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邓小平和他的出卖 2022-08-10 08:19:09

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----- Forwarded Message -----                 From:To:
Sent: Wednesday, August 10, 2022 at 08:07:11 AM CDTSubject: Deng Xiaoping and his sold-out Re: The resilience myth: Fatal flaws in the push to secure chip suppl

Deng Xiaoping and his sold-out

Leeliang letters 08-10-2022 #2

I must correct you once again for China’s determination to develop their own Chip industries. It is not because China is stupid!

Morris Chang’s TSMC and Korea’s Samsung are now totally controlled by the Imperialists and will shut down its supply to China any time they want to. Should this happen, China will be left out of holding the bag.

Morris Chang is a lost Chinese; he is now completely sided with Taiwan Independence against China, voluntary or involuntary.

China as a late comer of the semiconductor industry is a result of Deng Xiao-pings sold out since the 80’s when he decided to focus China to be a factory of cheap products for the lowering of the CPI of the West, he surrendered to the Imperialists and abolished China’s big plane and chip programs; he was the worst traitor of China!

By the way, Biden has just signed a bill of $280 billion to strengthen the US’ chip industry, do you think that Biden is stupid? (https://cn.nytimes.com/usa/20220810/biden-semiconductor-chips-china/?utm_source=news-list&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter )

(From google translator:

对于中国发展自己的芯片产业的决心,我必须再次纠正你。不是因为中国傻!

张忠谋的台积电和韩国的三星现在完全被帝国主义控制,随时会关闭对中国的供应。如果发生这种情况,中国将束手无策

莫里斯·张是一个迷失的中国人;他现在完全站在台独反对中国的一边,无论是自愿的还是非自愿的。

中国作为半导体产业的后发者,是邓小平上世纪八十年代以来卖光的结果,当时他决定把中国作为廉价产品的工厂,以降低西方的CPI,他向帝国主义投降废除了中国的大飞机和芯片计划;他是中国最坏的叛徒!

对了,拜登刚刚签署了2800亿美元加强美国芯片产业的法案,你觉得拜登傻吗?)


------ Original Message ------
Received: Wed, 10 Aug 2022 06:21:51 AM CDT
From: ye
To:
Subject: The resilience myth: Fatal flaws in the push to secure chip supply chains
Hi Mr. Whyndee / Dr.Bob / Dr.George ,                      

             Why does China CCP leaders so very stupid willing  to spend and waste $200-300 billion to invest in R&D to be able to  build their own advanced high end chips without depending on TSMC,  Samsung , Intel etc. ?                       
             Even if China succeed China will not be able to get  a profit return of their investment. Who want to buy from China made  chips that have no good back up services. No matter what China strategy  of dumping billions to be chip independent is very foolish and stupid  moves.                      
             China think their monopoly business model is better  than Dr.Morris Chang division of labor specialised contract  manufacturing model. Very stupid of the Chinese CCP leaders to thnk like  that.                      
             According to Boston Consulting ( if Dr.Bob still  believe BCG is clever enough not lying ) it is totally impossible to  have all the suply chain of semicon fab in one country.                      
             China do not have self sufficiency in food and need  to import plenty of food. There 1 billion Chinese want to eat well and  will suffer food shortage in the future. Why China never spend a few  billions to grow more than enough food to feed their own people ? China  have plenty of land to grow food and not enough being done to grow  plenty of food.                       
             China leaders on keen to invest in high technology  to make fast easy money using Chinese people hard earned money. Too many  stupid and useless China CCP leaders do not know what are their  priorities.                      
             ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                      
                                 The resilience myth: Fatal flaws in the push to secure chip supply chains                      From China to the U.S. to Europe, semiconductor makers are being showered with subsidies, but to what effect?                                        CHENG TING-FANG and LAULY LI, Nikkei Asia tech correspondents                      JULY 27, 2022                            
                                 

TAIPEI -- In the sweltering Asia summertime of mid-June,  Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. urgently dispatched a team to  Japan to visit some of the company's equipment suppliers. Why, it wanted  to know, were these companies saying they could not deliver vital  machines on time? TSMC is the world's largest chip manufacturer, and its  suppliers had always bent over backward to provide what the powerful  company was demanding, but for the first time, it was being met with  apologetic messages.

