replace them with some in Japan for vessels that sail as early as March 17. Costa Cruises, controlled by Carnival Corp., is also scrapping calls to South Korean ports and re-routing them to Japan.

A truck carrying components needed to set up the THAAD missile defense system arrive at the Osan base, South Korea.
Source: U.S. Forces Korea via Getty Images

China is concerned that the U.S. missile shield -- called Thaad -- will alter the balance of power in the region, and is lashing out by squeezing South Korean businesses on its soil and by discouraging citizens from traveling to popular tourist destinations such as Jeju Island. The Lotte Group, the Korean conglomerate that offered land to house Thaad, said this week that as many as 55 of its retail stores in China were suspended.

The U.S. military said this week that the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system was aimed solely at defending Seoul against potential missile attacks by North Korea.
Tweaked Accordingly

Spring Air’s spokesman said tourism and airlines should be “markedly affected” by the ongoing situation between China and South Korea, adding the carrier’s schedule after March 26, when the summer-autumn flight season kicks off, will be adjusted accordingly.

However, the stoppage of services wasn’t widespread. China Eastern Airlines Corp. said ticket sales to South Korea remain normal.

In response to the shuttering of Lotte Mart’s businesses in China, the foreign ministry in Beijing said Monday that the government welcomes “the investment and operation of foreign companies” and protects their “lawful rights and interests in accordance with the law, as long as their businesses abide by laws and regulations.”

South Korean Trade Minister Joo Hyung-hwan said March 5, he was “deeply concerned about the measures taken in China,” and that the government will seek recourse in international law should China violate its trade commitments.

— With assistance by Dong Lyu, and Kyunghee Park
 

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://business.mb.com.ph/2017/03/12/cruise-giants-cut-south-korean-ports-from-china-based-trips/



Cruise giants cut South Korean ports from China-based trips
0
SHARES
Share it!
Published March 12, 2017, 10:00 PM

By Reuters

Beijing/Shanghai– Global cruise giants Carnival Corp. and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. will cancel South Korean port visits from their China-based cruises after Seoul deployed a USmissile defense system, raising tensions between the two countries.

In a post on its Chinese website, Royal Caribbean said it would remove visits to popular South Korea sites due to “recent developments regarding the situation in South Korea.”

A Royal Caribbean cruise is seen at a port in Dalian, Liaoning province, China, July 20, 2017. Picture taken July 20, 2017. (Reuters)
Royal-Caribbean-cruise.jpg

A Royal Caribbean cruise is seen at a port in Dalian, Liaoning province, China, July 20, 2017. Picture taken July 20, 2017. (Reuters)

Carnival’s Costa Cruises said it was working with tour operator partners to adjust its offering for Chinese clients.

“Costa Cruises will remove calls to South Korean ports for our upcoming cruises home ported out of China, replacing them with cruising at sea or calls to destinations in Japan,” it said in a statement.

The plans mark the first time major travel firms have publicly stopped or restricted trips to South Korea after media reports last week that Beijing had given guidance to tour operators in China to stop selling trips to the country.

A South Korean government document seen by Reuters said China gave a “7-point” verbal instruction to travel firms regarding a ban on trips to South Korea. One point blocked China-based cruise ships from docking in South Korean ports.

In a notice posted on Thursday, Royal Caribbean detailed changes to itineraries for cruises leaving from Chinese ports. These removed visits to South Korean destinations such as Busan, Jeju and Seoul, replacing them with visits to sites in Japan. The firm did not respond to requests for further comment on Thursday.

The squeeze on Korean firms underlines Beijing’s anger over a joint plan by South Korea and the United States to set up the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) missile system in South Korea. Seoul and Washington say it will defend against nuclear-armed North Korean missiles, but Beijing says its far-reaching radar is targeted at China.

The number of Chinese tourists to South Korea has nearly quadrupled to 8 million over the past five years, accounting for nearly half of foreign visitors, Korean government data showed.

South Korea has said it will consider filing a complaint against China to the World Trade Organization over what it described as trade retaliation over the THAAD deployment issue.

