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Cake day: January 29th, 2025

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  • … since the outbreak of the war in Israel, Beijing has classified Israel as a “high-risk area” and imposed a ban on any new Chinese investments in the country.

    The South China Morning Post, a Hong Kong-based Chinese propaganda outlet, published just last week that China, Israel continue to collaborate in science and tech despite unrest in Gaza.

    While Beijing supports Palestine and has a fractious relationship with Tel Aviv’s closest ally, cutting-edge innovations keep them together.

    In a report published just now in February 2026, Lloyd’s Bank explicitly says,

    Chinese investment in Israel has grown rapidly in recent years, particularly in software, IT services and consumer electronics.

    Trade between China and Israel is also at an all-time high since the outbreak of the pandemic, and this hasn’t notably changed since the Gaza war (with Chinese exports to Israel have always been higher than imports from Israel, so Israel runs a trade deficit with China).

    It’s important to note that this Chinese Ballet Vision fund cites losses of its investment since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, and it seems this is the real issue here. China is heavily investing and trading with Israel. Nothing has changed.

    This is not much more than propaganda, the numbers paint a different picture. China-Israel business ties are stronger than ever, despite Gaza.

    [Edit typo.]


  • … since the outbreak of the war in Israel, Beijing has classified Israel as a “high-risk area” and imposed a ban on any new Chinese investments in the country.

    The South China Morning Post, a Hong Kong-based Chinese propaganda outlet, published just last week that China, Israel continue to collaborate in science and tech despite unrest in Gaza.

    While Beijing supports Palestine and has a fractious relationship with Tel Aviv’s closest ally, cutting-edge innovations keep them together.

    In a report published just now in February 2026, Lloyd’s Bank explicitly says,

    Chinese investment in Israel has grown rapidly in recent years, particularly in software, IT services and consumer electronics.

    Trade between China and Israel is also at an all-time high since the outbreak of the pandemic, and this hasn’t notably changed since the Gaza war (with Chinese exports to Israel have always been higher than imports from Israel, so Israel runs a trade deficit with China).

    It’s important to note that this Chinese Ballet Vision fund cites losses of its investment since the outbreak of the war in Gaza, and it seems this is the real issue here. China is heavily investing and trading with Israel. Nothing has changed.

    This is not much more than propaganda, the numbers paint a different picture. China-Israel business ties are stronger than ever, despite Gaza.

    [Edit typo.]

























  • China … opted to install factories on the ground. They create jobs …

    I’m not sure whether I got that right. China has been opening up factories in Europe, so far I agree, but that has little impact on the job market in Europe as the Chinese companies bring their own workers. We see this, for example, in Spain (CATL), Hungary (BYD), in the Balkans (Norinco, a Chinese state-owned military supplier that built solar projects there, among others) as well as in other parts of the globe. There are only of few local workers at Chinese foreign subsidiaries, while the most come from China. Also, illegal workers and forced labour is widespread in this setting (recent examples are Italy’s fashion industry or Chinese carmaker BYD’s closure of its Brazilian plant amid accusations of ‘slave-like’ labour conditions).

    And these are only a few examples.






  • There is this time now when people, perhaps rather conveniently in Europe and indeed elsewhere, might be ignoring that China’s economy has massively been running on slave-like labour for long period now. I think these and other human rights violations in China aren’t gone. I think China has very strong dictatorial policies, censorship, and surveillance capabilities, and therefore, calling ‘genuine partnership’ important while not even mentioning these crimes discredits Mr. Martin completely. As a European, I don’t want this cHeAp PrDuCtS mAde By SlAvE LaBoUr.

    Mr. Martin didn’t discuss Europe’s growing trade deficit with China. And when speaking on ‘issues around Chinese subsidies,’ he claims that ‘they make similar accusations in China about Europe.’ I would really like to know what these Chinese accusations about European subsidies are. This is makes no sense as Chinese subsidies are far higher than anything allowed in Europe.

    The Irish PM is conveying Chinese talking points after his China visit, and he is even hypocritical given he is calling for a ‘trade framework with China’ while opposing the EU-Mercosur trade deal.