@@kevinliu52yeah US over 800 military bases.. china had like 1. These fools watch too much cnn fox, bbc propaganda. Basically selling your soul and doing injustice to our people..
Great report Ken! - I’m so not political, but hear enough to understand in a common sense way what’s going on. If the agreement has been altered by China then there is none. They’re not sounding very popular on the world stage along side their friends from Russia, North Korea and Iran. I’ve had the honor of meeting people from all over the world, many here in Vietnam and have found them to be very sweet kind people. Their government’s not so much. Vietnam should make it clear that their citizens come first not this bullying. I’m an American married to a Vietnamese woman and living here. God forbid this ends up with army’s and tanks, I wouldn’t run to American I’d stay right here and fight by Vietnam’s side. The world is full of tech genius, create a tech war room and push back. Keep up the great work Ken.
you in a bubble world buddy, THE WORLD don't like the west, that's why they forming BRICS, and over 40 countries also want to join. FOR delusionals like you thinking G7 or western countries as some kind of "THE WORLD", you got one weird logic for sure.
Duong, I appreciate your channel that espouses extensive knowledge involving legal matters relating to Viet Nam which has greatly helped out many of us, and most of time, for free. Many people, including me, appreciate that. And I believe you are a good person with a good conscience that's why you took your time to response to me and that's why I decide to take my time to response to you here. The 'truth' is a very subjective term catering to each of our own exposure to the related topic in question. What is the ultimate purpose of consuming news? I believe that the ultimate purpose of consuming news is to objectively understand it and hopefully be able to see the bottom of the truth. How to get to the bottom of the truth is not an easy task since we are surrounded by fakes news, misinformation, disinformation, propaganda ect. So what the hell am I talking here? Well, when presented with news, we should view it in the role of a judge, and not as a lawyer for the plaintiff or the defendant. It's your expertise you know too well that as a judge, we should impartially listen fully to both sides of the stories from both the plaintiff and the defendant. After carefully weighing presented evidence, facts and testimonies from all sides and all sources until which, the judge can finally and objectively make a final judgement, or so we hope🙂. That's a fair and objective way to go about making the right judgement in a court case. The same approach should be taken when consuming news, all news not just news about China. I think that we should be very careful not to fall into the Confirmation Bias trap, meaning we formed a pre-determined notion about something and tend to only look for things that support that notion and completely dismiss any contrarian viewpoints or facts. The US and China are now at loggerheads against each other in all spheres. So if we are only consuming news from Western media, which occupied 97% of total world news outlets, we are only reading and consuming the West narratives and forming our perception based on that. That is not enough. We need to also listen to the viewpoints on the other sides as well and see what they have to say. We need to listen to contrarian viewpoints. We need to listen to viewpoints even that might create cognitive dissonance within us. Only after having an objective take on all sides on a subject matter that we can hopefully come up with a more informed and objective understanding of the matter at hand. As regard to China, a lot of people fan opinions about China have never actually lived or even set foot there. They formed opinion based on one-sided coverage by mainstream media which is prohibitively anti-China. I'm not here to defend China or the US per se. All I'm saying here is that we should strive to objectively consuming news from both sides before concluding something, otherwise we are making an uninformed opinion. There are many expats who actually lived for many years in China that can give a more accurate picture of what's going on in China if you can spare a bit of your time to see what others whom actually lived there have to say. Cheers."
This video has all the hallmarks of fanning anti-China sentiment using classical Vietnamese nationalistic attitude against China, that China has been dominating and controlling Vietnamese to their detriments. When China is selling stuffs cheap, then it's unfair and controlling and wiping out Vietnam home grown businesses, but no solid explanation as to how tings are unfair that cannot be equalized via tariffs -- only just said China is bad bad and bad.
The youtuber has shown his "good conscience" is out the window when China is the topic. The smearing attacks are straight out of US think tank, actually just regurgitate the same scripts. He claimed China is behind all forms of export businesses to Vietnam with intention to dominate and crush the small country. Incredible smearing. But the more he tried to use words to justify, the more irrational disparaging attack is showing. Good thing after all to reveal some hidden dark colors.
No competent professional lawyer would stray into sensitive political issues publicly, and especially one that’s beyond his competency. Would any educated person seek his legal advice knowing he regurgitates half baked propaganda? I’ve come to the conclusion that Ken is a phony. His ability to string a few big English words together in his pidgin English might impress the locals, but we now can see through his shallow understanding of the world.
@Congtrihayankeomut, we find your comment amusing, but you are completely missing the point. This is not about suggesting Vietnam engage in a “trade war” with China like the U.S. What we are exposing is how China’s underhanded tactics-dumping goods below market value, breaking anti-dumping laws, and manipulating local markets-are putting Vietnam in a vulnerable position. Pretending these issues are “out of our league” only shows a lack of understanding of the real economic threat China poses. Vietnam does not need to “jump” into any trade war, but it absolutely needs to protect its own market from China’s economic aggression. Ignoring this is not an option, and we will not be silent about it.
@thomaskim3128, your attempt to discredit us is laughable and reeks of desperation. Let us be clear: we have no problem addressing sensitive geopolitical issues publicly because we deal in facts, not “half-baked propaganda.” Questioning our competency only highlights your inability to engage with the actual points we are making. If you believe that using "big English words" and speaking uncomfortable truths makes us “phony,” then perhaps it is you who lacks the depth to understand the complexity of these issues. We stand by our analysis and will continue to expose China’s economic manipulation and illegal practices, whether it makes you uncomfortable or not. If you are here to attack our credibility, at least try to present an argument with some substance. We are not here to impress anyone-we are here to speak the truth. If you cannot handle that, feel free to keep scrolling.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting the west is saying the same thing about Chinese EVs. However when asked to provide proofs, the west has so far been unable to bring any solid evidences. So can you prove your above accusations since you’re a lawyer and all?
@Congtrihayankeomut, we appreciate your skepticism, but let us be absolutely clear: the evidence of China’s illegal trade practices is well-documented and recognized by numerous international bodies. We are not just throwing around accusations. China has been found guilty of violating anti-dumping laws, engaging in forced technology transfer, and using subsidies to flood foreign markets with cheap goods. This is not “Western propaganda”-these are facts upheld by rulings from the World Trade Organization and other regulatory bodies. See our related video to learn more, as shown by Attorney Ken. If you are truly interested in the evidence, we suggest you look up cases where China has been penalized for these practices, rather than dismissing them without any basis. As for Chinese EVs, we are talking about the broader picture of China’s economic manipulation, not just one industry. Our role as legal professionals is to analyze and expose these realities, not to sugarcoat them. So, before questioning our credibility, we encourage you to do a bit more research. We stand by our statements, and we have the evidence to back them up. If you are unwilling to see it, that is on you, not on us.
recently came back from Vietnam, the prices the sellers are trying to charge tourists is highway robbery, fake soccer jerseys they want almost as much as we pay for genuine? It is impossible to buy products that don't have a major lable or brand on them - which are all clearly counterfiet. When the Vietnamese market sellers stop trying to blatantly rip off tourists and ask decent prices, maybe they may increase their sales, we for one walked away from many purchases due to ridiculously high prices. What we found even more shocking was when on the way back to Australia we had a stop over in Singapore, many of the items they were selling in Vietnam were actually cheaper in Singapore and better quality... So I think China is a big concern but they are also a master of their own disaster due to greed!
This post is full of cognitive dissonance. The video accuses China of dumping goods at low prices. But you are blaming being ripped off by the Vietnamese. Somehow this is the fault of the Chinese? Most clothes are made in Vietnam these days anyway.
Going to tourist shops and expecting local prices. Literally every tourists destination in the world have shops catered to tourists and charging tourists price, not just Vietnam. Just stay home and never go vacationing again 😂
Blame China and Chinese has been standard in Vietnam and most of SE Asia. The US-led West used to just make fun of :Made in China" as cheap junks, but then when China wants to and can move up the value chain, suddenly China becomes "national security threat". But China will persevere and survive all such assaults and insults.
Same old same old. Americans wish the best for Vietnam as a partner, not as a vassal state. We hope that Vietnam retains its independence and unique culture.
As long as Vietnam can do the dirty work for America to "contain China", then Vietnam is the Good Commies. But when situation should change, that Vietnam is resisting USA, or Vietnam has the means and guts to move up the value chain to challenge USA hegemony, then Vietnam will be the Bad Commies.
Biggest danger may be politicians "on-the-take" in all the countries that are affected. When leaders seem to favor policies that benefit another country more than the domestic population, follow the money! Are they serving the people or their own pocketbooks?
