“international law” haha
“international law” haha
I mean, many US states/cities already do forfeitures, so applying this to foreign individuals and entities is just… consistent??
Which is fine as they will also lose access to western capital markets
Why does America treats presidents and ex-presidente as a protected class of citizens?
Because gullible consumers keep paying
Also note China modernized faster than any country. China went from farming-based to post-industrial in about 30 years and population behaviours and beliefs didn’t follow it at same speed. So they have more hicks with ability to damage stuff than most of Africa and Central Asia
As much as I would like to see a drastic solution for Boeing, America also has a very poor track of nationalization outcomes. Everything the government touches becomes bloated and inefficient. Best solution would be for Boeing board of directors and the C-level executives to be entirely replaced or just let Boeing die a slow death under litigations.
The BOJ is counting on low interest to force a devaluation of peoples savings to drive consumption and, given the massive amount of savings, it will take time to burn through that
Which is something I also observed. And even some trucks are electrical.
Not only that… A significant portion of cars in china are already electrical, at least in very large cities.
Unfortunately, that is the same notion shared with other neighboring muslim countries, as well the rest of other countries
Building high quality rail networks requires legal framework to facilitate that given that initial costs are staggering. The US framework simply leaves everything to private initiative and given the multitude of local land regulation and lack of laws to support strategic mobilization at this scale, it is guaranteed the USA will never have a country-wide high speed rail network. There are just too many interests to satisfy in a very diverse legal landscape across cities, counties, and states.
Laws of war… Pffffttttt
Class 6 and above are pretty zippy
Yeah, nothing special here
The law is what the political-legislative process agrees to
That was true in the 60s, but now most south American governments are ostensibly anti-american but need to be in okay terms with america so that they can trade internationally
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