Blog Page 33

Huawei, National Pride, and Trade Deals

After three years of a trade war that ranged from simmering to boiling, a partial agreement was signed by officials of the Chinese and American delegations on January 15th. The so-called “phase one” trade deal covers a broad range of items, including health restrictions on imports and intellectual property, while also committing the Chinese to purchasing an extra $200 billion worth of American products and services by 2021. It would seem that the conclusion of this political-economic spat is at hand. However, one major obstacle still stands in the path to normalization: Huawei’s Chief Financial Officer (CFO), Meng Wanzhou.

Wanzhou was seized by Canadian authorities in Vancouver on December 1, 2018 and has been held in custody since that time. After spending the previous 14 months in, what seems like limbo, it now appears we are nearing something resembling the end of this saga.

An extradition hearing for Ms. Meng was held on January 20th and it took just eight days for the United States Department of Justice to announce they would, in fact, be bringing charges of fraud against her. Not only is Wanzhou a ranking member of the world’s largest telecommunications equipment maker in the world, but also the daughter of founder, Ren Zhengfei. In addition, Huawei is the largest private company in the People’s Republic of China.

As if the above were not damaging enough to the hopes that the trade war would soon reach its end, the European Union has through one of its institutions, the European Commission, recommended that a limit be put on “high-risk” supplies sales to the tech giant. As a result, Huawei will still be allowed to participate in the rollout of 5G technology in the EU, but this decision is directly at odds with the American position which blacklisted the company over its alleged links to Chinese espionage. The blacklisting of Huawei prohibits American companies from selling anything of value to it in the interests of national security.

Observers and experts have noted the correlation between the trade deal and Huawei, but the company’s influence is far from typical. Any type of negative escalation in Wanzhou’s case has the far-reaching potential to completely derail the negotiations process between the Americans and Chinese. Wanzhou’s father, Ren Zhengfei has already gone on record as expressing his pride that his daughter has become a bargaining chip in the geopolitical realities of the two countries. He even went so far as to liken it to a sort of honor that has been bestowed upon her.

The concept “face” in Chinese culture is one still deeply ingrained in the minds of the people there. Disputes can be had, but a boundary exists where once crossed, the loss of face can be so devastating as to further embroil adversaries and ratchet up any tension between them, possibly making any reproach untenable.

The years long trade war between the United States and China is one of the many tools in the American diplomatic tool bag to challenge the political, economic, and military rise of the world’s most populous nation. Deeply ingrained in the dispute is the allegation that Chinese government institutions frequently engage in espionage and the theft of intellectual property. Huawei is an indigenous Chinese company that has pioneered 5G technology and as such is a refutation of these allegations and a source of pride for not only the government, but the Chinese people.

It would be a shame if the American side continues to engage in what many see as “hostage diplomacy” and in doing so, abrogate the already delicate deal in place. Phase Two of the trade deal is even more important due to the outstanding $360 billion at stake.

Amazon and Microsoft Battle it Out Over JEDI Contract

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Last October, Microsoft beat out Amazon on a bid for the contract to overhaul the cloud system for the Department of Defense. The Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) project is meant to bring the DoDs cloud system, as well as the systems of related military services, up to date. Amazon was not happy to lose out on this contract, especially as the current system runs on aws. Instead of giving up gracefully, in January Amazon filed an injunction to halt the work being done by Microsoft on the JEDI project.

On Thursday, February 13th, the US Court of Federal Claims granted the injunction. This comes the day before official work was supposed to begin on the project. Experts speculate that the project will end up being split and awarded to both companies, citing the complexity and decade long project plan.

Read more details here

What does this mean for future cloud technology?

Amazon tries to find ways to block fake reviews

Amazon production takes a hit as Chinese factories close due to coronavirus

Anti-Romance movies to watch on Amazon for Valentines Day

California Elementary School to be Renamed after Michelle Obama

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The former first lady has inspired millions of people over the last decade. This is true with regard to fashion, politics, and who could forget her attempted reworking of the school lunch system? To honor her dedication to the American educational system an elementary school, Woodrow Wilson Elementary, is renaming itself after Michelle Obama. This is the second school in California to make a name change in honor of her, the first being an elementary school in Panorama City. When speaking about the revamping of the school and its name Principal Claudia Velez said, “We have the opportunity to have a beautiful new school named after a person who really represents our diversity and values.”