China exports DEFLATION, Vietnamese should support Vietnam government for importing Deflation, so goods can be bought more affordably. Vietnam government can always raise tariffs and tighten border control to avoid illegal cheap stuffs from flowing through. Those are Vietnam internal issues, do not point fingers and blame China. With money saved, Vietnam government and Vietnamese populace can find ways to develop niches. It's common sense that it's silly to try to compete with your neighbor on anything and everything, that will only lead to craziness, even madness. This is what international trading suppose to be about: each party to be the most optimized. Some protection is justified, but to cry "Dirty Wars", that Tanya Harding style and tactics. US raising interest rates has been causing a lot of pain in most countries. US gets to see dollars returning, other currencies lowered, making buying other countries' assets a cheap bargain. That's where a lot of opposition ought to be about -- de-dollarization.
Buyers need to stretch their money. Most people in Vietnam consider 15 million VND a very good salary so you can’t blame the consumer for looking for a bargain. Ben Thanh market is for tourist and you need to pay no more than 20% of the initial price. I was in Cho Tan My in D7 and a pair of dinosaur sandals were 130K VND and you can probably get them for 100K, these same dinosaur sandals in Ben Thanh start at 400K to 500K so you need to research first. I dont think in USD I use a different currency that I can’t disclose in here because I don’t want to be banned from this channel and blacklisted in TH-cam BUT having said that you don’t pay more that 4 USD for tshirts or sandals. Shoes are more difficult because they have different grades of quality. So you need to compare and keep it cool. Sellers quote high but as a buyer you quote low then the seller will do a funny expression and let out a big sigh of other funny sound and then you bargain. But I do agree that China has a stance that other Asian nations don’t accept or like.
The youtuber is spreading the ultra-nationalistic Vietnamese paranoia and antagonism against China. He blames all cheaper stuffs Chinese businesses selling to Vietnamese as a plot by China government to dominate Vietnam. Yeah if Chinese are selling cheap underwears to VN then that must be done under the direction by China government, to eventually conquer Vietnam! Spreading paranoia and hate, that's all. Vietnam doesn't need to be at par with China on many things, Vietnam can find its comfort zone by finding niches to excel at. Spreading nationalistic hate against China will just drive the mind mad.
@@VK-tq4il This is Grey Business Chinatown. Bangkok already had. Chinatown, this is criminal Chinatown. Visit and try to speak Thai. Very dangerous for anyone not Chinese.
I used to live in South Vietnam before 1975 in Chợ Lớn area of Saigon, now Ho Chi Minh city, which are 80% Chinese (Guang Dong ren) who speak Cantonese (Guang Dong hua) mostly, and the majority of our customers were Chinese (Cantonese), yet we thrived very well because my mom and my grand fathers on both sides speak fluent Cantonese (Guang Dong hua), even though we are 100% VNmese without any Chinese relative. 70-80% of VNmese words have root in ancient Han Chinese anyway, so learning Chinese isn't so difficult, and it just come natural when you use it daily. Now living in the USA, my mom, I and my brothers and sisters now speak fluent Spanish to our Hispanic customers, and we are doing very well economically.
Not only there, I passed thru Singapore the other day, plenty of china chinese in the island now, you can notice them miles away from the way they wear clothes and they can only speak mandarin!. In a decade or so, SG will just be another china province 😅
I really wish I could buy Vietnamese products all the time. I really don't like to buy Chinese. But there are 2 problems. First: The VN goods I buy all break. I normally buy 2 of everything because I know I will have to replace them very quickly. The production quality needs to get much better. For example, I buy brooms for sweeping. They all have the same design fault, and they all break. I cannot buy a version that does not break. Second: The products are not available. For example, I have bought many water pumps in the last few years. The VN water pumps all fail because they have design faults. I have to lift the pumps out and fix them. But I can buy a Chinese pump that has some small design differences, and it doesn't fail. I originally bought 2 and now I'm buying 2 more. They are not cheap, and they are not delivered quickly. But I cannot buy an equivalent pump in Vietnam.
I believe that Vietnam can prosper even without depending to China..Vietnam should understand that China is not a friend. It's about time that Vietnam will bring their case to UNCLOS. Vietnam and Philippines have started to join together to protect their respective EEZ.
Ben Thanh Market is the place to know for scams that why, and locals people do not go there. If the tourist is just there for one time, and does not come back. The place is know for scam.
You are saying Vietnam should do the dirty work of America to "contain China", so that Vietnam can be rewarded with the moniker of being a Good Commie.
Much better to stand up against US first. US has little issue to stir conflicts all around the world. Will fight China to the last Filipinos, and will have no hesitation to do the same to Vietnam IF Vietnam government should be willing accomplice. But much more immediately, the printing of USD in the $Trillions has been causing the whole world crying in the pain of Inflation. That's much more immediate and REAL challenge and disturbance. Let's see how Vietnamese stand up to that. China selling things cheap to Vietnam is called a problem "of control and domination", that's just raw hate, no reasoning.
I don't agree with this Western narrative. I was in Vietnam for the past 6 months. Most Vietnamese make 6-10 millions VND, that's about $250-$400 USD. They do what they have to do to live somewhat of a comfortable life. Until wages go up, I don't blame the average person in Vietnam. They don't have the money like you to pick and choose. I know the Vietnamese government is working on getting the average person wage up but until then this is how people are surviving. When we can control our own supply chain like in the coffee and food industry to have open competition to drive down prices. This is why Starbucks and Western food industry can't compete with our locals.
We understand the struggle that many Vietnamese face with low wages and the need to make ends meet-this is a harsh reality. But let us not confuse survival tactics with the broader issue of economic manipulation. The point we are making is not about blaming the average Vietnamese person for buying cheaper goods; it is about exposing how China’s unfair trade practices-like dumping goods below market value and violating anti-dumping laws-are crippling Vietnam’s ability to build a self-sufficient economy. Yes, local industries like coffee and food have shown resilience and strength against foreign brands, and that is commendable. But what happens when Chinese products dominate every other market sector, making it impossible for local industries to grow and compete? That is not just about wages-it is about China systematically undermining Vietnam’s economic foundation. We are not pushing a “Western narrative”; we are shedding light on a critical issue that affects Vietnam’s future. It is not just about survival-it is about securing Vietnam’s long-term economic independence and prosperity.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Even in Indonesia, I was shocked to learn that a fish canning factory uses most of their tin cans from China.. if China does not have the size they need they cannot make that product they want. -- So now there is subtle blackmail --- your local factory is controlled by the supplies that china will sell you, if they not willing to sell there is no alternative as other tin can factories are closing down.. -- With advancement in robotics, AI and so on.. Factories even in China could have massively reduced workforce. It also affects the China public as even in China, automation to squeeze out all human costs will cost massive loss of jobs... So its the policy of the regime that serves the purpose , not its people , or even benefit other people in other countries. With massive amounts of people out of jobs, it creates a crisis of instability, even within China itself. New technology (AI, quantum computing) requires massive amounts of power and I think its time for Vietnam to go its own way and go Nuclear Power, Nuclear Fission and so on.. All the big boys ordering people to go "green" is not doing so themselves.. So Going nuclear for power is one of the way out of being strangled to death.. Eg: New York Nuclear power plant is to be restarted for Microsoft AI FARM.
I am Vietnamese, and I totally disagree with you. This is not Western narrative. China took our islands, and now they are taking our economy and jobs. You only live in Vietnam for 6 months and you think you know it all? Try talking to more Vietnamese people, and see how they think about China and CCP.
One minute you say how Chinese products are hurting economy but then the next minute you say come start a business because economy is booming which is it
We understand why it may seem contradictory, but let us clarify: Chinese products are indeed hurting certain sectors of the Vietnamese economy by undermining local industries through unfair competition. However, Vietnam’s economy as a whole is still growing and offers immense opportunities for businesses-particularly for those that can add value, innovate, and compete on quality. Encouraging businesses to enter Vietnam is not about ignoring the challenges-it is about recognizing the opportunities to strengthen the market, diversify supply chains, and create a more resilient economic environment that is not reliant on cheap Chinese imports. We are advocating for strategic investments that build up Vietnam’s economy, not for a blind race to the bottom. So yes, we expose the problems, but we also highlight the potential for growth and development. It is not one or the other-it is about navigating the challenges and leveraging the opportunities. That is the reality of doing business in a dynamic market like Vietnam.
The economy in Vietnam aint booming. The GDP number that the govt pushed out is all fake numbers to lure FDI (foreign direct investment) and masks the troubling economy.
