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2021 m. vasario 24 d., trečiadienis

Only our enemies, the Chinese, benefit from the destruction of the Lithuanian countryside

 

 Our enemy is China, because China poses a great threat to the only force that protects us, America. We understand this: 

"China underestimated the "Russia factor," said Andreea Brinza, vice president of Bucharest-based think tank the Romanian Institute for the Study of the Asia-Pacific. European countries dominated by Moscow during the Cold War have lingering strategic concerns, and as most of them rely on U.S. security guarantees, they want to show which side they are taking in trade disputes between Washington and Beijing, she said.

"We are simply respecting the strategic choices we've made: our partnership with the U.S., NATO and EU membership," said Romanian Deputy Prime Minister Dan Barna of his country's cooling toward China. The government said this month that it would tighten public-procurement rules, effectively banning Chinese companies, after blocking Chinese participation in the country's 5G rollout and in refurbishing a nuclear-power plant last year." [1]

 Unfortunately, we are important suppliers of wheat to these enemies of ours. We do not have the conditions to grow the wheat, therefore we pour only chemicals in Lithuanian fields. Such mass production destroys the Lithuanian soil, which is the basis of rural existence. We do not even get decent taxes on wheat exports to China. Only large farmers buy expensive toys - luxury cars, which annoy everyone in Lithuania and demoralize people. Lithuanian village is sacrificed for food security of our enemies - Chinese:

"For the Bulgarian and Lithuanian cases, their increased export figures can be associated with the China. The increased imports of cereals from Bulgaria (maize) and Lithuania (wheat) was a result of China’s lifting of trade barriers to importing these two cereals from these countries. The agreements were concluded during the “17+1” summit in 2019. A sharp increase of Chinese imports has been observed since August 2019, making Lithuania and Bulgaria the second and third largest suppliers of cereals to China in 2019, respectively. As such, the increase in Chinese imports from these countries can be seen as a continuity of this tendency."


1. World News: Europe Cools on Beijing Investments
Michaels, Daniel; Pop, Valentina. Wall Street Journal, Eastern edition; New York, N.Y. [New York, N.Y]24 Feb 2021: A.9. 


 


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