Read more about this here

Read about the fashion designer backed by Beyoncé and Michelle Obama

See how Michelle Obama and her friends celebrated “Galentines day”

Check out this throwback of the former first lady from her Princeton days

See how the Obamas are dealing with their empty-nester syndrome

The Three Losers of the MLB Off-Season (Yes, the Astros are one of them)

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Grading Major League Baseball off-seasons is always subjective whether a team is judged as having had a “good” winter or a “bad” winter. This off-season has been unusual in that many teams have had off-field issues ruin their blueprint. A previous post graded the three “best” off-seasons. Following are the three worst.

Houston Astros

The Astros sought to be the most innovative team in MLB, but it’s doubtful they intended to take damage control and turn it into damage escalation. With the continuing fallout from the sign-stealing scandal, they’re doing just that.

“Fluid” does not adequately describe this geometrically worsening morass. The latest (for now) is the spring training press conference in which owner Jim Crane and the players offered more explanations and contrition. For his part, Crane offered a hesitant, contradictory series of statements and stumbled through his answers to reporters’ questions.

Alex Bregman, Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa and George Springer offered apologies and denied that the team used buzzers to signal hitters about the pitches that were coming. This comes on the heels of former manager A.J. Hinch following up his interview with MLB Network’s Tom Verducci in which he gave sketchy, non-denial denials about the buzzers and appearing to do nothing more than dig a deeper hole.

Since October, the Astros have fired the architect of their rebuild, general manager Jeff Luhnow. They fired manager Hinch. They fired Luhnow’s right-hand man Brandon Taubman.

Even with all that contributing to their presence at the top of the list of teams that had the worst off-seasons, if the entire management hierarchy from top to bottom had remained in place, the players they lost and that they failed to adequately replace them might still put them on this list.

A top-five starting pitcher in baseball, Gerrit Cole, departed via free agency. He signed with one of their main rivals for American League supremacy, the New York Yankees. They did not replace him.

They lost their primary catcher from 2020, Robinson Chirinos.

They lost one of their best relief pitchers, Will Harris.

The lost another useful reliever, Hector Rondon.

For additions and retentions, they kept reliever Joe Smith and catcher Martin Maldonado and did nothing else.

Reigning American League Cy Young Award winner Justin Verlander is still top-level, but will be 37 on Feb. 20. Zack Greinke is 36. They are placing immense trust in Lance McCullers Jr. as he returns from Tommy John surgery.

New manager Dusty Baker will generate good will and his teams generally maximize their talent in the regular season, but the question as to whether their talent level remains good enough to defend their AL pennant is a reasonable one. There’s a perception that the Astros are so strong that they should overcome the rest of baseball gunning for them with a vengeance. Except they severely cut into their farm system in trades to try and win titles; they lost key components; and they have not addressed their issues.

The sign-stealing vitriol is not going away and they still insist they have the same talent level as they have in the past three years. Except they don’t. Saying “we’re still championship caliber” is not a solution, especially when it’s said in a tone implying they’re trying to convince themselves as much as they’re trying to convince everyone else.

Boston Red Sox

The Red Sox were also damaged by the sign-stealing scandal. Manager Alex Cora, who was the Astros bench coach in 2017, was fired amid allegations that the Red Sox were also using technology to steal signs during their 2018 championship run.

This came on the heels of president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski’s firing and the club’s mandate (though owner John Henry says it’s not a mandate) to get payroll under control. New chief baseball officer Chaim Bloom’s background is in sabermetrics and helping his former employer, the Tampa Bay Rays, compete while facing draconian payroll limitations and the lowest attendance in the American League. He was not hired to mimic Dombrowski.

Without the off-field drama, the on-field problems are stark. Had they kept Dombrowski and allowed him to run the club by spending to fill holes; retained Mookie Betts and David Price; and addressed the bullpen, they might not have been as strong as the Yankees on paper, but they could have competed with them. After their historic 2018 season, 2019 could have been classified as a championship hangover. The talent was still on the roster. Now, however, it is not. Add in that the heart and soul of the team, second baseman Dustin Pedroia, may never play again because of lingering injuries and the team is transitioning in myriad ways.

