The SDGs are dubious. It is another attempt by China to undermine the industrial competitiveness (price competitiveness) of developed countries. Just like air pollution, it is a problem that China has nothing to do with.
The Chinese are gloating behind the scenes, letting the developed countries, which are covered with pseudo-moralism, dance around them with rhetoric, and getting away with it.
Asahi, Nikkei, and NHK, are the ones who are most faithfully following this Chinese scheme.
Strangely, they have appointed Naomi Trauden, an idiotic college student who is driven only by rhetoric, to speak.
The producers and hosts of "Nikkei News 10" of TV TOKYO who overlook the stupidity are completely under Chinese manipulation.
Most people should be entirely dependent on China's specialty, money traps, and honey traps.
What is disgusting is that even the government has called the university student to the relevant committee.
It is because the government has also fallen for China's schemes.
An article on the front page of today's Sankei Shimbun proves that my suspicions were entirely correct at the beginning of this article.
China Taps into U.N. Data
"Analyzing human behavior.
China is gaining influence in the United Nations.
Four of the 15 U.N. agencies are headed by Chinese nationals.
China, which has been looking for an opening in the "absence of the United States" accelerated by the Trump administration's disregard for the United Nations, is reaching out to unexpected places as well.
Plans to establish the U.N.'s first big data research institute are underway in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China.
The plan is to collect and analyze vast amounts of data worldwide on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), aiming to solve global-scale issues such as hunger and climate change and use it for U.N. projects.
What is curious is that Chinese researchers say they also need to analyze data on "human behavior.
The U.S., which does not want its data leaked to China, is wary of the plan.
Claudia Rosett, a research fellow at the Hudson Institute, wrote an article for a U.S. newspaper warning that China could collect data from member states and set standards for data collection.
'The legitimacy of the U.N. mark makes it easier for the Chinese Communist Party to project its high-tech tyranny onto the world.'
The Secretary-General for the United Nations Economic and Social Council, which promotes the SDGs, has been reserved for Chinese nationals since 2007.
The incumbent, Liu Zhenmin, is a former diplomat who also served as vice-minister of foreign affairs.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, assisted by Liu, visited China in April 2019 and declared that the SDGs and China's giant economic zone concept, "One Belt, One Road," are "connected.
China is trying to use the SDGs as a means to pursue its hegemony.
This article continues.
The Chinese are gloating behind the scenes, letting the developed countries, which are covered with pseudo-moralism, dance around them with rhetoric, and getting away with it.
Asahi, Nikkei, and NHK, are the ones who are most faithfully following this Chinese scheme.
Strangely, they have appointed Naomi Trauden, an idiotic college student who is driven only by rhetoric, to speak.
The producers and hosts of "Nikkei News 10" of TV TOKYO who overlook the stupidity are completely under Chinese manipulation.
Most people should be entirely dependent on China's specialty, money traps, and honey traps.
What is disgusting is that even the government has called the university student to the relevant committee.
It is because the government has also fallen for China's schemes.
An article on the front page of today's Sankei Shimbun proves that my suspicions were entirely correct at the beginning of this article.
China Taps into U.N. Data
"Analyzing human behavior.
China is gaining influence in the United Nations.
Four of the 15 U.N. agencies are headed by Chinese nationals.
China, which has been looking for an opening in the "absence of the United States" accelerated by the Trump administration's disregard for the United Nations, is reaching out to unexpected places as well.
Plans to establish the U.N.'s first big data research institute are underway in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China.
The plan is to collect and analyze vast amounts of data worldwide on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), aiming to solve global-scale issues such as hunger and climate change and use it for U.N. projects.
What is curious is that Chinese researchers say they also need to analyze data on "human behavior.
The U.S., which does not want its data leaked to China, is wary of the plan.
Claudia Rosett, a research fellow at the Hudson Institute, wrote an article for a U.S. newspaper warning that China could collect data from member states and set standards for data collection.
'The legitimacy of the U.N. mark makes it easier for the Chinese Communist Party to project its high-tech tyranny onto the world.'
The Secretary-General for the United Nations Economic and Social Council, which promotes the SDGs, has been reserved for Chinese nationals since 2007.
The incumbent, Liu Zhenmin, is a former diplomat who also served as vice-minister of foreign affairs.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, assisted by Liu, visited China in April 2019 and declared that the SDGs and China's giant economic zone concept, "One Belt, One Road," are "connected.
China is trying to use the SDGs as a means to pursue its hegemony.
This article continues.