The situation was highly sensitive. TSMC is in the midst of  a $100 billion expansion, spurred on by governments in the wake of last  year's alarming shortages of crucial chips. But the Taiwanese giant has  found its own supply chains to be plagued by bottlenecks, affecting  items that range from lenses so precise they could focus a laser beam on  a pingpong ball on the moon, to apparently mundane valves and tubes.

The June mission followed on the heels of a similar trip by the company's  supply chain management chief, J.K. Lin, and a task force to the U.S.  in March, to investigate why the chipmaking machines TSMC ordered there  were taking up to 18 months to turn up.          

In Japan, suppliers including Tokyo Electron, the country's  largest chipmaking equipment manufacturer, and Screen Semiconductor  Solutions told TSMC they might miss even the elongated delivery times  they have promised, sources familiar with the tricky meetings told  Nikkei Asia.

Screen -- one of the few companies in the world making the  chemical cleaning machines that are vital in chipmaking plants -- reeled  off a list of obscure components that it was having trouble securing  from its own supply chain. Valves, tubes, pumps and containers made of  special plastics -- all are in short supply.

The problems are cascading from supplier to supplier and  making it hard to resolve the global shortage of chips, the hearts and  brains that power electronic devices from PCs and smartphones to  automobiles.

The difficulties  underscore a series of inconvenient truths, not just for TSMC and its  rivals and suppliers, but for policymakers around the world. Amid  U.S.-China trade tensions and pandemic disruptions, governments in  China, the U.S., Europe and elsewhere have determined to "onshore"  semiconductor manufacturing. So-called supply chain resilience has  become a central aim of policy. But such resilience is a myth.          

These new national  efforts are backed by huge subsidies and state-backed investments. The  U.S. Senate at the end of July is expected to vote on the $52 billion  CHIPS Act. Japan's government will back TSMC to the tune of 476 billion yen ($3.5 billion) to build a factory there for the first time.          

The trouble is these  efforts touch only the visible end of the semiconductor supply chain.  Behind chip production sits a network supplying equipment and other  items encompassing hundreds of raw materials, chemicals, consumable  parts, gases and metals without which the bogglingly precise process of  chipmaking could not function. China is  directing a combined 1.5 trillion yuan ($221 billion) of public and  private investments to replicate a chip supply chain within its own  borders, with modest results to date.          

While  a globalized semiconductor industry used to run smoothly across dozens  of countries, the effort to replicate this architecture inside single  countries or regions has revealed and exacerbated bottlenecks in the  supply chain,  according to Nikkei Asia's investigations and interviews with more than  two dozen senior industry executives from the major chip economies of  the U.S., European Union, Taiwan and Japan over the past five months. At  the same time, there are questions over the long-term wisdom of the  policy, and fears about whether, if they can be gotten up and running,  many of these factories might ultimately sit idle.        
                     
                                 

JT Hsu, head of semiconductors and materials at Boston Consulting Group, said even  a goal of reaching 70% to 80% self-reliance is "extremely tough. ... It  could be extremely challenging for any country or region to get all the  fronts covered."          

"It's not only the [factories] that  manufacture the chips but it's everything that goes in there," said Jens  Liebermann, vice president of semiconductor materials at the electronic  materials business unit of BASF, the German chemical group. "All the  materials, chemicals, gases and their raw materials. All have to be  there. It comes down to, where is the source, where is the raw material,  where is the manufacturing, and who can handle the logistics?"          

Morris Chang, an elder statesman  of the semiconductor industry who founded and formerly chaired TSMC, put  it most bluntly in remarks addressed to the U.S.          

