The Chinese New World Order is Coming Together By James Reed
There is much internet discussion about the coming New World Order, and rightly so, as organisations such as the United Nations, and World Health Organization push on with their centralist globalist agendas. But running parallel to this is the setting up of what I call the Chinese New World order, where the strategy under way is to replace the US dollar. And, in moving to war preparations, Russia and China are forging closer economic ties. Cooperative deals have been signed on things such as agriculture, e-commerce and manufacturing. China is tapping in on the resources that Russia has in abundance, to add to its own technological might. This will be a major challenge to the West; some say the end of Western dominance.
The question should be asked if the Chinese New World Order is contrary to the standard globalism that we know from sources such as the World Economic Forum? My guess is that the deepest level the apparent conflict is only an appearance, and that what we are seeing is but another experiment, just as there was once an experiment conducted by the elites with communist state-run economies, versus neo-liberal free trade. In the end, the centralist tyrannies remain the same.
“Chinese and Russian companies attending a regional conference in northeastern China signed a raft of cooperation deals on Monday in sectors ranging from manufacturing and logistics to e-commerce and agriculture, Chinese state media reported.
The conference in Shenyang, the capital of Liaoning province, followed last week's meeting in Beijing between Russian President Vladimir Putin and China's President Xi Jinping. Russian local government officials, business representatives as well as nearly 800 Chinese companies hoping to enter the Russian market were attending the conference.
China has urged increased cross-border connectivity with Russia and deeper economic cooperation despite disapproval from the West after Russian forces invaded Ukraine last year, with northeast China - comprising the provinces of Liaoning, Heilongjiang and Jilin - gaining new strategic significance as a zone of bilateral trade and commerce.
In January to September, 40 Russian firms set up businesses in Liaoning, China's national broadcaster reported on Monday.
Liaoning's outbound shipments to Russia soared 82.3% in the first nine months from a year earlier to 42.64 billion yuan ($5.83 billion).
In March, a new cargo hub for China-Europe freight trains was put into operation in Shenyang, with a train carrying 55 containers departing for Russia to mark the hub's inauguration.
In May, Chinese customs said the landlocked province of Jilin would be able to use Vladivostok, the biggest port in the Russian Far East, to ship goods to Zhoushan and Jiaxing in the eastern Chinese province of Zhejiang from June, cutting costs and transportation time for Jilin cargo bound for eastern China.”
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