QUOTE(abm @ May 31 2025, 07:53 PM)
Ok. I see
President Donald Trump accused China of violating terms of a deal reached this month to temporarily dial back tariffs and other trade restrictions.
I also see
China's embassy in Washington responded by saying it was the U.S. that was abusing export controls in the semiconductor sector.
Looks like both also violated the agreement. Agree?
Who violated first. I don’t know. The one violated first is the real scammer.
.President Donald Trump accused China of violating terms of a deal reached this month to temporarily dial back tariffs and other trade restrictions.
I also see
China's embassy in Washington responded by saying it was the U.S. that was abusing export controls in the semiconductor sector.
Looks like both also violated the agreement. Agree?
Who violated first. I don’t know. The one violated first is the real scammer.
CCP China is not just a top money scammer but the global HQ for iPhone thieves, .......
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14...arketplace.html - Is this where YOUR stolen phone ended up? Inside China's 'stolen iPhone building' where devices snatched in the West are sold on the cheap in huge marketplace - 22 May 2025
An unassuming building in the bustling southern Chinese city of Shenzhen has become the largest hub for the stolen iPhone trade.
Located in the city's Huaqiangbei electronic commercial street, the Feiyang Times building is known for selling second hand mobile devices from Western countries for cheap.
Many are traded in by western consumers to network operators or to phone repair shops.
But the tower's fourth floor has become synonymous with the illicit phone trade, where thousands of iPhones snatched by balaclava-clad thieves in Europe and the US end up, according to the Financial Times.
China's 'stolen iPhone building', is considered to be one of the most important hubs in a supply chain of second hand technology that starts in Europe and ends up in the global south.
Hong Kong serves as a critical middleman in this supply chain where hundreds of second-hand device wholesalers are based, with many of them in a single industrial building in the Kwun Tong district.
Phone traders from Shenzhen will make the short trip to the building on 1 Hung To Road to view wholesales quantities of phones, before purchasing them in online auctions and bringing them back to Huaqiangbei.
This trade partly thrives thanks to Hong Kong's status as a free trade port, where traders can avoid heavy import taxes. ...
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May 31 2025, 09:43 PM

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