"If you want to reestablish a  complete semiconductor supply chain in the U.S., you will not find it as  a possible task," he said at an industry forum last year. "Even after  you spend hundreds of billions of dollars, you will still find the  supply chain to be incomplete, and you will find that it will be very  high cost, much higher cost than what you currently have."          

Bottlenecks upstream          

Despite how insignificant they might sound, those valves,  tubes, pipes, pumps and containers are a case study in complexity -- and  they are driving executives mad.

"I am not kidding! We are still receiving valves and tubes  that we ordered more than a year ago," one executive with a Taiwanese  supplier to TSMC told Nikkei. "When opening the box, we are often very  shocked. The box might contain only 10 pieces out of a 100-piece order."

With only a handful of specialist  suppliers able to meet anti-contamination standards and deal with the  red tape of manufacturing items that also have potential military use,  it has been no easy task to increase capacity, especially with limited  supplies of the raw materials behind them.          

These items are made of special  plastics called fluoropolymers and are indispensable to the handling of  corrosive chemicals and ultrapurified water that flows in all chip  manufacturing facilities and chipmaking machines, where standards keep  going up and up.          

The most advanced chips, those used to build the latest  iPhone and MacBook processors, for example, are now at the 5-nm level.  Nanometer size refers to the line width between transistors on a chip. A  nanometer is roughly 1/100,000 of the thickness of a piece of paper or  human hair. The smaller the nanometer size, the more cutting-edge and  powerful the chips are, and thus more challenging to develop and  produce. In turn, chipmakers need to place billions of transistors on a  chip. The tolerance for a defect or microcontamination is extremely low.

"The size of a COVID virus is about 100 nm," Kevin Gorman,  senior vice president of integrated supply chain transformation with  Merck Electronics of Germany, told Nikkei. "You can then see how refined  the chip manufacturing work is and why all the materials are critical."

When it comes to semiconductor-grade valves and tubes for  handling chemicals, it is crucial they do not become a source of  contamination. Only a few suppliers worldwide have the capability to  reach the exacting requirements, according to Nikkei Asia analysis. CKD  and Advance Electric of Japan and Entegris of the U.S., are qualified  suppliers of valves; Iwaki of Japan is the dominant supplier for  chemical-handling pumps; industry sources referred to Agru of Austria  and Georg Fischer of Switzerland as essential providers of the critical  piping systems for chip plants.

The Wassenaar Arrangement, a multinational agreement signed  by more than 40 nations to avoid such components being shipped to rogue  states for military use, adds red tape that provides another barrier to  new entrants.

Follow the supply chain upstream, and  further chokepoints emerge with regard to the fluoropolymers from which  these components are made. One such material, known as PFA, is only  supplied by Chemours of the U.S. and Daikin Industries of Japan. It  requires extensive know-how to process, and no competitors are on the  horizon.          

Other key fluoropolymer material makers include Solvay of  Belgium, 3M of the U.S., Gujarat Fluorochemicals of India and  HaloPolymer of Russia. But not all of them are qualified to build  semiconductor-grade materials and they must supply to a wide range of  other industries beyond the tech sector. Sources from Russia have  dropped away due to the disruption and sanctions caused by the Ukraine  war.

Hsu Chun-yuan, chief business development officer of United  Integrated Services, a leading cleanroom builder for TSMC and rival  chipmaker Micron Technology, told Nikkei that "sources of fluoropolymers  are constrained" and there have been "demand hikes from both the chip  and battery industries, driven by the electric vehicle boom."

And further upstream still?  Fluoropolymers are processed from fluorspar, also known as fluorite, a  mineral of which China controls nearly 60% of the global production  output, according to data  from market research company IndexBox. China has long identified  fluorspar as a strategic resource and back in the late 1990s limited  exports due to its importance to industries from agriculture,  electronics and pharmaceuticals to aviation, space and defense. The  mineral is often labeled as a "semi-rare earth."          

