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To do business in China, don't be an enemy of the Chinese people

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To do business in China, don't be an enemy of the Chinese people
By Curtis Stone (People's Daily Online) 17:27, February 09, 2018
FOREIGN201802091726000452842008342.jpg


Daimler’s Chairman Dieter Zetsche and Daimler Greater China’s Chairman Hubertus Troika sent a joint letter of apology to the Chinese ambassador in Germany on Wednesday, sincerely apologizing to China for quoting the Dalai Lama in a social media post.

On Monday, Mercedes-Benz posted an advertisement on its Instagram account, with the quote: “Look at situations from all angles, and you will become more open.” Below the picture was the line: “Start your week with a fresh perspective on life from the Dalai Lama.” The post quickly led to an uproar in China, as the Dalai Lama is considered an anti-China separatist.

The next day, Mercedes-Benz issued an apology on Sino Weibo, China’s Twitter-like service, saying the post contained an “extremely wrong message,” and vowed that it would never happen again. That night, People’s Daily Online published a commentary that called Mercedes-Benz’s an “enemy of the Chinese people,” saying the apology lacked sincerity.

As the editorial argued, the ill-intentioned post was not only offensive, but it challenged the Chinese people. “Needless to say, it was disgusting,” it said. “It is worth asking why, even before the dust from Marriott International has settled, international companies dare play with fire.”

As we all know, this is not the first time an international company has landed in hot water for anti-China actions. Earlier this year, Marriott International mistakenly labeled Tibet and other parts of Chinese territory as separate countries, liked a pro-Tibet independence group on social media, and provided information on its website that informed travelers that Tibet was a separate country with “bad relations” with Beijing.

“Whoever wrote the Instagram message knew exactly what they were doing,” a reader commented on People’s Daily Online. On both Chinese and English-language websites, Chinese people boiled over with anger and called for more actions to prevent China from becoming a punching-bag of the West.

While some in the West have criticized the response as an overreaction and an attack on free speech, we should put ourselves in the shoes of the Chinese people. In recent history, China suffered the humiliation of foreign invasion and aggression. We should understand that the Chinese people cherish state sovereignty and territorial integrity and unity of the nation very much. Mercedes-Benz’s post hurt the feelings of Chinese people.

The simple truth is that China’s core interests cannot be challenged, and the Dalai Lama is widely viewed as a dangerous separatist. As the editorial noted, this puts the company squarely against China. “Holding the smelly feet of the Dalai Lama makes you the enemy of the Chinese people.”

As a business, Mercedes-Benz should strive for excellence and its actions should match its words on how economic success and social responsibility go hand in hand. How would Germany feel if a country’s company praised Hitler and widely spread his “famous sayings,” or the rhetoric of separatist forces in Germany?

Later, Daimler sincerely apologized to the Chinese people and said it has no intention of questioning or challenging China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and that it offers no support of any kind to anti-China separatist forces, which is welcome news. However, there are many Chinese people who still feel that the apology alone is not enough to fix the damage as well as discourage other international companies from challenging China’s core interests.

“A simple apology is not enough. The low cost will just encourage more international companies to challenge [China’s core interests],” said a net user on the WeChat account of People’s Daily Online.

Using the words of the Dalai Lama to sell a luxury car, Mercedes-Benz said to “look at situations from all angles, and you will become more open.” However, China’s core interests cannot be challenged from any angle. To be fair, the recent mistakes might not be deliberate attempts to insult the Chinese people or split China, but international companies need to better understand China. This is the message that the Chinese people are trying to get across to international companies: Foreign friends are welcome to do business in China, but there is no room for enemies of the Chinese people.
 
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I hope that CCP can get along with Dalai Lama.

Past is already the past. There's no use to keep the confrontation last forever. If KMT can get along with CCP, why can't Dalai Lama too?

But of course, Dalai Lama should be more understand about China, as well as China way of democracy, that able to bring +85% satisfaction compare with others.
 
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But of course, Dalai Lama should be more understand about China, as well as China way of democracy, that able to bring +85% satisfaction compare with others.
Don't be fooled, he wants Joshua Wong Hong Kong style which is unacceptable. Few years back he already embarrass Xi, China right now rather waits for him to die.
 
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Knock wrong door, you will get answered. Mercedes should keep all that bull for German or EU only, because they love that stuff lol. Dalai can say anything he want, he will get old and get old each years, yet he still stuck in his position right now.
 
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Don't be fooled, he wants Joshua Wong Hong Kong style which is unacceptable. Few years back he already embarrass Xi, China right now rather waits for him to die.

Dalai Lama the Trojan horse.

It's better if he govern south Tibet.

But the last I read the news about, it seems the region is so backward and ignored by Dalai Lama.

There's even no electricity and asphalt road.
 
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Dalai Lama the Trojan horse.

