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【分享】成就时代 歌声传奇
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【分享】成就时代 歌声传奇# Music - 天籁之音
n*p
1
女儿快三岁了, 中文好像不太顶,孩她妈决定多多熏陶她一下。
妈妈说:“来,跟妈妈念,大珠小珠落玉盘。”
女儿不假思索的说:“Piggies swing over 盘子。”
妈妈立马倒地。
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B*1
2
王健林喊话川普:敢任性 小心美国2万人没饭吃
近日企业领袖年会上王健林谈起了接班人问题,提到王思聪并不想接班,王健林感慨的说
:“年轻人有自己的想法,并不想过我这样的生活”。这位往日说出一个亿小目标的首富
,面对自己的儿子也颇感无奈。有趣的是,在当天王健林又霸气的语出惊人了,这一次对
象是——特朗普。
众所周知,特朗普在当选美国总统后就引发众多企业家恐慌了,这不仅仅包括硅谷的大佬
,国内如马云等涉及美国市场的中国企业家也关心特朗普的经济政策。在当天被问及特
朗普当选是否会影响万达在美投资的问题时,首富王健林就隔空喊话川普:警告特朗普如
果政策乱来,抑制中国公司在美投资的行动都有可能使万达在美雇佣的两万名雇员丢掉
饭碗。
王健林还是那么霸气外露,按照他的意思是,川普若是敢任性,那得小心美国2万人没饭吃
...
王健林当时原话说:“我在美国投了一百亿美金,有两万多员工,弄得不好这两万人就没
饭吃。别的不管,起码在影视产业上,你得想明白,英语片就是靠中国市场在增长。”
并且请美国电影协会主席Christopher Dodd将上述意思转达特朗普。
今年万达在好莱坞疯狂的买买买收购表明了王健林在影视娱乐方面的野心,目前万达旗
下AMC娱乐控股公司收购Carmike Cinemas Inc.的交易就在紧张进行中,一旦完成,以后
万达就成为了美国好莱坞电影的话事人了,排不排片得看王健林的眼色,毕竟是美国最大
连锁影院的所有权人。
万达在好莱坞的一系列收购已经引起了美国议员的恐慌,所以外界都关注特朗普上台会
不会针对万达。
其实王健林早在上个月就层表示:他并不担心特朗普当选。
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j*e
3
向大家推荐。写的真好。
How Immigrant Entrepreneurs Turbocharge U.S. Trade
While skilled immigrants make America smarter, richer and more influential,
the process for obtaining a work visa is dismayingly slow, capricious and
humiliating.

By ROBERT GUEST
I once asked the boss of Tata Consulting Services, a gigantic Indian IT firm
, how many of his top executives had worked or studied abroad. He replied: "
All of them."
The world's most talented people are exceptionally mobile. When they move to
America, they make it smarter, and that's not just because they are smart.
It is also because migration creates connections.
A couple of generations ago, immigrants might sail to America and never see
their old friends again. Today, they can text their brothers, wire money to
their business partners, and fly back home regularly.
So they form networks. Brainy Indians in Silicon Valley natter constantly
with brainy Indians in Bangalore. Brainy Chinese and Peruvians do likewise.
Diaspora networks speed the flow of ideas across borders. And this has far-
reaching consequences.
It turbocharges trade. Immigrants often start companies that are
multinational from day one. Consider the story of Mei Xu. She was born in
China during the Cultural Revolution. Her childhood memories are of being
locked in a small room while her parents were harangued by a Maoist mob for
being "bourgeois."
Now she lives in suburban Maryland and runs an ocean-straddling business. It
started when she spotted a gap in the American market for fancy candles.
She designed them herself and persuaded her sister in China to set up a
factory to make them. Now her firm, Pacific Trade International, grosses $
100 million a year.
Her success depends on having a foot in both countries. She understands
American tastes. And she has contacts in China, without which she would
struggle to get anything done.
Contacts are crucial in emerging markets, because the rule of law is
typically weak. If you can't rely on the courts to enforce contracts, you
need to know whom you can trust. William Kerr of Harvard Business School has
shown that American firms that hire immigrants find it easier to do
business with those immigrants' countries of origin.
Enlarge Image
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guest
Getty Images
This matters for the United States: Most of the growth in the global economy
is in emerging markets. And the diaspora effect is very large. For example,
an estimated 70% of the world's foreign direct investment in China passes
through ethnic Chinese who live outside mainland China.
Migrant networks accelerate the spread of technology, too. Immigrant
researchers in America constantly bounce ideas off their chums back home. As
these ideas bounce back and forth, they evolve.
For example, three Indian-American engineers had the idea of adapting the
cooling technology from a computer to cool a refrigerator. Through a
personal introduction, their firm in Texas, Sheetak Inc., linked up with
Godrej & Boyce, an appliance manufacturer in Mumbai. Together, they
developed a fridge that costs only $70.
Indian and Chinese consumers demand ultra-cheap products. Local engineers
strain every brain cell to invent such "frugal" products, which are often an
order of magnitude cheaper than their Western equivalents. We're talking
about $300 prefabricated houses and $1,800 heart operations.
If America wants to tap the gusher of innovation that is starting to come
out of emerging markets, it has to keep letting in immigrants from those
places. Some will stay; others will eventually go home. Either way, they
will keep ideas flowing through America. A study by the Kauffman Foundation
found that two-thirds of Indian entrepreneurs who move back to India from
America maintain at least monthly contact with their former colleagues in
the U.S. Chinese returnees are nearly as chatty.
Immigrants also provide America with an army of unofficial diplomats,
recruiters and deal-brokers. When they visit the countries where they were
born, they may grumble about American foreign policy. But they also talk
about their well-paid jobs, their amiable neighbors, and the vibrancy of
American churches.
And immigrants often absorb and spread American ideals. The opening of the
Indian economy in 1991 was partly inspired by the success of Indians living
abroad. (During the closed era, a lawmaker cheekily asked Indira Gandhi: "
Can the prime minister explain why Indians seem to thrive economically under
every government in the world except her own?")
Today, students from China who come to America cannot help noticing that the
air is cleaner, the people are richer, and the political system allows
people to choose a new government without bloodshed.
Hundreds of thousands of foreign-educated Chinese, known as "sea turtles,"
have moved back to China in the past decade. They are the elite—bright
enough to win scholarships or rich enough to pay American college fees. Many
are now highly influential. They dominate the Chinese technology industry,
Chinese universities and the think tanks that advise the government in
Beijing. They are also steadily rising within the Communist Party.
Cheng Li of the Brookings Institution calculates that sea turtles were 6% of
the Communist Party's central committee in 2002. When the next generation
of leaders takes over in 2012, he expects, they will be 15%-17%. Few sea
turtles return home loudly proclaiming the merits of democracy—that would
be career suicide. But China's eventual transition to one-person, one-vote
will surely come sooner, and more smoothly, because such a high proportion
of the Chinese elite have seen firsthand how free societies work.
While skilled immigrants make America smarter, richer and more influential,
the process for obtaining a work visa is dismayingly slow, capricious and
humiliating. The political debate in the United States about immigration
focuses almost entirely on keeping unskilled Mexicans out, which is odd,
since they stopped coming in large numbers when the construction industry
crashed in 2008.
Skilled migrants have choices. Canada, Australia and New Zealand welcome
them. America, by contrast, lets them come to study and then throws them out
when they graduate. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg calls this "
national suicide." He is right. For America to shut out immigrants is like
Saudi Arabia setting fire to its oil wells.
Mr. Guest is business editor at the Economist. His new book is "Borderless
Economics: Chinese Sea Turtles, Indian Fridges and the New Fruits of Global
Capitalism" (Palgrave Macmillan).
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w*s
4
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x*t
5
LOL
zan quick translation!
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c*s
6
re