Their managerial search has stoked more mocking as they named veteran baseball man and former Milwaukee Brewers manager Ron Roenicke the interim manager. What that means is anyone’s guess. Speculation has been that they intend to rehire Cora when the investigation is complete even if he is suspended. That is the only logical explanation for the interim label being attached to Roenicke. It’s a hard sell given the ongoing revelations of the Astros’ behavior when Cora was there and how the Red Sox allegedly stole signs of their own under Cora.

They still have a respectable core with Chris Sale, Xander Bogaerts, Rafael Devers, Andrew Bienintendi, J.D. Martinez and Nate Eovaldi. Top prospect Michael Chavis is on the rise. Alex Verdugo is a talent. Still, they have not gotten better. They have gotten worse. This while the Yankees and Rays have gotten better.

The front office is new; the rotation is weak; the bullpen is shaky; the offense is downgraded; the on-field staff is in flux; and they look like a .500 team in a difficult division. That’s a precipitous fall from two years ago when they won 108 games and blasted through the postseason with a dominating, historic season.

Chicago Cubs

Unlike the Astros and Red Sox, the Cubs’ controversies were relatively muted and mostly left to on-field considerations.

Sure, there was the Kris Bryant grievance about the club undeservedly sending him to the minors so they could have an extra year of team control. The decision came in favor of the Cubs and they are receiving trade inquiries on Bryant.

They also moved on from veteran manager Joe Maddon in favor of former Cubs backup catcher David Ross. The relationship between president of baseball operations Theo Epstein and Maddon was a prevailing storyline with public disagreements played out in real time. Despite Epstein and Maddon making assertions to the contrary, they could no longer coexist. Ross is more to Epstein’s taste of someone who will follow orders, will work cheaply for the opportunity and is expected to have a better rapport with the players than Maddon did.

When they won their World Series in 2016, the Cubs were projected as a potential dynasty. They lost in the National League Championship Series in 2017; were bounced in the Wild Card Game after blowing the National League Central in 2018; then missed the playoffs entirely in 2019 with a mediocre 84-78 record. High-profile free agent signings Yu Darvish and Craig Kimbrel have been disappointing and terrible, respectively. Owner Tom Ricketts has closed the vault after Epstein’s very public missteps in big name, big money acquisitions.

The Cubs are relying on the change from Maddon to Ross and improved performance from the veterans on the roster to get them back into legitimate playoff contention. Since the core of the team’s offense is still in its 20s and the veteran starting pitchers and Kimbrel have the track records they do, it’s certainly possible that the Cubs rebound in a winnable National League Central.

That said, they’re relying on these arbitrary factors and hoping everything goes right after so many things have gone wrong since that World Series win. All in all, that equates to a bad off-season

Snoop Dog Apologizes to Gayle King for His Threatening Video

In case you missed it, Gayle King came under attack while reporting on Kobe Bryant’s death. Fans of the NBA star were outraged that King brought up the rape accusations against Kobe so close to his death. One of the people who was fired up was Snoop Dog, who posted a profanity filled video ranting about Gayle King.

“How dare you try to tarnish my motherf***in’ home boy’s reputation, punk motherf***er? Respect the family and back off, b*tch. Before we come get you.”

This, being tantamount to a death threat, set off others, and soon King needed body guards to go anywhere for fear of an attempt on her life. On February 12th, the rapper took back his comments and made a public apology to the reporter, citing high emotions and grief as his excuse.

To see how Gayle King responded to the initial video, go here

Some question the legitimacy of the rapper’s apology

Some are happy with Snoop Dog’s apology, but want to know when Gayle King is planning her apology for the interview that sparked it all

“Kobe would not have appreciated the attacks” says Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

Was King wrong to question Kobe’s legacy?

