The Heir wants to boycott Wauwei (as soon as he learns to dang spell it) the first chance he gets, because he believes that its executive that managed to escape back to China from North America is still guilty as sin for whatever it was she did. He doesn't remember offhand what she was accused of, but he's pretty sure she's guilty. Sure that goes against the presumption of innocence, but since China successfully strong armed Canada into giving her back in a "hostage" exchange since China unjustly captured and imprisoned two innocent Canadian citizens, he doesn't believe that he's bound by that presumption where common sense is concerned. So this yet another mark the Heir makes against China, and he places a mark against Canada for caving into China and not standing for principle. It's perfectly fine by him if the Canadian citizens who were returned end up helping make the case against China's self-styled legitimacy, and also publicly share their opinions as to the amount of guilt the Wauwei executive bears for she's accused of. The Heir thinks they should hold their own once China tries to respond with an up-is-down contention against them in response. This is also why the Heir believes that Janet Yellen in turn should hold her own when meeting with China's finance minister when the minister asks that China get a get-out-of-jail-free card for everything they've ever done, including the unjust detention of tourists for the sake of a political vendetta, just so they can use their economic power to strong arm the rest of the world to what China wants them to do. The Heir says...
..."no way, no how." |
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