Tuesday, September 1, 2015

As Google Prepared To Exit China, State Department Pushed For Expo Sponsorship

Months before the company announced it would shutter its Chinese search site, U.S. government officials encouraged it to participate in the Expo 2010 fair in Shanghai.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton greets Haibao, the mascot of the Shanghai World Expo 2010.

Saul Loeb / AFP / Getty Images

Days before Google announced it was preparing to shutter much of its Chinese business due to ongoing cyber attacks, Hillary Clinton and her State Department staff were pitching the company on becoming a corporate co-sponsor of the U.S. pavilion at the upcoming Expo 2010 in Shanghai.

"I noticed on your schedule that you are meeting with a number of tech CEO's this evening," Kris Balderston, a State Department staffer, wrote to Clinton in January, 2010. "Google should be an obvious co-sponsor of the USA Pavilion and they have consistently pushed us off."

"Although they bring up [intellectual property] issues as a reason not to participate, the Chinese frequently note they do a lot of business in China," wrote Balderston, a former Clinton Senate aide who followed her to the State Department to work on global partnerships.

It appears Clinton attempted, unsuccessfully, to sell the idea of sponsoring the Shanghai pavilion to Google. "I don't think I made any progress," she said in an email to Balderston three days later. "What will it mean if we can't raise the remaining $? Where can can we try?"

The conversation was one of many made public by the latest tranche of Clinton emails released by the State Department.

Five days after Balderston initially wrote to Clinton, Google published a blog post detailing what it said was "a highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China that resulted in the theft of intellectual property from Google."

The company said that it had evidence "to suggest that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists." In response to the attacks, Google said it was reconsidering its Chinese operations, and that "this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China."

A few months later, in March 2010, the company said it would essentially withdraw from the Chinese search market, redirecting its Chinese users to its uncensored Hong Kong website. Google first launched a Chinese version in 2006 and as part of the launch, it agreed to censor search results on the local site.

Google did not respond to a request for comment, and the State Department declined to comment on the emails.

In an exchange following his initial message, Balderston wrote that "Google has been weird about this whole deal" regarding sponsoring the U.S. pavilion in China.

Fundraising continued unabated, and the more than $60 million needed for the pavilion was raised with no direct federal government money. Balderston had led the government-backed effort since early 2009 according to Jonathan Allen and Amie Parnes book HRC, with the State Department keen on an American presence at the Expo. Not building a pavilion, the authors wrote, would be seen by China as "a little less insulting than a boycott of the Olympics but not much."

Eventually the pavilion was able to land heavyweight corporate sponsors like Chevron, General Electric, Disney, Johnson & Johnson, Dow Chemical, and PepsiCo.

While the U.S. World Expo presence was seen as a victory for the Clinton team's ability to raise money from and coordinate with large companies, the exhibit had its critics. Popular Science called the exhibit a "disgrace," noting that in the videos played in the pavilion, after Clinton, President Obama, and some academics talk, "every sound byte is delivered by corporate PR reps, many in logo'd polos, all representing the pavilion's major sponsors." The Los Angeles Times said the pavilion "says little about what makes America, and Americans, special."

Clinton was more upbeat in her remarks opening the pavilion. "There's a famous American movie called Field of Dreams. And in it, the hero, played by Kevin Costner, builds a baseball field at his remote farm," she said after thanking the many corporate sponsors. "During his project which so many people criticize, he keeps hearing 'If you build it, they will come.'"

Balderston's first email to Clinton, sent five days before Google would announce that it believed the Chinese government was trying to access the email accounts of human rights advocates:

Balderston's first email to Clinton, sent five days before Google would announce that it believed the Chinese government was trying to access the email accounts of human rights advocates:

State Department

Balderston's email three days later, accusing Google of being "wierd [sic] about this whole deal":

Balderston's email three days later, accusing Google of being "wierd [sic] about this whole deal":

State Department


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Meet Kim Davis, The Woman Denying Same-Sex Couples Marriage In Kentucky

Timothy D. Easley / AP

Upon her election to the role of Rowan County Clerk in November 2014, Kim Davis said she felt "humbled" and "blessed." Speaking to the Morehead News, she made three promises: "I promise to each and every one that I will be the very best working clerk that I can be and will be a good steward of their tax dollars and follow the statutes of this office to the letter.”

Davis' willingness, or unwillingness, to follow those statutes are now the subject of intense national focus. She has refused on religious grounds to grant marriage licenses -- to both same-sex or opposite-sex couples -- in the wake of June's historic Supreme Court decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide.

On Tuesday, after the Supreme Court denied her request to put on hold a judicial order that she end her “no marriage licenses” policy, she still continued to turn away couples.

"Under whose authority are you not issuing marriage licenses?" a local gay man seeking to marry asked Davis.

Turning directly to face him and look into his eyes, she sternly replied, "under authority."