,
firm
"
to

【在 j**********e 的大作中提到】
: 向大家推荐。写的真好。
: How Immigrant Entrepreneurs Turbocharge U.S. Trade
: While skilled immigrants make America smarter, richer and more influential,
: the process for obtaining a work visa is dismayingly slow, capricious and
: humiliating.
:
: By ROBERT GUEST
: I once asked the boss of Tata Consulting Services, a gigantic Indian IT firm
: , how many of his top executives had worked or studied abroad. He replied: "
: All of them."

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z*n
7
赞,殷秀梅美声和民歌完美组合。。。赞“美的声音”,“洋为中用”。。

【在 w***s 的大作中提到】

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c*u
8
haha!有才!

【在 n***p 的大作中提到】
: 女儿快三岁了, 中文好像不太顶,孩她妈决定多多熏陶她一下。
: 妈妈说:“来,跟妈妈念,大珠小珠落玉盘。”
: 女儿不假思索的说:“Piggies swing over 盘子。”
: 妈妈立马倒地。

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p*n
9
good one
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a*e
10
快三岁了英语这么棒!其实中文也很棒

【在 n***p 的大作中提到】
: 女儿快三岁了, 中文好像不太顶,孩她妈决定多多熏陶她一下。
: 妈妈说:“来,跟妈妈念,大珠小珠落玉盘。”
: 女儿不假思索的说:“Piggies swing over 盘子。”
: 妈妈立马倒地。

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a*t
11
翻译的真好啊
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a*y
12
太牛了!!!

【在 n***p 的大作中提到】
: 女儿快三岁了, 中文好像不太顶,孩她妈决定多多熏陶她一下。
: 妈妈说:“来,跟妈妈念,大珠小珠落玉盘。”
: 女儿不假思索的说:“Piggies swing over 盘子。”
: 妈妈立马倒地。

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p*i
13
这个太牛了
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l*a
14
有才
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m*r
15
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t*f
16
太有才了
我刚才测试了下我娃,跟妈妈念:大珠小珠落玉盘
我娃立刻抱起了自己的毛绒小猪说:here she is.
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h*e
17
你们英语很强大的说。

【在 t**f 的大作中提到】
: 太有才了
: 我刚才测试了下我娃,跟妈妈念:大珠小珠落玉盘
: 我娃立刻抱起了自己的毛绒小猪说:here she is.

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t*f
18
我娃和LZ娃年龄差不多,水平可比人家差远了

【在 h*********e 的大作中提到】
: 你们英语很强大的说。
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v*n
19
牛啊!我儿子估计3岁连piggies都不会说。

【在 n***p 的大作中提到】
: 女儿快三岁了, 中文好像不太顶,孩她妈决定多多熏陶她一下。
: 妈妈说:“来,跟妈妈念,大珠小珠落玉盘。”
: 女儿不假思索的说:“Piggies swing over 盘子。”
: 妈妈立马倒地。

avatar
t*e
20
哈哈哈, 赞一下翻译。

【在 n***p 的大作中提到】
: 女儿快三岁了, 中文好像不太顶,孩她妈决定多多熏陶她一下。
: 妈妈说:“来,跟妈妈念,大珠小珠落玉盘。”
: 女儿不假思索的说:“Piggies swing over 盘子。”
: 妈妈立马倒地。

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