It's better if he govern south Tibet.

But the last I read the news about, it seems the region is so backward and ignored by Dalai Lama.

There's even no electricity and asphalt road.

Well, maybe he has already has relinquish his right over the South Tibet to India, to pay his daily necessity and security. That's way they call it Arucanal Pradesh, and not Tibet. Or Dalai Lhama is only the Indian's puppet to weakened China. If he's truly a Tibet's patriot, he won't allow India to rule over a piece of his Kingdom.
 
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Good excuse for the Chinese people to buy only domestic products. Chinese patriots should shun Western products and buy only Chinese brands. Even if some domestic brands are not quite up to Western ones yet, still buy Chinese to help develop Chinese brands and improve domestic market.
 
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I hope that CCP can get along with Dalai Lama.

Past is already the past. There's no use to keep the confrontation last forever. If KMT can get along with CCP, why can't Dalai Lama too?

But of course, Dalai Lama should be more understand about China, as well as China way of democracy, that able to bring +85% satisfaction compare with others.
Would Indonesia accept an independent Chinese controlled island in indonesia?
 
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To do business in China, don't be an enemy of the Chinese people
By Curtis Stone (People's Daily Online) 17:27, February 09, 2018
FOREIGN201802091726000452842008342.jpg


Daimler’s Chairman Dieter Zetsche and Daimler Greater China’s Chairman Hubertus Troika sent a joint letter of apology to the Chinese ambassador in Germany on Wednesday, sincerely apologizing to China for quoting the Dalai Lama in a social media post.

On Monday, Mercedes-Benz posted an advertisement on its Instagram account, with the quote: “Look at situations from all angles, and you will become more open.” Below the picture was the line: “Start your week with a fresh perspective on life from the Dalai Lama.” The post quickly led to an uproar in China, as the Dalai Lama is considered an anti-China separatist.

The next day, Mercedes-Benz issued an apology on Sino Weibo, China’s Twitter-like service, saying the post contained an “extremely wrong message,” and vowed that it would never happen again. That night, People’s Daily Online published a commentary that called Mercedes-Benz’s an “enemy of the Chinese people,” saying the apology lacked sincerity.

As the editorial argued, the ill-intentioned post was not only offensive, but it challenged the Chinese people. “Needless to say, it was disgusting,” it said. “It is worth asking why, even before the dust from Marriott International has settled, international companies dare play with fire.”

As we all know, this is not the first time an international company has landed in hot water for anti-China actions. Earlier this year, Marriott International mistakenly labeled Tibet and other parts of Chinese territory as separate countries, liked a pro-Tibet independence group on social media, and provided information on its website that informed travelers that Tibet was a separate country with “bad relations” with Beijing.

“Whoever wrote the Instagram message knew exactly what they were doing,” a reader commented on People’s Daily Online. On both Chinese and English-language websites, Chinese people boiled over with anger and called for more actions to prevent China from becoming a punching-bag of the West.

While some in the West have criticized the response as an overreaction and an attack on free speech, we should put ourselves in the shoes of the Chinese people. In recent history, China suffered the humiliation of foreign invasion and aggression. We should understand that the Chinese people cherish state sovereignty and territorial integrity and unity of the nation very much. Mercedes-Benz’s post hurt the feelings of Chinese people.

The simple truth is that China’s core interests cannot be challenged, and the Dalai Lama is widely viewed as a dangerous separatist. As the editorial noted, this puts the company squarely against China. “Holding the smelly feet of the Dalai Lama makes you the enemy of the Chinese people.”

As a business, Mercedes-Benz should strive for excellence and its actions should match its words on how economic success and social responsibility go hand in hand. How would Germany feel if a country’s company praised Hitler and widely spread his “famous sayings,” or the rhetoric of separatist forces in Germany?

Later, Daimler sincerely apologized to the Chinese people and said it has no intention of questioning or challenging China’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and that it offers no support of any kind to anti-China separatist forces, which is welcome news. However, there are many Chinese people who still feel that the apology alone is not enough to fix the damage as well as discourage other international companies from challenging China’s core interests.

“A simple apology is not enough. The low cost will just encourage more international companies to challenge [China’s core interests],” said a net user on the WeChat account of People’s Daily Online.

Using the words of the Dalai Lama to sell a luxury car, Mercedes-Benz said to “look at situations from all angles, and you will become more open.” However, China’s core interests cannot be challenged from any angle. To be fair, the recent mistakes might not be deliberate attempts to insult the Chinese people or split China, but international companies need to better understand China. This is the message that the Chinese people are trying to get across to international companies: Foreign friends are welcome to do business in China, but there is no room for enemies of the Chinese people.
I've posted in another similar thread that western companies will keep on doing this, offer a fake apology until Chinese government do something to really hurt their bottom line
 
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