According to IndexBox, Mexico  is the second-largest producer of fluorspar with about 10.8% of the  market last year, followed by Mongolia and South Africa. In  Europe, Bulgaria and Spain together control some 5% of the global  market. In a supply chain review paper published by the White House in  2021, the U.S. flagged the risks of  critical materials subject to foreign domination and identified  fluorspar as one in a list of "shortfall strategic and critical  materials." The report did not point out  its deep link with the chipmaking industry. It said increasing sources  of critical minerals, strengthening stockpiles, and ramping up North  American manufacturing, processing, and recycling capacity could result  in fewer disruptions during "future worldwide crises."          

Similar issues arise in the handling of gases such as neon,  used in lithography, and C4F6, a fluorine gas used in etching. Both  count either Ukraine or Russia as a major source of supply, which has  been disrupted by the war. The equipment for moving them around is also  highly specialized.

Only a handful of companies --  including Rotarex of Luxembourg and BBB Neriki Valve and Hamai  Industries of Japan -- are qualified to supply the ultra high purity  valves for the gas cylinders that the semiconductor industry uses,  Nikkei Asia supply chain checks show. Rotarex controls close to 80% of  the market and only produces these specific items in Luxembourg.          

The valves, built with stainless steel and other alloys,  must endure extensive verification processes and need to be government  certified because of the dangers of leaks and explosions. It would take  "10 to 20 years" for a new entrant to meet the standards and tests of  different government authorities for certification, some industry  executives told Nikkei.

Trade tension, pandemic and war          

The call for chip supply chain resilience emerged amid the  U.S.-China tech war when former U.S. President Donald Trump's  administration clamped down on Chinese tech champion Huawei Technologies  in 2019 and blocked its use of American technologies, especially chips,  citing national security. The drastic move spurred an aggressive  nationwide Chinese campaign across sectors to cut dependence on the U.S.  and build a secure, self-controllable supply chain.

The self-sufficiency movement evolved into a global  campaign in late 2020, as unprecedented chip shortages stalled car  production and hurt a wide range of industries, crimping global economic  growth and threatening jobs. The U.S. Department of Commerce said the  shortages wiped an estimated $240 billion off the country's gross  domestic product in 2021. The automobile industry alone made 7.7 million  fewer cars than the year before.

The Ukraine war has further amplified demands for supply  chain security. The war drove up prices of energy, metals, chemicals and  crucial gases that many chip-related suppliers needed. It also  increased the sense of urgency.

For most major economies, chips are essential for building  everything from computers and data centers to appliances and cars. They  are central to the battle for supremacy in space, science, artificial  intelligence and EVs, and will be crucial to the military and defense  equipment of the future. Advanced chips are integral to an array of  critical national security capabilities "including sophisticated weapons  systems such as the Javelin antitank missiles the U.S. is supplying to  Ukraine to defend itself against Putin's invasion," the U.S. Department  of Commerce pointed out in a recent report.

Governments so far have promised to pour more than $100  billion into subsidizing the building of local chip supply chains. As  well as the U.S. CHIPS Act, the EU adopted the 45 billion-euro ($46  billion) European Chips Act, Japan had budgeted 600 billion yen ($4.42  billion) and India set up a $30 billion funding program for  semiconductors and other tech sectors.

Major chipmakers from Intel, Micron and Texas Instruments  in the U.S. to TSMC and South Korea's Samsung Electronics have  separately announced more than $650 billion in investments. These  include several outside their home bases. TSMC is building in the U.S.  and Japan, Intel plans to expand in Europe and Southeast Asia, and  Samsung has construction plans in the U.S. According to SEMI's estimate,  some 91 new chip plants are set to go online worldwide from 2020  through 2024.

When the European Chips Act was enacted earlier this year,  European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen acknowledged that "no  country -- and even no continent -- can be entirely self-sufficient."  The hope is that parts of the supply chain that cannot be brought  onshore will at least run through friendly nations.

"Europe will always work to keep global markets open and to  keep them connected. This is in the world's interest; it is in our own  interest, too," she said. "Europe will build partnerships on chips with  like-minded partners, for example the United States or for example  Japan. It is about balanced interdependencies and it is about  reliability."

