Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
He should be forced to pay back every single grant dollar her took.
Why? The government got the resulting benefits of any research they funded.
You've clearly never done research in academia. The USG can fund researchers to do all of the hard foundational level work, and then just as projects start to become mature enough to start paying off, the Chinese govt will lure them away where they will take nearly all of the rewards. Your assumption is often wrong.
I am in research field and manages a lot of R&D funding. This is happening more than people realize and there is a significant amount of IP theft(read several hundreds of B$s) that happens every year from China. This needs to stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How about Americans who get college paid for and then go to work in other countries and for other countries? Are they hypocrites?
Way to compare apples to oranges. Other countries have specific scholarship programs intended for anyone, including people who are not citizens. They also have scholarship programs intended for their own citizens. It'd be like a German citizen in Germany enjoying all of the scholarship programs for German citizens only, yet going out an competing for Russia.
Gu enjoys everything about the US, yet enriches herself competing for China. The hypocrisy is truly astounding. It's funny how progressives will defend her when she competes for the country systematically wiping out Uyghurs while the same progressives will chastise China over the issue. You can't have it both ways.
Wtf are you talking about? No one I know who is a progressive is “defending” Gu. Frankly, I find her participation on behalf of China and her plastic surgery to be really gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
He should be forced to pay back every single grant dollar her took.
Why? The government got the resulting benefits of any research they funded.
You've clearly never done research in academia. The USG can fund researchers to do all of the hard foundational level work, and then just as projects start to become mature enough to start paying off, the Chinese govt will lure them away where they will take nearly all of the rewards. Your assumption is often wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
She can reclaim her US citizenship, I believe. She may not be a great skier but she may be better than any China has to offer so it is still a plus for their effort. Interesting re her dad. Also, has she always used "Gu" as her family name or did she drop her father's name to be more Chinese?
Reclaiming US citizenship isn’t some automatic or easy thing. In most cases it’s impossible. She’s now a Chinese citizen. No American anything. That’s gone. China can decide she doesn’t leave China for college and disappear her like Peng and she has no recourse. They can take money she makes or retaliate against her family if she makes headlines for the wrong reasons. An iPhone video of her saying Hong Kong is being handled poorly surfaces, and she’s done.
It not a position I’d want for my daughter. Especially after Peng’s allegations. But I guess if you are a 15 year old Asian American kid, you do what your parents say.
The most hypocritical part about it all is that Gu is a supporter of movements like BLM, yet at the same time competes for a country oppressing many types of ethnic minorities. I mean Stanford really let this walking ball of two faced hypocrisy through their doors? I though academia in the US were supposed to be the last line of defense for western ideology, democracy, and freedom of speech....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
She can reclaim her US citizenship, I believe. She may not be a great skier but she may be better than any China has to offer so it is still a plus for their effort. Interesting re her dad. Also, has she always used "Gu" as her family name or did she drop her father's name to be more Chinese?
Reclaiming US citizenship isn’t some automatic or easy thing. In most cases it’s impossible. She’s now a Chinese citizen. No American anything. That’s gone. China can decide she doesn’t leave China for college and disappear her like Peng and she has no recourse. They can take money she makes or retaliate against her family if she makes headlines for the wrong reasons. An iPhone video of her saying Hong Kong is being handled poorly surfaces, and she’s done.
It not a position I’d want for my daughter. Especially after Peng’s allegations. But I guess if you are a 15 year old Asian American kid, you do what your parents say.
Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
She can reclaim her US citizenship, I believe. She may not be a great skier but she may be better than any China has to offer so it is still a plus for their effort. Interesting re her dad. Also, has she always used "Gu" as her family name or did she drop her father's name to be more Chinese?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
She can reclaim her US citizenship, I believe. She may not be a great skier but she may be better than any China has to offer so it is still a plus for their effort. Interesting re her dad. Also, has she always used "Gu" as her family name or did she drop her father's name to be more Chinese?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
He should be forced to pay back every single grant dollar her took.
Why? The government got the resulting benefits of any research they funded.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?
He should be forced to pay back every single grant dollar her took.
https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/33160624/...elicate-balancing-act-china-us
I feel a little bad for her. She chose to compete for China when she was only 15. And that was a decision with major consequences for the rest of her life. It certainly looks like her mother pressured her to make this decision. She had to renounced her US citizenship and for the rest of her life will have to toe the line China sets. She’s certainly losing endorsement $$$.
I have kids in their late teens. So, I know 15 year olds can be convinced to do stupid stuff. She’s subject to the whims of the Chinese government. So no OP, she doesn’t get all the benefits of being American anymore. Because legally she isn’t American.
Anonymous wrote:
It's rather interesting that Zhu renounced her US citizenship in 2018 to become a Chinese citizenship. Her father who is an award winning scientist in artificial intelligence was working at UCLA, but now he is at Peking University. She is obviously not a great skater so it begs the question . . . did they want her or her father?