Tags: Carnival Corp., Cruise giants cut South Korean ports from China-based trips, Global cruise, manila bulletin, mb.com.ph, Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd, South Korean port
 

nkfnkfnkf

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.voanews.com/a/chinese-fallout-over-thaad-deployment-spreads/3759762.html


South Korean Businesses in China Feel Backlash Over Seoul Missile Deployment
March 10, 2017 7:49 AM

William Ide
Joyce Huang

A Lotte Mart is seen closed in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China, March 5, 2017.

A Lotte Mart is seen closed in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China, March 5, 2017.
Share

See comments

A growing number of South Korean companies are feeling the impact from China’s backlash over Seoul’s decision to begin deployment of a U.S.-made missile defense system at home. Chinese employees of South Korean companies and those working for related industries are also getting caught up in the diplomatic spat.

Lotte Group, the South Korean company that provided the military with a plot of land for the deployment of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, has already had more than 50 of its stores closed in China.

A spokesperson for the company told VOA that 55 of Lotte’s stores have been closed, impacting 7,000 of the company’s Chinese employees. Lotte said it employs some 20,000 in China. The company has around 115 outlets and facilities in China.

Although company sales records attribute only a small portion of Lotte’s overall sales to its biggest overseas market – China – the country is a major destination for South Korean trade and Lotte is not the only company being impacted.
A woman walks past an Intime Lotte Department Store in downtown Beijing, China Jan. 10, 2017.

A woman walks past an Intime Lotte Department Store in downtown Beijing, China Jan. 10, 2017.

Backlash

The backlash is impacting cosmetics, tourism and other sectors as Chinese authorities step up their use of administrative related measures and behind the scenes prodding to put pressure on Seoul.

This week, a South Korean and U.S. joint venture between Lotte Group and American candy giant Hershey Co. confirmed that it was ordered to stop production because of safety violations.

Royal Caribbean, a U.S. cruise operator, said in a post on its Chinese website that it had changed its China based cruises to remove visits to popular South Korean resorts because of what it called “recent developments regarding the situation in South Korea.”

Some airline operators in China have suddenly halted routes to South Korea. According to a statement on the website of South Korea’s Eastar Jet, starting next Wednesday, flights between several Chinese cities – including Harbin, Shenyang and Ningbo - and the South Korean city of Cheongju and tourist hotspot of Jeju, will be canceled.

The notice said flights will not resume until October 28, 2017. The statement listed “worsening China/South Korea relations” as the reason for the change.
FILE - Workers on lifts are pictured near the tail of a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner being built for for Xiamen Airlines.

FILE - Workers on lifts are pictured near the tail of a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner being built for for Xiamen Airlines.

The head of Xiamen Airlines, Che Shanglun, told reporters on the sidelines of high-level political meetings in Beijing that some passengers were canceling or postponing their trips to South Korea.

“We haven’t reduced flights, but passenger numbers have fallen… by about 10-20 percent daily, Che said.

So far, state media has largely led the push for sanctions against South Korea. The Chinese government warned that the public could respond, but also stressed that law abiding foreign firms are welcome in China and will be protected.

The government’s ambiguous stance seems to be a cover for its aggressive efforts behind the scenes to make South Korea feel the pinch and the Chinese public believe that the outrage is coming from the ground up.

But, clearly that is far from the case. While there have been some small and sporadic protests. Public outrage over the missile deployment in South Korea seems muted in comparison to the public outcry over a territorial dispute with Japan in 2012 over the Senkaku or Diaoyu islands as they are called in China.
A Lotte Mart is seen closed in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China, March 5, 2017.

A Lotte Mart is seen closed in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China, March 5, 2017.

Apathy and sarcasm

On Friday, at one Lotte Mart in central Beijing that is still open, it was business as usual. Customers were coming and going - both young and old. Some pulling grocery carts, others with hands full of tasty pastry treats.

None were willing to talk about the dispute or comment on what the government and some online argue is widespread public anger over the decision.

A security guard was on the lookout at the door and two others sat nearby at the bottom of an escalator that leads down to the below ground shopping mart. Their presence appeared to be part of what has been described as an increased security presence at stores in case protesters gather outside. But none were seen.