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has floated  "friendshoring" as a compromise concept. "We cannot allow countries to  use their market position in key raw materials, technologies, or  products to have the power to disrupt our economy or exercise unwanted  geopolitical leverage," she said in April. "Let's build on and deepen  economic integration and the efficiencies it brings, on terms that work  better for American workers. And let's do it with the countries we know  we can count on."

Russia's fall from Western favor demonstrates that  alliances can shift over time and spats can emerge even between nations  ostensibly committed to free trade.

Japan limited the export of photoresists, a crucial  chipmaking chemical dominated by Japanese suppliers, to South Korea  during a Tokyo-Seoul trade war in 2019.

An assessment by BCG suggests there are at  least 50 chokepoints in the semiconductor supply chain across design  tools, manufacturing, packaging, materials and equipment. These points  are defined as areas where 65% or more of a particular item is  concentrated in a single country or region.          

The U.S. dominates chip design tools  and at least 23 types of essential equipment, it found. Japan is a  leader in the production and critical formulation of critical materials  that include wafers as well as photoresists. Europe is the leader in  industrial gas.          

The extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machine  exclusively built by ASML of the Netherlands provides a prime example of  how difficult it is to switch a component in the chip supply chain.  Sometimes it is just impossible to find alternatives.

The EUV machine is indispensable in the production of  cutting-edge chips of 7 nm and below, helping project the complicated  patterns of integrated circuits on a microscale. Production delays are  hampering the ability to add new capacity, lengthening the current chip  crunch and setting back the introduction of more cutting-edge chips.

ASML has extended the waiting time for several models to  two years due to constraints on vital parts including optical mirrors  and lenses, people familiar with the matter told Nikkei. A company  spokesperson acknowledged some delays and said constraints on the  industry were "very diverse and across multiple tier suppliers."

Creating EUV light inside a vacuum  chamber within a machine is exceptionally challenging, relying on  Germany's Trumpf for a powerful laser source and another German partner,  the optics specialist Zeiss Group, for a system of mirrors to reflect  and direct the light.          

Since even the smallest  irregularities cause aberrations, Zeiss boasts that its product is the  world's "most precise" mirror. "If one of these EUV mirrors were to  redirect a laser beam and aim it at the moon, it would be able to hit a  pingpong ball on the moon's surface," CEO Andreas Pecher told Nikkei.  Zeiss and ASML have been working together for nearly 30 years.          

Even if ASML wants to strengthen its own supply chain  resilience and looks for other optical partners, it will require at  least five to 10 years of co-development work before getting initial  results, several executives told Nikkei.

"Actually it's almost not replaceable in the many years to come," Nikkei heard from one executive from a Japanese lens maker.

There is almost no part of the chipmaking process that does  not require deep specialization and no part of the supply chain that  can be simply and quickly duplicated.

Chemicals and solvents used in chip plants need to reach  the so-called part-per-trillion (PPT) grade -- one particle to 1  trillion drops. Gases need to reach a purity of up to 99.9999% -- the  so-called 6N -- when it comes to cutting-edge chip production. For  silicon wafers, the basic substrate materials that chips are fabricated  on, all need to be as pure as 9N, or 99.9999999%, an executive with the  chip material distributor Wah Lee Industrial told Nikkei.

"If you want a resilient chip supply chain, you not only  need chip plants, you also need a whole string of suppliers from  critical chemicals and precision components all coming along," said an  executive at Japan's Daikin. "Building a semiconductor plant takes  several years, but building chemical plants will take even longer given  the extensive environmental assessments and regulations for handling  chemicals."

The long road to onshoring          

China's efforts demonstrate that the  practical difficulty of building a chip supply chain cannot be overcome  by throwing billions of dollars into the effort.  As early as 2014, Beijing launched the first phase of the China  Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, nicknamed the Big Fund,  with 138.7 billion yuan ($20.7 billion). Another 204 billion yuan  followed in 2019. The first national seed fund stimulated more than 500  billion yuan of investment from the private sector and local  governments; the second phase of the fund is expected to encourage a  further 1 trillion yuan.          