Signing marriage licenses is one of the main duties for the county clerk. But Davis, a 49-year-old Apostolic Christian, objects to having to put her name to documents that recognize same-sex marriages.

The Apostolic Christian Church was founded in the 1830s by Swiss man Samuel Froehlich, who split from his country's state church to form the Evangelical Baptist Church. After the religion arrived in the U.S. in the late 1840s, it eventually became known as the Apostolic Christian Church. Followers believe in a highly literal interpretation of the Bible as "the inspired and infallible Word of God to man."

For Apostolic Christians, traditional gender divides are clear. "Men should look masculine and women should look feminine," the church says. Women are encouraged to have their "long hair modestly arranged" and are discouraged from wearing make-up or jewelry.

"Marriage is a lifelong union ordained of God in which a man and a woman of like mind, faith, and fellowship are united in the Lord in Holy Matrimony," according to the Apostolic Statement of Faith. "Divorce is rare," according to the church.

According to Rowan County records obtained by BuzzFeed News, Davis has been divorced three times. When she married Joe Davis on Aug. 24, 2009, it was her fourth marriage – and her second to Joe, whom she previously married on the same day 13 years earlier. After her first marriage to Dwain Wallace in 1984, she married Thomas McIntyre Jr. in 2007 in between her marriages to Joe.

Davis says her religious convictions remain strong. In July she testified in court that she had sought out God, prayed, and fasted as she contemplated whether she would sign marriage licenses for same-sex couples – before ultimately concluding she would not. “If I say they are authorized, I’m saying I agree with it, and I can’t,” Davis told the court.

Timothy D. Easley / AP

Since losing in trial court, the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals and the United States Supreme Court have both rejected requests from Davis to keep her "no marriages licenses" policy in place while she appeals the decision. “In light of the binding holding of Obergefell," the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals wrote, "it cannot be defensibly argued that the holder of the Rowan County Clerk’s office, apart from who personally occupies that office, may decline to act in conformity with the United States Constitution as interpreted by a dispositive holding of the United States Supreme Court."

While Davis believes her signing same-sex marriage licenses would conflict with her Apostolic faith, her religion also preaches that "governmental authority is [to be] respected and obeyed."

Davis's lawyer didn't return a request for comment. In a statement released Tuesday, she said, "some people have said I should resign, but I have done my job well." She added, "I never imagined a day like this would come, where I would be asked to violate a central teaching of Scripture and of Jesus Himself regarding marriage. To issue a marriage license which conflicts with God’s definition of marriage, with my name affixed to the certificate, would violate my conscience."

Davis has worked as a clerk in Rowan County for more than 25 years. In May 2014 – while serving as chief deputy in the clerk's office – she narrowly won the Democratic nomination for the top job by 23 votes.

Davis with her mother, former Rowan County Clerk Jean Bailey.

Facebook

“The public is my boss," she told the Morehead News during last year's general election. "Being a public servant is ingrained in me and I want continue providing the high level of customer service we do while treating people with respect, kindness, and helping them with whatever situation they have.”

Public service is a tradition in her family. When she won last year's general election, she took over from her mother, Jean Bailey, who had served in the job for 37 years.

And Davis's son, Nathan, began working in the Rowan County Clerk's office in January.

During the election, Davis promised voters what she had learned from her mother would ensure a "seamless transition with no break in services" to the citizens of Rowan County. "Licenses, taxes, election-related activities, and all of our other services cannot stop or slow down," she told the Morehead News.

However, she prefaced the promise by acknowledging she couldn't predict what the future would hold: “I am not a politician and I do not make political promises that I may not be able to achieve and I do not think that I know every situation that may happen but I do know how to maintain this office,” she told the newspaper.

“I will continue to be on the front line, ever present, and continue to serve with compassion and dedication.”

Kim Davis' First Marriage License:

Kim Davis' Second Marriage License

Kim Davis' Third Marriage License

Kim Davis' Fourth Marriage License:



SOURCE: BuzzFeed

Markets Tumble Again On Worries About China's Economy

The latest blow to investors’ confidence in China came from a survey of the country’s manufacturing.

Chinafotopress / Getty Images

The latest blow to investors' confidence in China came from a survey of the country's manufacturing, released early Tuesday. The Caixin Purchasing Managers' Index, which measures manufacturing activity in China, "saw the quickest deterioration in operating conditions for over six years in August," the firm Caixin Insight Group said in a release.

"Recent volatilities in global financial markets could weigh down on the real economy, and a pessimistic outlook may become self-fulfilling," said Caixin chief economist He Fan in a statement.

Another measure of China's manufacturing sector, the "official" PMI, also slipped Tuesday to 49.7. Any level below 50 indicates contraction. "This first sub-50 official PMI reading in six months is consistent with the declining Caixin PMI and points to weakening growth momentum in August," analysts from Nomura, an investment bank in Japan, said.


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SOURCE: BuzzFeed