 

New Cases of Coronavirus in California, Tokyo

As the Novel Coronavirus outbreak reaches unprecedented highs, countries outside of China look at their number of infected. The USA has now, as of this last weekend, reached 15 total cases of the virus, including the death of a US national in China. The countries surrounding China have the highest contamination rates and it has just been reported that a taxi driver in Tokyo was found to be infected as well, giving rise to the concern that tourists and foreigners were infected in the cab. The international reach of the virus has also caused conventions and meetings to be cancelled due to risk of infection.

See the latest numbers of infection here

The world’s biggest phone show, the Mobile World Congress has been cancelled

In spite of the level of outbreak, the Tokyo Olympics are scheduled to go on

Patient in the Phillipines is recovering, but family is under house quarantine

An association in Nigeria teaches safe butchering practices in wake of golbal outbreaks

 

Empire Actor Jussie Smollett Re-indicted In Hate Crime Case

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Last year Empire actor Jussie Smollett claimed to be the victim of a hate crime that he claimed was perpetrated against himself because of his race and sexuality. The police report was filed and a massive investigation began, including over 100 interviews and in depth investigations. This led to Olabinjo and Abimbola Osundairo, the two brothers who carried out the supposed attack accusing Smollett of paying them to fake the attack in order to increase his salary on Empire. More chaos ensued, but as of March 2019, the case was dismissed. Until now.

A new look into the dismissal has found that the case did not have enough evidence to be dismissed and so Jussie Smollett has been re-indicted on 6 charges of false report. He is scheduled to appear in court on February 24th.

Read a full recap of all of the events leading up to this here

How has it affected his career?

Chicago Special Prosecutor revived the case

More on the repercussions of the case

This case may have an effect on the race for state attorney in Cook’s County

Which Three Teams Won the Off-Season? Two May Surprise You.

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Ordinarily, assessing which teams had the “best” and “worst” off-seasons in Major League Baseball is limited to acquisitions and subtractions, filling needs, failing to fill needs and other player-related maneuvers. However, 2019-20 is shaping up to be one of the most consequential off-seasons in baseball history and much of it is unrelated to on-field matters. With that in mind, the combination of those concerns factor in to the subjective categorization of the three best and three worst off-seasons in MLB. This post will assess the three best. (As a teaser, off-field factors will predominate the three worst.)

Los Angeles Dodgers

Had this been written two weeks ago, the Dodgers would have been in the subsequent post about the teams that had the worst off-seasons. Acquiring Mookie Betts and, to a lesser degree, David Price is enough to vault them from there to here.

The Dodgers, having lost in the World Series in 2017 and 2018 and then getting bounced by the Washington Nationals in the 2019 National League Division Series, were justifiably viewed as taking a major step back. When teams are projected to win a World Series, get to the precipice and fail not once but twice, then follow up those failures with an early-round playoff defeat, there can be a calculated determination that a bold move to shake up the clubhouse could be beneficial.

Often, that involves firing the manager. With the Dodgers, firing Dave Roberts made little sense because his replacement would be…Dave Roberts, only with a different name. In other words, the Dodgers manager will follow edicts from the front office no matter who it is, so it’s no more than a cosmetic solution.

After being rumored to have interest in Gerrit Cole and Anthony Rendon, but getting neither, the Dodgers sat by and waited for the Boston Red Sox to get serious with their attempts to trade Betts. As is their custom, the Dodgers crafted a creative series of trades to get Betts without surrendering their best prospects and even managed to get some prospect and draft capital in return to soften the blow by trading Kenta Maeda to the Minnesota Twins.

They pulled this off even after there was a holdup due to the Red Sox having concerns over Brusdar Graterol’s medical records, so the Dodgers ended up with him as well. While the Red Sox wanted him as a starter and the consensus is that he profiles as a reliever, the Dodgers are moving him to the bullpen where he is expected to contribute in 2020.

Losing Maeda and Hyun-Jin Ryu will not impact them after the acquisition of Price and shifting Julio Urias to the starting rotation. The Dodgers were wise not to stand pat despite having won 106 games. Change for the sake of change would have been a positive. They went beyond that and acquired one of the five best players in baseball along with a veteran starting pitcher (only paying half his salary) who should benefit from the Dodgers’ defense and bullpen.