While some aspect of the VNmese economy are hurt due to Chinese's low-cost goods, other aspect of the economy like tourism, service, real estate, agriculture, etc...can gain much more benefit from deeper economic ties with China, while cheaper Chinese goods at the same time can lower inflation and increase living standard. VN should make more effort to make VN tourism and agricultural products more appealing and promote these aspect of the economy to China and neighboring countries.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting What is "unfair competition"? Is someone selling Pho noodle $3 unfair to the guy selling $6? If China is dumping, then is WTO really so badly disabled by US? So Vietnam has to suffer and has to play the blame China game .. I see. Oh, the whole VCP got bought out by the CCP so blame the CCP. What else to blame the Chinese? Constipation next.
@@ysw8291Nationalistic Vietnamese like to paint any dealings with China as Zero-sum, but that does Not need to be. The money saved from buying Chinese goods can be used to develop, doesn't need to be wasted on beer if you get the meaning, and then blame blame China for not able to rise up further.
There is nothing misleading about the title. China’s economic tactics in Vietnam are aggressive and calculated, and calling it an “invasion” accurately reflects the severity of the situation. We use strong titles because we are discussing serious issues that deserve attention.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting in 2023 Vietnam exports products to China valued at $61.2 billions. Vietnam exported more products to China than it imported from China. China has more buying power than Vietnam. As a business lawyer you should know this.
@usaguru1, we appreciate your engagement, but your information is incorrect. In 2023, Vietnam did not export more to China than it imported. The reality is that Vietnam has a significant trade deficit with China, with imports far exceeding exports. Vietnam imported around $130 billion worth of goods from China while exporting only about $61.2 billion. This imbalance is precisely why China’s economic leverage over Vietnam is so concerning. Having “buying power” does not justify predatory practices like dumping goods below market value or violating anti-dumping laws to dominate the market. As a business lawyer, we are fully aware of these dynamics and their implications for Vietnam’s economy. This is not about numbers alone; it is about the broader impact on local industries and economic sovereignty. If you are interested in a serious discussion, it is crucial to get the facts straight. We are here to highlight these issues because they matter for Vietnam’s long-term stability and prosperity, not to present a skewed view of trade relations.
China's industrial output has reached impressive levels, largely due to the globalization movement over the past four decades. In addition to foreign direct investment (FDI) flowing into China, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has controlled investment options for its citizens, primarily directing funds into state owned banks low-interest savings accounts and real estate. This approach has allowed the government to channel substantial banking resources into strategic sectors such as infrastructure, high-speed rail, solar panels, steel, Huawei, semiconductors, green energy, and electric vehicles through significant subsidies. However, this has led to overfunding and excess capacity in many industries. Without similar extensive government support, private enterprises in other countries struggle to compete. The situation has worsened recently: the real estate sector in China is deflating, domestic consumer spending is declining, and FDI is decreasing. Many Chinese companies are now in survival mode. With excess production capacity and a slowdown in domestic consumption, these goods must be exported at very low prices. It's no surprise that many countries are imposing tariffs or investigating the dumping of predatory goods from China.
My experience living in Vietnam for the past 5 years is that the people hear understand that: "You get what you paid for" Accordingly, people in the middle class avoid low quality Chinese goods and opt for better quality options.
Part of that is intended discrimination against China, or some intention to "not to enrich China", because China has been portrayed by Vietnam nationalism as the "eternal adversary". China used to make cheap stuffs, and Vietnam merchants made quick money by importing questionable low quality stuffs to enrich themselves - and blame China for it. Reality is China has been moving up the quality ladder for many years. The most expensive commodities have been made in China for more than a decade. But people in their intention to vilify will spew out nasty words to disparage.
I think Vietnamese have enough anti-China nationalism already, nothing more to add to it, and frankly very unhealthy to add to it. Nationalism can be poisonous. The fellow said China selling stuffs cheap is a plot by the China government to dominate Vietnam. That's crazy paranoia. As if the China government is all powerful to direct all businesses to follow the same script. Ask yourself this: do Vietnamese businesses follow the directive by the VCP government, to do what the government order them to do? Or do the Vietnam government order businesses to do things to dominate and crush its smaller neighbors Laos and Cambodia? If you don't think VCP would bother to do those things, then think the same about CCP. Too much ultra nationalism can make people crazy.
That is quite a creative theory, but it could not be further from the truth. We do not need “anti-China funding” to expose the reality of China’s economic tactics. The facts speak for themselves: breaking international trade laws, dumping subsidized goods, and undermining local markets are tactics that hurt economies like Vietnam’s. Our mission is to shed light on these issues, regardless of where the chips fall. Throwing out baseless accusations about funding is just a distraction from the real conversation. If you have actual arguments to counter our points, we would be happy to engage. But until then, we suggest focusing on the facts we have presented rather than inventing conspiracy theories. We are here to discuss reality, not fantasies.
There is no “mixing apples with bananas” here. The facts are straightforward: China’s aggressive economic tactics-dumping goods below market value, violating anti-dumping laws, and manipulating local markets-are a direct threat to Vietnam’s economic stability. These are deliberate actions, not random fruit comparisons. If you cannot see the connection between China’s economic strategies and their impact on Vietnam, then you are missing the bigger picture. We are exposing how these tactics are systematically undermining Vietnam’s economy. This is about economic warfare, not fruit baskets.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsultingKen, your labor theory of value was refuted by the subjective theory of value, of the economists E.von Baverk and Carl Menger.
We appreciate your attempt to dive into economic theory, but this is not a classroom debate about 19th-century economic philosophers. Our focus is on exposing China’s manipulative trade practices that violate international laws and harm Vietnam’s economy. The “subjective theory of value” and “labor theory of value” are academic discussions that have little to do with China flooding markets with cheap, subsidized goods that cripple local businesses. If you want to engage in a philosophical debate, that is fine, but we are here to discuss the real-world impacts of these predatory tactics on Vietnam’s economic future. Let us not get sidetracked by irrelevant academic theories while China continues to undermine Vietnam’s economic stability. The issue is not about abstract value theories-it is about economic sovereignty and the survival of local industries.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting So y would you like to prohibit, for "protection", chinese products to be chosen by vietnamese consumers ? It has no sense. There is no better practice than a good theory.
We are not advocating for “prohibition” of Chinese products. What we are calling for is fair competition. When China dumps goods below market value and breaks international anti-dumping laws, it creates an uneven playing field that crushes local businesses and undermines Vietnam’s economic stability. This is not about stopping Vietnamese consumers from choosing what they want; it is about ensuring that they have a real choice, not one dictated by China’s economic manipulation. Fair competition is not about shielding local industries from superior products-it is about protecting them from predatory practices that distort the market. Allowing these tactics to continue unchecked does not lead to a healthy economy; it leads to dependency and long-term harm. So yes, there is “no better practice than a good theory,” but theories must be grounded in reality. The reality is that China’s actions are designed to dominate, not to compete fairly. If we ignore this, then we are not protecting consumers-we are handing them over to a system designed to eliminate their choices in the long run. That is not the future we want for Vietnam.
Greetings, no country is forced to revive foreign merchandise or investment. In the event that abuses are taking place, the responsibility falls on the government of the country. Whether we like it or not, China is a commercial and industrial power.
Greetings. You are correct-no country is forced to accept foreign goods or investments. But when a powerful nation like China uses illegal tactics such as dumping goods below cost and manipulating trade policies to dominate another country’s market, it is no longer just a matter of choice. It becomes a deliberate strategy to undermine local industries and create dependency. Yes, China is an economic powerhouse, but that does not excuse violating international trade laws and crippling smaller economies in the process. The responsibility does fall on governments to protect their markets, but we cannot ignore the root cause of these economic issues-China’s predatory practices. Acknowledging China’s power should not mean accepting its abuses. We are here to shed light on these realities because recognizing the problem is the first step toward finding solutions. Ignoring these issues only allows them to grow unchecked, and that is not an option for Vietnam’s future.