The store’s general manager was unwilling to comment neither on the ongoing dispute nor on concerns he might have about the fate of the store. One woman said that if the store did get closed down she would just go elsewhere.

She did not have any comment about the ongoing dispute, that many online claim has their blood boiling.

Pictures of protests outside some stores have been posted online, but on social media there were just as many sarcastic remarks about the push to apply punishing sanctions on South Korea as there were calls to do more.

One supportive comment about a news story detailing the impact on South Korea’s hotel industry called on all brave Chinese to stand up and not buy goods from any country that is unfriendly to China and to stop traveling to Japan and South Korea. A response said: “What right do you have to hold others hostage?” Another comment quipped: “Please tell me, which country is friendly to China?”

The comments were found on the popular online news portal Netease and in response to an article about worsening China/South Korea ties and its impact on the hotel industry in South Korea. The report said that in response to the deployment hotels in South Korea saw a 30 percent drop in reservations and that hotels affiliated with Lotte were leading the way.

Still one reader, who realized that means 70 percent were still keeping their reservations, asked: “Why are there still people traveling to South Korea?” One respondent shot back: “Because South Korea is a safe place to visit, people are cultured and well mannered, and goods are cheap. At home, tourists are getting ripped off.”

Many were skeptical that the calls for a boycott would last, noting that the last time the Chinese were rallying against Japanese goods, the push did not last long.
 

war is best form of peace

Alfrescian
Loyal
Too civilized.

Xijinping can Erase South Korea from map within just weeks if he merely Sponsor Kim Jong Nuke to take over by force. Give missiles, war planes, tanks, ammos, guns, troops if necessary. The stronger brute force applied the faster the result and the more civilians wiped out. Just stop being kind and do it. Use this to bait Ang Moh Trump for a Shiok Shiok WW3 at Korean Peninsular. Kim Jong Nuke will be the most willing to accept the deal. He will get on on it immediately. South Korean just impeached their president, so it is a good timing. Kim Jong Nuke will occupy the presidential palace within less than 10 days.
 
Last edited:

frenchbriefs

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Every 'patriotic' chink I know would suck black dick if it would allow them to emigrate America or Canada. Every 'patriotic' chink I know is dishonest and has shifted lots of money out of China to tax-havens from Zikapore to Zurich.

Besides, what would the chinks be buying on Jejus besides their usual instant cup noodles?

Sir my guess is u don't have the mindset of the wealthy and capitalist.U think the Chinese is trying to flee with their capital because of corruption and instability but u couldn't be further away from the truth.the reason the chinks are fleeing with their capital is because China is making too much money and there's nothing left to buy,China is making so much money it's haemorrhaging from the sky.everything that can be bought in China has already been bought and rebought and rerebought,their companies are over inflated,their stocks are overinflated,their real estate is over inflated.

Now where can u find things that hasn't be bought or sold?That's right!!!Outside of China!!!

What is the purpose of a capitalist?The only purpose of a capitalist is to grow,that's it.grow and expand and conquer like a virus.if I was a real estate tycoon in Singapore with 100 properties u think I'll stop there?I will go to Australia and use my capital and assets and buy another 300 properties and increase my revenues and cash flow.my reit value will jump from 300 million to 1.2 billion.i will not stop until I'm the richest chink on earth,richer than likely ka shing.

Have u ever gone on tour with PRCs and they want to buy the sand and log on the beach?No u are just a sinkie elite scholar and ur destiny is to work for PAP.why is orchard Rd failing?Cause sinkiepore is a land of coolies,and if sinkies are truly rich orchard Rd would be thriving.mbs will cater to sinkies and not rich PRCs.
 
Last edited:

HTOLAS

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Taiwan was very dependent on the China tourist trade, too, and there was great concern when Chinese organised tours stopped making Taiwan a destination following the victory of President TSAI Ing Wen. Instead of fretting, the Taiwanese diversified, and welcomed tourists (often of better quality in terms of appreciation and spending power) from elsewhere. They have largely succeeded, and their tourism trade is back on even keel.

I suspect ROK is doing the same.
 
Top