Another great article Wayde. Huawai seems shady as hell, so I agree its not a bad idea to limit their access to US markets.
Thanks for the kind words.
Personally, I wouldn't buy anything Huawei, and they are distributed where I live here in Canada. I agree that they're shady as truck.
Unfortunately, Canada is still doing business with Huawei on all levels as far as I know, despite the fact that there's a low-level legal war between Canada and China right now that's even more underhanded than the US trade war with China.
The Canadian government arrested a Huawei executive on behalf of the US in a legally required extradition under international law. China has told Canada that it wants the exec released. But that's not how it works, Canada is simply following international law, only the American government could release her. She was arrested for doing business with Iran which I guess breaks the US sanctions against Iran to assist in propping up that state.
Since Canada refused to release that Huawei exec, China has been going hog wild arresting Canadian business-people operating in China on mostly false charges. They've even started handing out death sentences for some shady charges. That one drug dealer notwithstanding, I think the Canadian who was caught shipping Chinese opioids to Australia did indeed break a law that carries a legit death sentence in China. But there are others who, as far as anyone knows, were just doing business over there and not drug dealing or doing anything specifically illegal.
I think most Canadians found it insulting to be seeing Huawei ads during the NHL playoffs this year, including a big Huawei logo in front of the desk of hockey the commentators during the period breaks. Huawei had become a major advertiser for Hockey Night in Canada just before the "troubles" began. The ad contracts were already in place. It was kind-of ironic to see a blurb for a CBC news story coming up after the game about how China has arrested yet another random Canadian businessman, all because of Huawei. Then seeing a Hauwei ad.
I don't completely understand how extradition works, but the arrest occurred months ago, so I would think she wouldn't even be in Canadian custody anymore. So, I don't think Canada "can" let her go. I'm not sure why she'd languish in custody in a Canadian federal holding cell for months? I mean, wouldn't the Americans take her from there?
It's pretty dirty underhanded stuff. I think Trump is right to do something about trade with China. How can a first world nation offshore manufacturing to a country that still holds slaves and has hospitals to harvest bodyparts of people deemed enemies of the state? There needs to be coherent human rights and environmental standards for anything manufactured for first-world consumption. Even if it increases the cost. Lord knows we could live with a lot less of the Made in China garbage we buy from Wal-Mart. Especially in consumer electronics.