China indeed increased local chip production -- to 16.7% of  its domestic needs in 2021 from 12.7% a decade before, IC Insights data  show.

The mathematical implication of having many countries  creating new onshore chip supply chains is that capacity is going to be  much greater than the world as a whole actually needs.

The industry has indicated that these are often noneconomic  investment plans by saying in many cases that factories will only be  built if they are heavily subsidized. With consumer spending on  electronics apparently slowing sharply and recession talk in the air,  the outlook for actual chip demand, at least in the short term, is  suddenly uncertain.

Gorman of Merck Electronics  acknowledged questions about whether local plants could reach economic  scale, but said it still makes sense to localize if its key customers  could together shoulder the risks.          

"Keeping the supply line short is also better for our  environment," he told Nikkei. "Our customers ... will favor a local  supply over one that has to cross international borders."

Building an onshore chip supply chain is a "very large-scale and long-term journey," BASF's Liebermann told Nikkei. "It  will take a lot of time and a lot of costs and the cost will only be  justified if the utilization rates of those new plants are meeting the  demand, and the demand is high enough."          

Most industry  executives believe a long-term increase in chip demand is locked in,  regardless of the current economic environment, as everyday items become  more connected and complex and as cars go electric and, ultimately,  autonomous. A semiconductor industry that had revenues of nearly $600 billion in 2021 is widely projected to be at $1 trillion by 2030.          

"If we really believe that the industry will be reaching $1  trillion ... we should be able to have some level of regionalization of  the manufacturing and have the right leverage," Bertrand Loy, CEO of  Entegris, told Nikkei. "But we won't be able to have manufacturing  everywhere and get the right leverage. We are investing in some  countries, some products, but not in all countries for all products  because we cannot afford [to do] that."

ASML believes regional investments "can co-exist, if  connected to a global ecosystem," its spokesperson said.  "Compartmentalization leads to sub-optimization, which leads to higher  cost and slower innovation for consumers and companies and governments  who rely on this innovation."

'No longer an era of free trade'          

Simon H.H. Wu,  president of San Fu Chemical, a Taiwanese chipmaking chemical supplier,  reckons geopolitical conflicts and trade barriers are prevailing over  globalization, upon which the chip industry was built. "It's no longer  an era of free trade," he told Nikkei, warning that policymakers and the industry should be under no illusions about the difficulties ahead.          

"Any country that controls certain  natural resources or key technologies would want to protect and leverage  those resources for economic and political benefits," Wu said. "What  companies could do is to look for allies and partners to alleviate the  potential disruptions.          

"There's always something you need to  import and ship from another place, country or even continent. If you  don't have phosphate rock how do you produce chipmaking phosphoric acid?  If you don't have fluorspar, how do you produce fluoropolymers? At the  end of the day, you can't move all those mines and natural resources ...  next door."          

JT Hsu, the head of  semiconductors and materials at BCG, said the chip crunch shows it is  about time to build some "redundant" capacity to give the industry a  buffer to absorb shocks. "However," he said,  "it's nearly impossible and unrealistic that any country or region  could reach a point of 100% self-reliance, in terms of making everything  about chips from the start to the end. That's not possible now and that  is not likely to be possible in the future."          


             The resilience myth: Fatal flaws in the push to secure chip supply chains        
                     
                     



The resilience myth: Fatal flaws in the push to secure chip supply chains

From China to the U.S. to Europe, semiconductor makers are being showered with subsidies, but to what effect?