I understand, for those cases if you are right in your opinion there is the recourse to file a claim before the international trade organization. Those responsible for allowing this alleged abuse It is the Vietnamese government
You are correct that filing a claim with international trade organizations is one way to address these issues. However, it is not always that simple. Political and economic pressures often make it difficult for governments like Vietnam’s to take strong actions against a powerful neighbor like China. It is not just about filing complaints-it is about navigating a complex web of diplomacy, economic dependency, and regional stability. The responsibility does lie with the Vietnamese government to protect its economy, but the scale of China’s manipulation makes it an extremely challenging task. That is why we are discussing these issues openly-to raise awareness and push for stronger measures that protect Vietnam’s economic sovereignty. We are not here to point fingers without offering solutions. Highlighting these problems is the first step toward finding viable strategies that help Vietnam stand strong against these predatory practices. If we ignore them, we risk compromising the country’s economic future.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting What "solution" do you ever have? Regurgitate the phrases "decouple from China", "derisk from China", "national security risk" ... That would work huh Let me imagine, maybe you wish there to be this "Contain-China Union" that VN will be a faithful participant, that the rest of the world will join together to fully trust each other, to freely share resources and technology, but doing all these things to "contain China", so Vietnam can be big in status in that part of Asia -- Isn't this a nice fantasy? What are you Really after here? Wishing China would give a blank cheque to VN, that VN can get anything: raw materials, technology, anything and everything from China at next to no cost, then that would be the outcome that suit Vietnamese? Or maybe even more immediately, that China will retreat from Cambodia and Laos and SCS, so Vietnam can be as dominant as it wishes, in return for VN (or yourself) won't talk bad about China (for a while). Thinking of that as a more realistic goal? What do you really want China to do? Sell things cheaply is bad, sell things as Western prices is bad, so China has to just lie down and let Vietnam to walk all over -- some mental picture hey?
Underhanded anti-China propaganda? I hope not. The world is no longer unipolar. Countries that adapt best will have a competitive advantage. Overall, Vietnam is doing it smartly, He plays the game with both hands, he doesn't bet his future on a single country.
Victor Salas, coming from you who owns a media company is China talking about propaganda is hilarious. There is no “anti-China propaganda” from us here-just facts. Acknowledging and exposing China’s unfair trade practices and economic manipulation is not propaganda; it is a reality that affects Vietnam’s economic future. Vietnam’s strategy of balancing relations with multiple countries is indeed smart, but that does not mean turning a blind eye to economic threats. The world is no longer unipolar, as you mentioned, and that is precisely why it is crucial for countries like Vietnam to protect their markets from predatory practices. Playing the game with both hands means being aware of the tactics being used against you and taking steps to counter them. We are not here to bash China-we are here to highlight the challenges Vietnam faces so that it can continue to navigate these complex dynamics wisely. If that makes some people uncomfortable, so be it. We will continue to speak the truth about these issues because Vietnam’s economic sovereignty should never be compromised.
This is old news. Yes China do subsidies, other countries do the same as well for their strategic industries. Vietnam needs to understand its a small country, big and powerful countries has been playing the capitalist game for a long time and always been having an upper hand. It’s kinda hard to assert power without your own technology and a strong military. What Vietnam really need to develop fast is not related to politics at all. It’s about its own culture. East Asian countries like China Korea Japan has developed quickly due to a strong masculine culture of hard working men. Vietnam on the other hand from my observation is that majority of men are weak and lazy that mostly prefers a matriarch family structure. You fix this and Vietnam would prosper like crazy .
You are missing the point entirely. Highlighting the challenges posed by China’s economic manipulation is not “alarmist”-it is about being realistic and proactive. Ignoring these issues would be far more damaging to businesses than confronting them head-on. Awareness is the first step toward creating strategies that allow businesses to thrive, even in a challenging environment. Exposing unfair trade practices, such as breaking anti-dumping laws and flooding markets with subsidized goods, helps businesses understand the landscape they are entering. This is not about scaring anyone; it is about preparing businesses to compete strategically and protect their interests. If you think discussing real challenges is not beneficial, then perhaps you are not looking at the bigger picture. We are here to provide the information businesses need to navigate and succeed, not to sugarcoat the reality. Knowledge is power, and we believe in empowering our audience to make informed decisions.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting 'flooding markets with subsidized goods' damn near every country is dealing with this. Almost every point you bring up is easily debunked or heavily exaggerated and shows a very surface level knowledge of China, assuming every second order effect stemming from the country is somehow malicious in intent. Furthermore, how is this 'invading Vietnam'; the countries share a border, of course goods are going to flow into the country, China is the no.1 trading partner of most of the world. Implement tariffs if it's such a problem. Titling a video 'China is invading Vietnam' is completely alarmist or intentionally deceptive, or both. The whole world knows that China is formidable in manufacturing lol acting like they're invading your country doesn't educate anyone. You can discuss a business landscape in a serious manner without resorting to warmongering. Besides, VN sits in a relatively privileged position, already absorbing high value manufacturing that doesn't want to be in China (or India), and some textiles manufacturing as well. VN even has a national EV company. VN is the second fastest growing economy in the past 25 years, second only to China. This is better than what many emerging markets can claim. Bashing China in this manner is just distasteful, you don't even see this level of fearmongering in the US.
Your comment reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of the issue at hand. Yes, many countries deal with subsidized goods, but what China is doing goes beyond normal trade practices-it is economic manipulation. Breaking anti-dumping laws, using forced technology transfers, and flooding markets with artificially cheap products are not “surface-level” concerns. They are strategies designed to destabilize and dominate markets like Vietnam’s. As for calling this an “invasion,” let us be clear: we are talking about an economic invasion, not a military one. It is about China systematically gaining control over Vietnam’s economy through these predatory practices. Sharing a border does not justify these actions, and your suggestion to “just implement tariffs” ignores the complex political and economic dynamics that make such decisions challenging for Vietnam. You mentioned Vietnam’s economic growth, which we do not deny. But that does not mean we should ignore the very real threats posed by China’s economic tactics. Vietnam’s success should not come at the cost of its economic sovereignty. A booming economy is not immune to being undermined by unfair competition and dependency on a single dominant trading partner. If you think discussing these issues is “fearmongering” or “distasteful,” then you are choosing to overlook the reality of the situation. We are not here to bash anyone-we are here to inform and expose the truth, even if it makes some people uncomfortable. If that is not your cup of tea, you are free to watch elsewhere, but we will continue to discuss these issues in a serious and straightforward manner.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting economic manipulation is a stretch. I don't think very many manufacturers or Chinese govt officials are losing much sleep trying to 'control VN'. Calling business something other than business when you're not getting the result you want is dishonest. The IP theft thing has some ground - not in VN though lol don't see how you can complain about that. You also paint with a VERY broad brush, making it seem like every 'Made in China' product was paid for by Xi himself. You make 1 and a half good points and the rest of the vid is literally fearmongering discussing things that are easily debunked. This is not how subsidies work at all, it's even much less direct than the way that they work in the US, and definitely doesn't apply to much of the products that would find their way to VN. What is an 'artificially cheap good', please tell me lol. If it's cheap it's cheap, VN has much lower labor costs don't see why it can't compete on that front. Just read over your own words, what you're claiming to be happening just doesn't make sense and is not something that can happen over a sustained period of time. China is a formidable trade partner, everyone knows this. There are actions countries can take to mitigate this, why doesn't VN implement these strategies? 'Cheap goods are not benefiting VN consumers', than why do they keep buying them? Is the govt supposed to hold everyone's hand and make them buy local? The VN consumers themselves, and the VN govt, should both be blamed 1st in this scenario, before Chinese manufacturers, who I doubt think about 'invading VN economically', at all. You mention China has already 'invaded' Thailand. This is not what has happened at all, it has more to do with the rise of ecommerce and less to do with Chinese goods. This isn't even a talking point in Thailand, because there's nothing to talk about. They may implement tariffs, but they leave it at that, they don't claim that China is 'invading Thailand'. This is a byproduct of global trade, you're making it seem intentional. VN has the potential to have a very strong domestic market with it's own manufacturing hubs and even ecommerce platforms. You don't have to blatantly lie to encourage this. I suggest having at least some level of background knowledge not just citing English media headlines and purporting false facts on a foreign subject. "Our reporting needs to reflect that nuance", in your own words.
