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| 1/15/2024 7:37:12 AM |
Who is Lai Ching-te, Taiwanās new President? kraken3yvbvzmhytnrnuhsy772i6dfobofu652e27f5hx6y5cpj7rgyd.onion Lai Ching-te, a former doctor from a poor mining family, was propelled into politics by a military crisis in the Taiwan Strait 27 years ago. Now, the soft-spoken political veteran is tasked with preventing another one from happening as the newly elected leader of the self-ruled island that Chinaās Communist Party has vowed to one day absorb. On Saturday, Lai, 64, the current vice president from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP), won a widely watched election to become Taiwanās next president. His victory handed the DPP a historic third consecutive term, delivering a snub to years of growing threats from Taiwanās much-larger authoritarian neighbor, China. āThe election has shown the world the commitment of the Taiwanese people to democracy, which I hope China can understand,ā Lai told thousands of jubilant supporters at a rally after his win. Lai, who has long faced Beijingās wrath for championing Taiwanās sovereignty, said as president he has āan important responsibility to maintain peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait,ā pledging to pursue dialogue with China under the principles of dignity and parity. |
gennadiy4w9fdya@mail.ru
https://kraken-2.com
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| 1/15/2024 4:32:39 AM |
The tech sector is pouring billions of dollars into AI. But it keeps laying off humans мега ŃŃŃŠ»ŠŗŠ° The tech sector has kicked off the new year with a spate of fresh job cuts that are coming at the same time as the industry is doubling down on investments into artificial intelligence. While AI tools putting workers out of jobs has been a major point of anxiety in Silicon Valley and beyond over the past year, not all the recent layoffs in the tech industry are directly linked to AI tools simply replacing workers. But many of the recent job cut announcements have come on the heels of those same companies disclosing major investments into AI technology as they look to reallocate resources, and a growing number of tech firms have explicitly cited AI as a reason for rethinking head counts. The continued labor upheaval unfolding in the very industry creating AI could point to more unrest to come as the technology is forecast to reshape the broader business landscape in the years ahead. |
turovaknc1983@mail.ru
https://m9ga.at
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| 1/15/2024 3:36:36 AM |
The tech sector is pouring billions of dollars into AI. But it keeps laying off humans mega sb The tech sector has kicked off the new year with a spate of fresh job cuts that are coming at the same time as the industry is doubling down on investments into artificial intelligence. While AI tools putting workers out of jobs has been a major point of anxiety in Silicon Valley and beyond over the past year, not all the recent layoffs in the tech industry are directly linked to AI tools simply replacing workers. But many of the recent job cut announcements have come on the heels of those same companies disclosing major investments into AI technology as they look to reallocate resources, and a growing number of tech firms have explicitly cited AI as a reason for rethinking head counts. The continued labor upheaval unfolding in the very industry creating AI could point to more unrest to come as the technology is forecast to reshape the broader business landscape in the years ahead. |
galinagromova87@mail.ru
https://m9ga.at
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| 1/14/2024 9:08:58 PM |
China Failed to Sway Taiwanās Election. What Happens Now? mega darknet market Chinaās leader, Xi Jinping, has tied his countryās great power status to a singular promise: unifying the motherland with Taiwan, which the Chinese Communist Party sees as sacred, lost territory. A few weeks ago, Mr. Xi called this a āhistorical inevitability.ā But Taiwanās election on Saturday, handing the presidency to a party that promotes the islandās separate identity for the third time in a row, confirmed that this boisterous democracy has moved even further away from China and its dream of unification. After a campaign of festival-like rallies, where huge crowds shouted, danced and waved matching flags, Taiwanās voters ignored Chinaās warnings that a vote for the Democratic Progressive Party was a vote for war. They made that choice anyway. Lai Ching-te, a former doctor and the current vice president, who Beijing sees as a staunch separatist, will be Taiwanās next leader. Itās an act of self-governed defiance that proved what many already knew: Beijingās arm-twisting of Taiwan ā economically and with military harassment at sea and in the air ā has only strengthened the islandās desire to protect its de facto independence and move beyond Chinaās giant shadow. |
kononovaacella19844564@mail.ru
https://mega555toweb.com
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