     


                     


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· 答秋念11"大陆全力讨好台湾,台
· 万维博客的点击统计难以令人信服
· 掉入陷阱的中国外交和军事?秋念
【清邓,究周,复毛;救中国】
· 东方起,太阳升,26号凌晨人潮涌
· 打蛇不打七寸,始终都是白忙一场
· 做人要手心向下,不要手心向上 –
· 被邓小平洗脑后的几代中国人,无
· 内奸王毅簇拥舒默驾临北京裹挟习
· 习近平的阳具哪儿去了?
· 中国今日面临的急务是反帝国主义
· 有关真理的实践问题 - 什么“邓小
· 邓小平盖棺六论定
· 帝国第五纵队派驻中国的邓小平特
【中国的道路】
· 如果中国对夏威夷军售,华盛顿
· 米尔斯海默: 世界上只有中美俄
· 吕震宙,美国制裁,和清邓
· 习近平宜快点找回阳具 - 中國對
· 谁敢横刀立马,唯我华为将军:中
· 王毅习近平下跪舔屁眼后被白嫖:
· 打蛇不打七寸,始终都是白忙一场
· 做人要手心向下,不要手心向上 –
· 老拜登诈骗有术,习近平英雄救美
· 堕河而死,将奈公何!制裁打压声
【无本生意和朝三暮四耍猴术】
· 做人要手心向下,不要手心向上 –
· 堕河而死,将奈公何!制裁打压声
· 秦刚事件外一章 - 崔永元和柴璐
· 公无渡河,公竟渡河! - 习近平
· 无本生意和朝三暮四耍猴术的极致
· 习近平万万不可会见布林肯走上自
· 布林肯下周访华-第五纵队完全胜
· 中华人民共和国外交部宜改名为中
· 帝国派驻北京第五纵队之又一荒谬
· Indeed the Angelo's trick
【帝国时事】
· 美前众議員良心发现:我叛國!我
· 中国现状与中国统一问题
· 阿猫阿狗都在你头上撒尿拉屎了,
· 基辛格死了
· 杀4千巴勒斯坦儿童太少 - 看看犹
· 美国商务部推出“专利归零”法案,
· From Gaza With Rage (来自加沙
· 总不能再上演一出“出地球记”吧?
· 加萨医疗崩每10分钟死一童 美、
· 谁帮助修建了哈马斯隧道?
【日本政府放毒】
· 日本市民团体以业务过失致死为由
· "Little Japs (小日本)&quo
· 日本市民团体递状检举播污岸田称
· 俄宣布:若核污水检测不达标 将武
· 韩国海女迷棺作法咒尹锡悦?东电
· 韩水产业者穿丧服抗议。全球受害
· 福岛核污水排放海面呈现2色, 太
【科技/哲学/自然】
· 个衰人害死我个妹!- 中国人还没
· 地震可以人造吗?
· 50 年后再看美国登月
· 孔门和佛家都是朴素的无神论者
· 全球干旱席卷欧洲 ,莱茵河濒临干
【新冠病毒】
· FOX:中央情报局提供金钱以改变
· 又一次露出了作为反华走卒马脚的
· 疫情乱象多: 今日欢呼孙大圣,
· 溯源新冠病毒必须追究石正丽和美
· 介绍一种由中美研究人士合作而人
· 取法乎上,得乎其中 – 关于清零
· 中国放弃清零学步美国将至少4.3
· 介绍一种由中美研究人士合作而人
· ADE 效应和新冠病毒感染
【打假记录】
· 全程录影显示,胡锦涛"离场疑云"
· 胡锦涛二十大"被离场"
存档目录
2024-04-21 - 2024-04-21
2024-03-03 - 2024-03-28
2024-01-31 - 2024-01-31
2023-12-01 - 2023-12-27
2023-11-01 - 2023-11-30
2023-10-01 - 2023-10-28
2023-09-01 - 2023-09-27
2023-08-01 - 2023-08-31
2023-07-02 - 2023-07-31
2023-06-01 - 2023-06-26
2023-05-01 - 2023-05-31
2023-04-02 - 2023-04-30
2023-03-01 - 2023-03-31
2023-02-01 - 2023-02-28
2023-01-01 - 2023-01-31
2022-12-01 - 2022-12-31
2022-11-01 - 2022-11-30
2022-10-01 - 2022-10-31
2022-09-01 - 2022-09-30
2022-08-01 - 2022-08-31
2022-07-24 - 2022-07-31
 
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