Your comment raises several points, but it also reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of the issues we are discussing. Let’s break it down: The term “economic manipulation” is not a stretch-it is a reality recognized by international trade bodies. China’s practices of dumping goods below cost and leveraging subsidies are well-documented. This is not just business; it is about using economic tools to dominate and destabilize markets, which does directly impact Vietnam’s economic sovereignty. To think that Chinese officials are not strategizing about controlling regional economies is to ignore decades of documented evidence. You dismiss IP theft as not relevant to Vietnam, but it is part of a broader strategy that affects global markets, including Vietnam. When Chinese companies steal IP to create cheaper alternatives, it undermines the entire ecosystem, from original manufacturers to local businesses trying to compete. Ignoring this issue is shortsighted. When we talk about “artificially cheap goods,” we are referring to products sold at prices below their actual production cost, made possible through government subsidies and unfair practices. This is not about a natural market outcome-it is about distorting the market to the detriment of other players. Vietnam’s labor costs may be lower, but they cannot compete with products that are sold at unsustainable prices due to state intervention. Yes, Vietnamese consumers buy these goods, but that is not the point. The availability of these cheap products, driven by subsidies and dumping, skews consumer choice and destroys local competition. It is not about blaming the government or consumers-it is about addressing the root cause, which is China’s predatory economic behavior. You mention Thailand and e-commerce without recognizing the bigger picture. E-commerce is just a channel; the problem is the flood of subsidized Chinese goods dominating those platforms. If you think that does not matter, look at the impact on local businesses struggling to compete with prices they cannot match. This is not fearmongering-it is a reality that affects livelihoods. If presenting facts about unfair trade practices and economic manipulation is “fearmongering” to you, then perhaps you are not fully grasping the stakes involved. We are here to provide a nuanced view, but also to be clear about the challenges Vietnam faces. Ignoring these issues does not make them go away. We suggest diving deeper into the realities of these economic dynamics rather than dismissing them as “English media headlines.” We stand by our analysis because it reflects a nuanced understanding of these complex issues. We are not here to spread fear but to shed light on the strategies being used against Vietnam and the region. If you are willing to engage in a serious discussion based on facts, we welcome it. Otherwise, dismissing these concerns as “lies” only undermines your own credibility in this conversation.
Is there any way to know if ordering from Shopee or buying at a Market if what you are buying is from China or if it’s Domestic or from USA ,Japan etc. very good reporting. I didn’t know that it was so rampant here in Vietnam. With China dumping their cheap goods here. My Wife and I are careful not to buy from China. We look to see where it is manufactured but that too can be misleading because they produce their junk in other Countries to avoid tariffs and such. Thanks,Ken. Love your Channel. US Expat in Saigon.
Shopee Has a Better Transparency Over Lazada. Shopee clearly Includes the Country of Origin or the Shop Country so it is Easy To Avoid Chinese Shop or to choose Shops that are Within Vietnam, Chn Products couldnt be avoided as they Have a lot in anything. Also Shopee Should the Review stars Selection so a buyer could just choose the 1 to 3 stars of the product Review while Lazada is Hiding The Bad Review of a Products which is Not very transparent. Lazada has Many Many Shops from China. That are Pretending to Be A Vietnamese Shop and It SUCKS .
Actually all his talking points are verbatim like the ones use by US politicians. I am sure he is paid by cia. He is a lawyer by heart. I would definitely hire him if I need legal representation in VN.
Ken Duong - Interesting upload , very much so you did here - K. D. - hasn't your government in Hanoi taking action on this issue , as it can't be unknown to them?? 🤓😎👽💀
@@alexzhangdragonn3438 wahhh… does it hurt your ego realizing Vietnamese do not buy Chinese products or something ?!? The most popular cars in Vietnam are Japanese and Korean, not even Vintast, if you didn’t already know, ok wumao ?!!
coming from spore n malaysian , we see the local vn perception toward CHINA is quite narrative , regarding some polictic issue we leave to the court n polictician to deal with while we still can partner n trading with whoever that give mutual benefit and both side on good wills . Why mixed up politic issue in the trading and it quite bad to generalised Made in china is low poor quality , some information Spore MRt are buying cabin from china and ruk well ,the social housing HDB is contracted to China developer on some project , As a business POV we just make sure customer get the value and worth every penny with good quality . in the 90s msia nor spore we also face the confident or quality of china made ,,As a importer or business pov we make sure the good quality good must be bring in and comply with countries import safety standard . . be open minded and treat all with fair in trade while hoping all SEA countries benefit and developed well . Gov n the business must work hand in hand and let the Citizen to enjoy with more affordable ,valued and choices As the trend is globalisation , It borderless now in trading
Philippines is already US lackey. Tis youtuber is broadcasting anti-China rant, so wanting more anti-China flavor? Marcos has his family $Billions controlled by the US, so all actions will have to please his Masters. Enjoy the ride to the bottom.
I have travelled to Thailand, Cambodia, and China for my visa renewal. First, as a foreigner visiting these neighbor countries, I felt very comfortable buying products on the street vendors. Why? Simply because they are honest merchants, unlike the local Vietnamese you don’t mentioned at all. They are intent to whip you off by charmed you, [hi handsome or hi honey] slogan. The world is much bigger than anyone’s head, social media has become the most powerful source of information of do vs don’t. Everyone knows the true. If Vietnam’ merchants start selling the right price, I would know and will consider buying it again. Blaming China for low quality and cheap goods doesn’t work.
The information in the videos literally is going over your head. Recommend you read between the lines. Honest and dishonest merchants are literally everywhere there’s a major tourist hub, and not just in Vietnam. Unfortunately, that’s just too much for you to comprehend.
Name a country where all tourists are 100% sastified! If you aren’t happy in Vietnam go to other countries. My compatriots complaining about thief pockets in Milan, robberies in Paris, racisms in US, scams in Australia…should they blame the whole western world for those incidents?
@@DaiCaThanh71 No need to get emotional. The point is some countries have more scams than others *as of the current social conditions". Japan and China for example have far less scams by street hawkers compared to Vietnam. That's because the social conditions in Japan and China have developed to a better place now, that hawkers don't feel a big pull to cheat others. Vietnam can get to a better place too.
I'm bullish VN as much as anyone but be serious bro lol. China manufactures a ton of stuff, how is it their fault that ecommerce platforms (not based in China) impact VN. VN is a small fry lol China doesn't gain anything from putting Thailand or VN street and market vendors out of business. At best, this is complete nonsense, at worst, this blame the select few Chinese individuals and companies. Or better yet, blame the VN population for buying these Chinese goods in the first place. Please go to China to at least have some credibility, I don't think anyone can be taken seriously on this topic when they mention the Xinjiang 'labor camps' with a straight face. Do you know people who have been there?
Let us clarify the difference here: Vietnam’s historical involvement in Laos and Cambodia was driven by complex geopolitical dynamics, including responding to threats like the Khmer Rouge, which was committing genocide and destabilizing the region. It was not about economic domination or territorial conquest. China’s economic strategies, on the other hand, involve using unfair trade practices, violating international laws, and creating dependency to exert control over Vietnam’s economy. Comparing this to Vietnam’s past actions is not just misleading-it is a false equivalence. Respecting a country’s sovereignty means recognizing its right to determine its own economic and political path without interference or coercion. That applies to all nations, including Vietnam. Attempting to justify one country’s invasive actions by pointing to another’s history ignores the principles of international law and respect for sovereignty. We are here to discuss these issues openly because they impact Vietnam’s future and stability. We cannot afford to ignore these realities, and we will continue to speak out against any actions that threaten Vietnam’s sovereignty, no matter where they come from.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting I'm not referring to historical events or in past tense. This is what is still going on now. Who installed the dictatorship in Cambodia for the last forty years, not Vietnam? The government running ruling over Laos, are NOT all Vietnamese? Why is the Chinese and Korean still hates Japan and Japanese for the event during WW2.
It is crucial to address these topics accurately. Vietnam’s involvement in Cambodia was about ending the Khmer Rouge regime, which was committing genocide and destabilizing the entire region. Since then, Cambodia has been a sovereign nation, making its own choices (with China!). The same goes for Laos-its government and policies are decided by its own people (and China!), not by Vietnam. As for historical grievances, each country has its own context and reasons for how they view the past. We are not here to justify or judge those feelings, but to focus on current issues that impact Vietnam’s economy and regional stability. We should avoid conflating unrelated historical events with the topic at hand. Our focus remains on highlighting economic and geopolitical dynamics that affect Vietnam today. If you want to discuss these topics constructively, we welcome your insights. But let’s keep the conversation relevant to the issues impacting Vietnam’s future, rather than getting lost in historical debates.
China also has a strategy to smear Vietnamese goods. Most recently, there was an article by a Chinese financial expert saying that Vinfast cars imported spare parts from this country for assembly. Yet there are also Vietnamese people who translated this article into Vietnamese. Very dangerous.
"a Chinese financial expert" said Vinfast uses China spare parts -- How is that a smearing? Apple and Tesla both have large operations in China and uses a lot of China parts. Or are you afraid US won't let Vinfast to operate? Or what? And even let's drop this "smearing" thing, how's one Chinese guy said something equate "China has a strategy" ?? So one Vietnam guy commits a crime, then Vietnam government has a strategy? Too much C-h-i-i-n-n-a in the mind, too much poisonous Vietnamese nationalism.
when cheap China stuff start flooding the market in Australia 2095 I actually said that the little money we were paying at least was real money, but their crap couldn't even be used for what they sell it for.