Atlanta Braves

(AP Photo/John Minchillo)

After a 97-win season, a second straight National League East title and a second straight loss in the NLDS, the Braves lost third baseman Josh Donaldson to free agency. Starting pitchers Dallas Keuchel and Julio Teheran also departed as free agents.

To replace Donaldson’s offense, the Braves signed Marcell Ozuna and Travis d’Arnaud. To boost their starting pitching and be better prepared for the postseason, they signed battle-tested veteran Cole Hamels. Finally, for the bullpen, they signed former San Francisco Giants closer Will Smith.

Ordinarily, the loss of Donaldson would be a massive hole to fill, but the Braves are relatively well-suited to at least counteract a portion of Donaldson’s lost production on the field. Off the field, it’s slightly more complicated because he is a clubhouse leader and the type who other players look to as a spokesman. Hamels can handle a portion of the off-field aspect. On the field, the Braves need to trust that Austin Riley can build on his up and down rookie year at third base with Johan Camargo as insurance.

D’Arnaud experienced a resurgence in Tampa Bay after the Rays acquired him from the Los Angeles Dodgers who had acquired him from the New York Mets. Injury prone and streaky, the combination of d’Arnaud and Tyler Flowers should be sufficiently productive behind the plate.

Ozuna signed a one-year contract comparable to the one Donaldson signed after 2018. The difference is that Donaldson had been injured the previous year and Ozuna was basically the same player he’s always been. Problematically, the free agent outfield market for 2021 is far stronger than it was in 2020 so Ozuna might not do any better in 2021 than he did in 2020. From the Braves’ perspective, he will be supremely motivated to have a big year, just as Donaldson was.

Chicago White Sox

The White Sox are in the process of moving forward from their long-term rebuild and are now signing proven talent. This is a marked difference from one year ago when they talked about jumping in on Manny Machado or Bryce Harper (or Manny Machado and Bryce Harper) and got neither with reports that their offers were doomed to fail from the start.

Adding Keuchel, Yasmani Grandal, Edwin Encarnacion, Gio Gonzalez, Nomar Mazara and Steve Cishek addresses many of their needs. They were 13th in the American League in runs scored in 2019. Their starting pitching was short behind Lucas Giolito. Their offense and starting rotation have been upgraded.

(Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images)

Grandal is not only one of the best pitch framers in baseball, but he throws well and is an offensive force. Encarnacion is a pure run producer and strong voice in the clubhouse. Keuchel is a craftsman on the mound and positive veteran presence. Their bullpen was one area that was relatively effective in 2019 and is bolstered with Cishek.

Designating a team as having a good off-season does not necessarily mean they need to jump from being bad or mediocre to realistic contention. The 72-89 White Sox will now be better. Whether that means contention hinges not on their free agent and trade acquisitions, but on the players who were already on the roster and in the high minors.

In the American League Central with the Kansas City Royals and Detroit Tigers still in the recesses of their own rebuilds, the White Sox should have a certain number of accruable wins to hover around the fringes of the Wild Card race. They have the right to expect an improvement of 10 wins. After that, their chances of getting from 82 to 87-90 will come down to luck and what they can do at mid-season.

The Cleveland Indians are slightly weaker than they have been in recent years. The Twins added Donaldson to a team that won 100 games. A 41-16 record against the White Sox, Royals and Tigers helped them achieve that number. They and the rest of the American League will not be bludgeoning the White Sox to that degree anymore.

5 Year Old Killed by Family Pit Bull

On February 10th the 12 year old pit bull of a family in California killed the 5-year old of the family. Per the babysitter, a cousin of the child, they left the room to grab a video game controller and came back to the Pit Bull holding onto the child by the neck, refusing to let go. The child has since died from the injuries. The family never expected this, stating that they have had the dog for 12 years and have never had any incidents before. The cousin of the victim said in a statement: “He was not a vicious dog, but how he snapped, we don’t understand”

Read more on the story here

Paramedics were called but were unable to save the child

The dog has been taken into custody by Animal Control

Denver, Colorado is lifting the 30 year old ban on Pit Bulls

A man in Massachusetts accidentally killed his neighbor with a crossbow while trying to save him from a Pit Bull attack