Anonymous ID: 999973 April 28, 2020, 6:10 p.m. No.8953987   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4005 >>4012 >>4054

Take a step back

The devils in the details, no?

How does China comm [secure] w/ DNC leaders?

How does Soros comm [secure] w/ DNC leaders?

China and Soros are in direct communication with DNC leaders, with a sensitivity rating requirement of high security + plausibly deniable

They aren't talking about their grandkids, or the latest game.

Anonymous ID: 999973 April 28, 2020, 6:34 p.m. No.8954392   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Disney and China

https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/15/business/international/china-disney.html

Mr. Iger has staked his personal legacy on Disney’s partnership with the Chinese government. Last September, he brought a group of Disney board members to Shanghai to show off the park. They took in the world’s largest Disney castle, looking on as 11,000 construction workers raced to finish a “Pirates of the Caribbean”-themed underwater voyage. His signature is quite literally on the place: He autographed the castle’s golden spire before it was attached last year.

 

While he delegated certain duties to lieutenants, Mr. Iger has been the guiding force. He pre-tasted the food, which will include items like pork knuckles and Donald Duck-shaped waffles, and decided which characters would appear in the parade. He has held face-to-face talks with Chinese presidents, prime ministers and propaganda officials.

 

Mr. Iger, 65, has sought a personal relationship with China’s paramount leader, President Xi Jinping.After Mr. Iger learned that Mr. Xi’s father, Xi Zhongxun, a revolutionary leader, had visited Disneyland in 1980, he pressed his staff to find a photograph. A color photograph shows the president’s father, who died in 2002, wearing a Mao suit, shaking hands with Mickey Mouse. Mr. Iger presented it to the Chinese leader as a gift and a symbol of their partnership.

 

When Mr. Xi stopped in Seattle last September, Mr. Iger was among the American executives on hand to welcome him. At the White House state dinner a few days later, Mr. Iger was seated at Mr. Xi’s table. Just last month, Mr. Iger flew to Beijing to meet the president at the Communist Party’s leadership compound.

 

“It’s good to see the fruits of efforts over the years,” a smiling Mr. Xi told Mr. Iger at a public meeting between the men at the Great Hall of the People in early May. “And I believe the new cooperation will continue to yield new outcomes.”

 

Mickey in the Land of Mao

 

It may be all smiles now, but Mickey Mouse knows all too well what can happen when the Middle Kingdom gets mad.

 

The year was 1997, and Disney had finally found a bit of success in China. “The Dragon Club,” a Disney cartoon series, was popular in Chinese homes, and “The Lion King” had given Disney its first big hit in Chinese cinemas. But then came “Kundun.”

 

As part of a now-defunct effort to make films for more sophisticated audiences, Disney agreed to back the director Martin Scorsese, who wanted to make “Kundun,” about China’s oppression of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader. The Chinese government, which considers the Dalai Lama a separatist, denounced the project and pressured Disney to abandon it.

 

In the end, Disney decided that it could not let an overseas government influence its decision to distribute a movie in the United States. “Kundun” was released, and China retaliated by banning Disney films and pulling “The Dragon Club.”

 

“All of our business in China stopped overnight,”Disney’s chief executive at the time, Michael D. Eisner, recalled.

Anonymous ID: 999973 April 28, 2020, 6:47 p.m. No.8954633   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Am'.lie.ai Am<pickle>man

Am'.lie.ai Am<pickle>man

Am'.lie.ai Am<pickle>man

Am'.lie.ai Am<pickle>man

Am'.lie.ai Am<pickle>man