@@ysw8291 I think you are lacking in the comprehension department if you can't connect the dots on your own. Or maybe you can and that's why you're here spamming bull💩 Mad that people are talking bad about your country? Maybe you should tell your country to not do bad things
Hey Ken n’ team. Important video and points made here in very good lingo. I usually hate on this fishy snack my students get from China, it’s unhealthy , too sugary and smells awful, but they’re addicted to it. I wish everyone can wake up on matters cheap goods and their effects on local industry.
To spread poisonous nationalism against China is not a good report, it's not healthy for the mind and soul of Vietnamese. China is doing business. China sells things inexpensively should be appreciated, not as a force of "control and dominance". Do you curse a Dollar Store or Liquidation Mart? Doesn't need to see any issues or dealing with China as zero-sum, wishing for China to fall so Vietnam can be bigger -- that's childish, prideful and unhealthy. Maybe a day will come when Vietnam can grow to have better sense of self-peace, and don't need to keep using attacks to deal with China.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Inciting nationalistic antagonism is much worse than an opinion. Inciting Zero-sum hatred is much worse than an opinion. You present no fact in your diatribe, only "China is bad, others have said so". Let me spell these out one more time how you incite anti-China antagonism: There is no international anti-dumping "laws", only anti-dumping Duty. You have no proof China is subsidizing all forms of exports into Vietnam, period. To suggest even consumer commodities would be subsidized by China government is silly in very juvenile way. Things like Chinese steel, China has not subsidized that for four years. You certainly have no proof at all that China government is offering subsidies for selling in Vietnam to weaken and then to dominate Vietnam, but that has been your disparaging claim.
Temu is an abomination here in the USA. Products are simulated. They resemble something functional, but fall apart the first use. My Vinfast e34 (in Vietnam) car is fantastic. No problems after the first software update years ago.
Cut the crap An immigration attorney, what do you know about economics. Chinese stuff is everywhere. In US, India, EU, including Vietnam. We all know Cho Ben Thành is for tourists. Locals don’t go there. I was there a couple of months ago. It was packed If you want to rent a stall there, you can’t. None available and it’s super expensive. They know it’s a gold mine if they have a stall there. All the times you were talking about doing business in vn. Passports and citizenship and all. Now spreading lies about China. China is a powerful country and they are only interested in doing business. They are not concerned about invading vn economically. They are everywhere including the moon. Your bias agenda is not going to take you anywhere. Stick with passports, citizenship…
Yeah. Business men knows better to stay away from politics. Ken getting into sensitive politics, you know he has issues. Now I understand why he couldn’t cut it as a lawyer in the states. As a lawyer he should know better than to sensationalize and regurgitate debunked allegations regarding slave labor and Xinjiang concentration camps; very unprofessional. Any lawyer worthy of his degree wouldn’t be peddling his service on youtube. What a shame.
@@Henry-bl3lz Maybe your just another Bought by China mouth piece. Ken is doing a great service to us ExPats and Vietnamese people. Stop trash talking him and start your own BLOG.
@Henry-bl3lz, it is clear that you are missing the point entirely. This is not about whether China is "everywhere"-it is about how China’s economic tactics are deliberately undermining local markets, including Vietnam’s. And for the record, our expertise is not limited to immigration; we have extensive experience in international business and legal strategies, which is why we can speak confidently about the economic manipulation that is happening. You mentioned Cho Ben Thanh being packed and expensive to rent-yes, it is a tourist hotspot. But that is not the issue we are discussing. The real problem is that Chinese goods are flooding every market, not just the tourist areas, pushing local businesses to the brink and making it impossible for them to compete. This is economic aggression, not just “business as usual.” We find it amusing that you think calling out China’s unfair practices is “spreading lies.” If you believe that China’s only interest is “doing business,” you are either uninformed or willfully ignorant. China’s actions are not about fair competition; they are about dominance and control, and we are here to expose that, whether it fits your narrative or not. Stick to the facts before throwing accusations around.
@thomaskim3128, Your comment is as predictable as it is uninformed. The fact that you think a lawyer should “stay away from politics” shows a lack of understanding of our role. We are here to discuss the real issues affecting businesses and economies, whether they are geopolitically sensitive or not. Exposing economic manipulation and human rights abuses is not “sensationalism”-it is standing up for the truth. And it is geopolitics, not politics. We hope you understand the difference. Your attempt to dismiss credible reports about forced labor and human rights violations in Xinjiang as “debunked” is not only ignorant but also irresponsible. These are well-documented facts recognized globally, and denying them does not make them any less true. And as for your claim that no respectable lawyer would use platforms like TH-cam to share their expertise-welcome to the 21st century. We reach out through all mediums to inform, educate, and expose. If that makes you uncomfortable, then it is probably because we are saying things you do not want to hear. We have no issue confronting uncomfortable truths. The question is, do you?
@@Sly2C How about US ? Jut GM get from US govement more than 50 billions in last two years !That is not "subsidized"? whee is the money? Even with that help from US goverment need to put 100% tariff on chinese EV! TRuly pathetic is US :D
@natenay5730, we disagree completely with your comment. This is not just about a country doing business-it is about economic aggression. China is using dirty tactics like dumping goods below market value, breaking international anti-dumping laws, and destroying local industries. This is economic warfare, plain and simple. Calling this an “invasion” is not misleading-it is the harsh reality. China’s goal is to dominate Vietnam’s economy and force dependency. If you cannot see that, you are missing the entire point. This is not business as usual; it is a calculated strategy to undermine and control. We will not sugarcoat it: China’s actions are aggressive and dangerous for Vietnam’s economic sovereignty. That is the truth we are exposing.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Ken Im sorry but you truly do not know what is going on.. If another country invest in there industries that is a natural advantage.. its rules for thee and not for me
What happened to this channel or what's happening in Vietnam? It is called telling the truth, even when it is uncomfortable. Our mission has always been to provide real, unfiltered information that impacts Vietnam and the region. If exposing China’s illegal trade practices and economic manipulation to protect local businesses and economic sovereignty is “bashing,” then so be it. We are not here to sugarcoat the truth to appease anyone. We discuss what matters, and right now, China’s actions are a major concern for Vietnam’s future. If you think that highlighting these issues is “bashing,” perhaps you need to ask yourself why these facts make you uncomfortable. We are not here to play nice; we are here to inform and expose. That has always been our focus, and it will not change.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Duong, I appreciate your channel that espouses extensive knowledge involving legal matters relating to Viet Nam which has greatly helped out many of us, and most of time, for free. Many people, including me, appreciate that. And I believe you are a good person with a good conscience that's why you took your time to response to me and that's why I decide to take my time to response to you here. The 'truth' is a very subjective term catering to each of our own exposure to the related topic in question. What is the ultimate purpose of consuming news? I believe that the ultimate purpose of consuming news is to objectively understand it and hopefully be able to see the bottom of the truth. How to get to the bottom of the truth is not an easy task since we are surrounded by fakes news, misinformation, disinformation, propaganda ect. So what the hell am I talking here? Well, when presented with news, we should view it in the role of a judge, and not as a lawyer for the plaintiff or the defendant. It's your expertise you know too well that as a judge, we should impartially listen fully to both sides of the stories from both the plaintiff and the defendant. After carefully weighing presented evidence, facts and testimonies from all sides and all sources until which, the judge can finally and objectively make a final judgement, or so we hope🙂. That's a fair and objective way to go about making the right judgement in a court case. The same approach should be taken when consuming news, all news not just news about China. I think that we should be very careful not to fall into the Confirmation Bias trap, meaning we formed a pre-determined notion about something and tend to only look for things that support that notion and completely dismiss any contrarian viewpoints or facts. The US and China are now at loggerheads against each other in all spheres. So if we are only consuming news from Western media, which occupied 97% of total world news outlets, we are only reading and consuming the West narratives and forming our perception based on that. That is not enough. We need to also listen to the viewpoints on the other sides as well and see what they have to say. We need to listen to contrarian viewpoints. We need to listen to viewpoints even that might create cognitive dissonance within us. Only after having an objective take on all sides on a subject matter that we can hopefully come up with a more informed and objective understanding of the matter at hand. As regard to China, a lot of people fan opinions about China have never actually lived or even set foot there. They formed opinion based on one-sided coverage by mainstream media which is prohibitively anti-China. I'm not here to defend China or the US per se. All I'm saying here is that we should strive to objectively consuming news from both sides before concluding something, otherwise we are making an uninformed opinion. There are many expats who actually lived for many years in China that can give a more accurate picture of what's going on in China if you can spare a bit of your time to view 'Jerry's Takes On China', or Cyrus Janssen, or Trip Bitten among others including those who have travelled there recently. And this is from a Vietkieu like you. Cheers.
