(They almost pushed Indonesia there too, but managed to NOT piss off ASEAN's biggest country). In 5 years, they have pushed Australia, Japan, Philippines and S Korea deep into America's corner. So I guess China decided to help by levelling the playing field for the US. Of course, they didn't believe it would happen so much that they threatened all manners of retaliation if it did. I am leading Singapore AI-Robotics Initiative for our next-generation Singaporeans □ do support my efforts to grow Singapore's Economy and anchor this new Industry Revolution 5.0 □įirst up, they (China) didn't believe that shutting out China would work. This is why I have said - Artificial Intelligence with Autonomous Robotics Technology is Industry 5.0 and it will create Jobs of the FutureNow by looking at the FuturePast. If Singapore can demonstrate this can be done, Tesla can build any Factory in any Country of the Developed World with near full Automation. In fact, Singapore has already starting doing so, with our 1st Major Final Assembly since the massive CRT production days in the late 1980s - The Hyundai All-Battery Electric Car at Jurong Innovation District with all key components coming out of Korea or China, Finally Assembled in Singapore or Made in Singapore with a high percentage of other local components and process input. We will use Artificial Intelligence with Autonomous Robotics Technology alongside our human Technicians to do Final Assembly. Certainly, no country can do that.Īfter 20-years and the next 10-years, we will do the reverse. Their lines were very manual with young operators. In the past, China has millions of operators queuing outside Factories ready to work daily. You may ask me, this is too expensive for any home country to do Manufacturing, especially final assembly line. While China will continue to ship commodity parts and components. I am seeing the likely reverse, final assemblies will start or have already begun shifting out of China, with components staying behind.įor the next 10-years, various countries will opt to setup final assembly lines with government subsidies and create jobs, outside of China. During the transition, we still managed to hold final assembly lines with components done the shifting. Within 2 decades or so, everything went China. For those might know Singapore was once upon a time the largest CRT TV manufacturer in this part of the World. President Bill Clinton between 19, the World witnessed the most profound shift in Manufacturing as Globalization enabled by the Internet.Īt that time, new but now old business models were developed to achieve viable outsourcing. Of course it can work, everything is reversible. But what is at stake is foreign investor confidence and sustained growth, two things which Thailand has lacked over the past decade and which could remain elusive if the ex-generals decide to pull the trigger. Ultimately, the incumbent still has many ways to game the political system and return to power. In sum, the opposition is not yet dead, and the incumbent is running out of ideas to engineer its preferred outcome. □ Meanwhile, a senator has suggested having a discussion on Section 112 - perhaps opening the door on a possible compromise with MFP? Granted, only 19 senators have said they would back Pita, but a brokered deal on Section 112 could add to those numbers. It is also likely that the opposition would win back those 30 seats in a re-vote. But it would not give the incumbent any advantage. Sure, it would make the opposition's task of conquering the prime ministerial vote a lot harder. They would still have 280 seats, over the incumbent's 170-odd seats. ❌ Neither will the possible disqualification of all 30 MP-elects from the opposition deprive the opposition of a simple majority. iTV has come out to state that it's no longer operating as a media business, while Anutin has distanced the BJT from what appears to be a quickly unravelling plot by a BJT candidate against Pita. □Perceived attempts to discredit Pita are also not exactly succeeding. But it goes to show the kind of unforgiving scrutiny the EC is under and the discernment it needs to show if it is to rescue some of its legitimacy. Of course, you only need one of them to land to unravel the MFP. It could also have accepted a slew of petitions against Pita by a ruling coalition member, but chose to throw most of them out. The EC is feeling the heat over public criticisms of its dithering, and so is trying to appease discontent by imposing its own deadline to rule on Pita's case. □Pita is also getting a bit closer to it. To be clear, Pita is still leagues away from the prime ministerial post that he has laid his eyes on.
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