
China Is Not a Developing Country; U.S. Senate Calls for Termination #unitednations #china #news
#chinaforecast
#unitednations #usa #ccp #senate #climatechange #international
The U.S. Senate recently passed an amendment to climate regulations that includes an additional proposal that would require the U.S. State Department to propose to the United Nations to end China's developing country status. Some comments pointed out that the CCP has been playing the card of "developing country" for many years, undermining international rules and conducting unfair competition.
As the world's largest emitter of greenhouse gases, China has long ignored environmental standards, increasing its emissions and investment in coal-fired power plants since the 2015 Paris climate agreement.
In a remarkable move, two senators introduced an additional proposal to incorporate the Kigali Amendment, asking the U.S. Department of State to propose to the U.N. by November 6th that China's "developing country" status be terminated under the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change. The full House unanimously approved the proposal by a vote of 96 to 0.
If the United Nations and the WTO no longer recognize China as a developing country, some of the preferential treatment enjoyed by the Chinese Communist Party will be revoked. China is a country with a huge gap between the rich and the poor, with the super-rich Communist elite on one side and the extremely poor underclass on the other.
According to U.S.-based China observer 張健Zhang Jian "The Chinese Communist Party has exploited a big loophole in the Western democratic system, taking advantage of the goodwill of the developed countries. When it developed, it demonstrated force and military expansion abroad. It has also invaded the world under the banner of the Confucius Institute. It's a cultural invasion, an ideological invasion. Through the Thousand Talents Project, it steals and seizes high technology from overseas."