@UBERAPPRAISAL, thank you for your thoughtful response and for acknowledging the value we try to provide through this channel. We genuinely appreciate viewers like you who engage in meaningful dialogue and take the time to consider all perspectives. You are absolutely right-truth is often nuanced, and understanding it requires looking at all sides of a story. As a lawyer, I agree that we should approach any issue like a judge: weighing the evidence, considering multiple viewpoints, and avoiding the trap of confirmation bias. This is precisely why we strive to back our statements with well-documented information and credible sources, even if they challenge popular narratives. We also agree that consuming news from diverse sources is crucial, especially in the current polarized global climate. Our intention is not to promote a one-sided view but to highlight specific challenges that Vietnam faces due to certain economic practices and geopolitical dynamics. When we discuss China’s influence in Vietnam, we do so because it has direct implications for the country’s economic future-a matter of great importance for anyone invested in Vietnam’s growth and stability. We respect your call for balanced consumption of information, and we encourage our viewers to look at multiple sources, including those you mentioned. Our goal is not to create an echo chamber but to provide a platform for informed discussions on topics that are sometimes overlooked or misrepresented. Thank you again for your thoughtful insights and for being part of this community. We welcome constructive debates and appreciate your perspective.
UNSUBSCRIBED former subscriber...you are spreading hate and is absolutely dumb what you say. Go visit the country and see their factories, they are just very very well made and have huge scale. Also very dumb to say they have no profits, how can this continue? as a business man you hear yourself? Second thing USA companies, due to the scale, do the same thing in IT, they have all the big companies. when you have scale and tech you can become powerful!
First, if you're going to unsubscribe because we expose hard truths, that's your choice. But let’s address the facts before you throw around accusations. No one here is spreading hate-we're laying out the economic realities that affect Vietnam and other countries that trade with China. Sure, China has well-made factories and massive scale, but that’s part of the problem. They leverage this scale, backed by subsidies, to undercut prices and dominate markets. That’s why smaller businesses in Vietnam can’t compete. It’s not about whether China’s factories are good; it's about the unfair advantages they have in global trade due to government backing. And as for profits-China's model, in some cases, isn’t even about short-term profitability. It's about dominating the market, gaining control, and pushing out competitors. Look at how Amazon and other U.S. companies do it in tech-same playbook, but China applies it across sectors. So yes, we hear ourselves. You should too before accusing us of “spreading hate.” We’re here to discuss real issues, not brush them under the rug.
It is not as simple as “letting them in” or not. Vietnam, like many other countries, must navigate a complex web of economic and geopolitical realities. China’s economic influence is not just about opening the door; it is about a powerful neighbor using its leverage to dominate markets and create dependencies. Blaming the Vietnamese government for “incompetence” oversimplifies the issue. The challenge lies in balancing economic growth, maintaining sovereignty, and managing the pressures from a dominant trading partner. It is a tightrope walk, not a black-and-white choice. Recognizing these challenges is the first step in pushing for stronger measures that protect Vietnam’s interests without jeopardizing its economic stability. Accepting the consequences blindly is not an option. That is why we are exposing these tactics and advocating for strategies to mitigate their impact. It is about protecting Vietnam’s future, not just accepting the status quo.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting What "tactics" are there that the "bad China" is using to invade and dominate Vietnam? China is doing business. It's the same tactics that the $3 Pho shop (China) are doing, and then the $6 Pho shop (the West) is smearing, and nationalistic Vietnamese wanting to see any dealing with China as a Zero-Sum game and so siding with and cheering on and regurgitating the smears as the West. You sir still want to write in good English to show you're "not at a low level", so the intellect certainly is there, but I wonder why so obsess at nationalism, to see China as zero-sum. The Paracels, the SCS, let those things get to you so much, why? Lots of peoples have grievances with Vietnam too. But why let the pride be grown so big? My questions are sincere. A lot healthier to see things as cooperative, rather than Zero-Sum. The wishing that the West could somehow destroy China so Vietnam could gain some benefits is ... too damaging to the mind and soul.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Things are "complicated" only if you want to see all things as dark and zero-sum. There's the win-win angle, but the hateful antagonistic nationalism turn people mad and in turn spread more madness.
I mean look at Cambodia. It's a shadow of what it could have been. Its just a modern time colony of the CCP at this point. And its all mainly because of the greed of Cambodian governance and elite. Most building in the capital are Chinese owned, rent are so high Cambodians can't afford them and Chineses are replacing them. Most construction sites are mainly employing Chinese immigrant, same for shops, restaurants. And I'm not talking about Sihanoukville obviously... the rest of Cambodia is just going the exact same path.
What geopolitical information? China has been waging trade wars on the West for decades now and they are now experiencing pushbacks. Dumping practices are no longer acceptable here. When Trump is back in office, it will get worse for them. It is therefore natural for them to start dumping their overcapacities on developing nations. If you don’t think this will destroy the local industries then you are either a Wumao or a very naive person.
He’s a phony lawyer that somehow knows how to string a few big English words together without understanding the words nuances, and then he thinks he’s a competent lawyer.
@fyoo1484, we appreciate your feedback, but let us clarify something: our channel discusses critical geopolitical and economic issues that directly impact Vietnam and the region. If that makes you uncomfortable, it says more about your unwillingness to confront these realities than it does about us. We do not shy away from the truth just because it is inconvenient. Our content is backed by facts and analysis, and we will continue to expose China’s economic manipulation and its impact on Vietnam. If you prefer to ignore these issues, that is your choice. But for those who seek real, unfiltered information, we will be here. Unsubscribing is your loss, not ours.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting “Our channel is backed by facts…” Ok. Ken regurgitated about issues relating to slave labor and Xinjiang, despite the fact that these allegations have been debunked many times. Perhaps you could educate us on the EVIDENCE you have gathered. Other issues about Chinese economic practices, I don’t care about. It could be true or not.
this youtube channel just basically switched from real estate to subscribing to U.S $1.5 billion/year media funding program, GOOD JOB getting steady money from the state department $$$usd, i'm gonna do that too, i got a few youtube channels doing anti china propaganda, i like my easy money $$$usd.
This comment would be amusing if it weren’t so detached from reality. We have never received a single dollar from any government or media funding program. Our channel has evolved to cover a broader range of topics, including lifestyle, economic and geopolitical issues that impact Vietnam, because they matter to our viewers and the region. If you believe discussing the challenges that China’s economic practices pose to Vietnam is “anti-China propaganda,” then you are missing the point entirely. We are here to provide real information and analysis, not to cash in on conspiracy theories. If you have actual evidence to support your claim, feel free to share it. Otherwise, we suggest focusing on the content and the issues we discuss, rather than making baseless accusations. We will continue to cover the topics that matter, regardless of who it upsets. This is not about “easy money”-it’s about real issues that impact real people.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting hey i don't blame you, $1.5billion/year steady funding is GOOD $$$ money and good income guaranteed by U.S government. IF you think i'm making it up, you can check public records on state department media funding programs and the N.E.D. for journalists training and other media program funding.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting we have a couple of people making very good $$$ money, here is an example of media topics you could do in order to keep making those cash cows, $$$$. Serpentza and laowhy86, both great youtube channels for multiple income streams of money $$$ from adsense, subscriber base, advertisement and best deal of all, U.S state department funding $$$, $millions dollars per year is great income stream.
And who is paying you for being a troll? It is always interesting to see how quickly some people jump to conspiracy theories when they cannot engage with the content. We are not here to chase “cash cows” or push any external agenda. Our channel is focused on providing real, valuable information about issues that matter to Vietnam and the region. We have no connection to any government funding or organizations like the U.S. State Department. Our mission is to shed light on economic and geopolitical dynamics affecting Vietnam, not to profit from spreading misinformation. If you think the only motivation for discussing these topics is money, then you are missing the point entirely. We are committed to providing honest, fact-based content because these issues are important for anyone interested in Vietnam’s future. If you have genuine questions or topics you would like us to cover, we are always open to suggestions. Otherwise, let’s keep the conversation focused on the real issues instead of entertaining baseless theories. Last comment, as it is a complete waste of time and very childish.
All countries who can not compete claim that China sells products below production cost. If that is the case, how China's companies could survive?
