With the Reciprocal Access to Tibet Act of 2018 now signed into US law, the already rocky China-US relationship just got an additional flashpoint.
IN A VIDEO widely reposted on the internet, some pupils can be seen pouring free milk provided by the local government into a gutter of a primary school in Longhui, a poverty-stricken county in Hunan province. The National Radio of China comments:
CUI YONGYUAN, a former famous news anchor, recently posted several photos via his micro blog account, claiming the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs for promoting genetically modified (GM) food nationwide while not allowing GM food to appear in its own canteen. On Wednesday, the ministry responded, saying it bought all its foodstuff in the market. Thepaper.cn comments:
Editor's note: An overseas buyer donated Tiger Ying, a bronze ware of the Western Zhou Dynasty (c. 11th century-771BC), to the National Cultural Heritage Administration in September after buying it at a price of 410,00($517,000) in an auction organized by Canterbury Auction Galleries in the United Kingdom in April. The administration sent the bronze ware to the National Museum of China on Thursday. People's Daily comments:
This year marks the 40th anniversary of the China-Japan Treaty of Peace and Friendship, as also the thawing of Sino-Japanese relations after eight long years. The visits of Premier Li Keqiang to Japan and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's subsequent visit to China helped bilateral ties to get back on track.
With the real estate market experiencing fluctuations this year, both the supply side and demand side, at different times, have indicated the realty market would cool down. And many are worried whether the cooling trend will continue next year.
It takes a child to tell an emperor he has no clothes and it took Greta Thurnberg to tell climate negotiators in Poland they "have to speak clearly, no matter how uncomfortable that may be".
As a journalist, the privilege of covering many historic events firsthand is indeed rewarding, and there has probably been no better time to be a journalist if it is about "firsts" and "mosts". Most of which are associated with China's reform and opening-up.
Editor's note: Statistics show that in 2016, approximately 50 percent of the global demand for oil was attributable to the road transportation sector, with automobiles accounting for 20 percent. Countries that are strong in the new energy vehicle industry therefore have more room to ease their reliance on oil. China should pay more attention to building up its new energy vehicle industry. Niutanqin, a columnist, said in a recent post:
This year has not been an annus mirablis for China's Huawei Technologies Ltd, the world's largest supplier of telecommunications network equipment and second-biggest maker of smartphones.
Washington seems intent on getting its kicks by trying to relive the good old days. If that just involved it rambling on about "America first" it could just go in one ear and come out the other. Unfortunately, it also insists on trying to act as it did in the past.
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