We provided the answer in the video. Watch again.
As stated in the video, China subsidizes these businesses to do that they try to do it everywhere to ruin competition
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting sure. Look at the all the military bases and tell me who’s the aggressor and occupier
@@kevinliu52yeah US over 800 military bases.. china had like 1. These fools watch too much cnn fox, bbc propaganda. Basically selling your soul and doing injustice to our people..
Many Chinese companies do not survive, they go bankrupt.
Great report Ken! - I’m so not political, but hear enough to understand in a common sense way what’s going on.
If the agreement has been altered by China then there is none. They’re not sounding very popular on the world stage along side their friends from Russia, North Korea and Iran.
I’ve had the honor of meeting people from all over the world, many here in Vietnam and have found them to be very sweet kind people. Their government’s not so much. Vietnam should make it clear that their citizens come first not this bullying.
I’m an American married to a Vietnamese woman and living here. God forbid this ends up with army’s and tanks, I wouldn’t run to American I’d stay right here and fight by Vietnam’s side.
The world is full of tech genius, create a tech war room and push back.
Keep up the great work Ken.
you in a bubble world buddy, THE WORLD don't like the west, that's why they forming BRICS, and over 40 countries also want to join. FOR delusionals like you thinking G7 or western countries as some kind of "THE WORLD", you got one weird logic for sure.
Duong, I appreciate your channel that espouses extensive knowledge involving legal matters relating to Viet Nam which has greatly helped out many of us, and most of time, for free. Many people, including me, appreciate that. And I believe you are a good person with a good conscience that's why you took your time to response to me and that's why I decide to take my time to response to you here.
The 'truth' is a very subjective term catering to each of our own exposure to the related topic in question. What is the ultimate purpose of consuming news? I believe that the ultimate purpose of consuming news is to objectively understand it and hopefully be able to see the bottom of the truth. How to get to the bottom of the truth is not an easy task since we are surrounded by fakes news, misinformation, disinformation, propaganda ect. So what the hell am I talking here? Well, when presented with news, we should view it in the role of a judge, and not as a lawyer for the plaintiff or the defendant. It's your expertise you know too well that as a judge, we should impartially listen fully to both sides of the stories from both the plaintiff and the defendant. After carefully weighing presented evidence, facts and testimonies from all sides and all sources until which, the judge can finally and objectively make a final judgement, or so we hope🙂. That's a fair and objective way to go about making the right judgement in a court case. The same approach should be taken when consuming news, all news not just news about China.
I think that we should be very careful not to fall into the Confirmation Bias trap, meaning we formed a pre-determined notion about something and tend to only look for things that support that notion and completely dismiss any contrarian viewpoints or facts.
The US and China are now at loggerheads against each other in all spheres. So if we are only consuming news from Western media, which occupied 97% of total world news outlets, we are only reading and consuming the West narratives and forming our perception based on that. That is not enough. We need to also listen to the viewpoints on the other sides as well and see what they have to say. We need to listen to contrarian viewpoints. We need to listen to viewpoints even that might create cognitive dissonance within us. Only after having an objective take on all sides on a subject matter that we can hopefully come up with a more informed and objective understanding of the matter at hand.
As regard to China, a lot of people fan opinions about China have never actually lived or even set foot there. They formed opinion based on one-sided coverage by mainstream media which is prohibitively anti-China. I'm not here to defend China or the US per se. All I'm saying here is that we should strive to objectively consuming news from both sides before concluding something, otherwise we are making an uninformed opinion. There are many expats who actually lived for many years in China that can give a more accurate picture of what's going on in China if you can spare a bit of your time to see what others whom actually lived there have to say.
Cheers."
This video has all the hallmarks of fanning anti-China sentiment using classical Vietnamese nationalistic attitude against China, that China has been dominating and controlling Vietnamese to their detriments. When China is selling stuffs cheap, then it's unfair and controlling and wiping out Vietnam home grown businesses, but no solid explanation as to how tings are unfair that cannot be equalized via tariffs -- only just said China is bad bad and bad.
The youtuber has shown his "good conscience" is out the window when China is the topic. The smearing attacks are straight out of US think tank, actually just regurgitate the same scripts. He claimed China is behind all forms of export businesses to Vietnam with intention to dominate and crush the small country. Incredible smearing. But the more he tried to use words to justify, the more irrational disparaging attack is showing. Good thing after all to reveal some hidden dark colors.
Ken this issue is out of your league. Are you suggesting Vn to jump on the trade war with China like the US does?
No competent professional lawyer would stray into sensitive political issues publicly, and especially one that’s beyond his competency. Would any educated person seek his legal advice knowing he regurgitates half baked propaganda? I’ve come to the conclusion that Ken is a phony. His ability to string a few big English words together in his pidgin English might impress the locals, but we now can see through his shallow understanding of the world.
@Congtrihayankeomut, we find your comment amusing, but you are completely missing the point. This is not about suggesting Vietnam engage in a “trade war” with China like the U.S. What we are exposing is how China’s underhanded tactics-dumping goods below market value, breaking anti-dumping laws, and manipulating local markets-are putting Vietnam in a vulnerable position.
Pretending these issues are “out of our league” only shows a lack of understanding of the real economic threat China poses. Vietnam does not need to “jump” into any trade war, but it absolutely needs to protect its own market from China’s economic aggression. Ignoring this is not an option, and we will not be silent about it.
@thomaskim3128, your attempt to discredit us is laughable and reeks of desperation. Let us be clear: we have no problem addressing sensitive geopolitical issues publicly because we deal in facts, not “half-baked propaganda.” Questioning our competency only highlights your inability to engage with the actual points we are making.
If you believe that using "big English words" and speaking uncomfortable truths makes us “phony,” then perhaps it is you who lacks the depth to understand the complexity of these issues. We stand by our analysis and will continue to expose China’s economic manipulation and illegal practices, whether it makes you uncomfortable or not.
If you are here to attack our credibility, at least try to present an argument with some substance. We are not here to impress anyone-we are here to speak the truth. If you cannot handle that, feel free to keep scrolling.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting the west is saying the same thing about Chinese EVs. However when asked to provide proofs, the west has so far been unable to bring any solid evidences. So can you prove your above accusations since you’re a lawyer and all?
@Congtrihayankeomut, we appreciate your skepticism, but let us be absolutely clear: the evidence of China’s illegal trade practices is well-documented and recognized by numerous international bodies. We are not just throwing around accusations. China has been found guilty of violating anti-dumping laws, engaging in forced technology transfer, and using subsidies to flood foreign markets with cheap goods. This is not “Western propaganda”-these are facts upheld by rulings from the World Trade Organization and other regulatory bodies. See our related video to learn more, as shown by Attorney Ken.
If you are truly interested in the evidence, we suggest you look up cases where China has been penalized for these practices, rather than dismissing them without any basis. As for Chinese EVs, we are talking about the broader picture of China’s economic manipulation, not just one industry. Our role as legal professionals is to analyze and expose these realities, not to sugarcoat them.
So, before questioning our credibility, we encourage you to do a bit more research. We stand by our statements, and we have the evidence to back them up. If you are unwilling to see it, that is on you, not on us.
recently came back from Vietnam, the prices the sellers are trying to charge tourists is highway robbery, fake soccer jerseys they want almost as much as we pay for genuine? It is impossible to buy products that don't have a major lable or brand on them - which are all clearly counterfiet.
When the Vietnamese market sellers stop trying to blatantly rip off tourists and ask decent prices, maybe they may increase their sales, we for one walked away from many purchases due to ridiculously high prices.
What we found even more shocking was when on the way back to Australia we had a stop over in Singapore, many of the items they were selling in Vietnam were actually cheaper in Singapore and better quality...
So I think China is a big concern but they are also a master of their own disaster due to greed!
This post is full of cognitive dissonance. The video accuses China of dumping goods at low prices. But you are blaming being ripped off by the Vietnamese. Somehow this is the fault of the Chinese? Most clothes are made in Vietnam these days anyway.
Going to tourist shops and expecting local prices. Literally every tourists destination in the world have shops catered to tourists and charging tourists price, not just Vietnam. Just stay home and never go vacationing again 😂
As a Vietnamese living abroad, I agree there are sellers who will take advantage of unknowing tourists
what! you need to blame Vietnamese seller for ripping you off.
Blame China and Chinese has been standard in Vietnam and most of SE Asia. The US-led West used to just make fun of :Made in China" as cheap junks, but then when China wants to and can move up the value chain, suddenly China becomes "national security threat". But China will persevere and survive all such assaults and insults.
Thank you Ken for the information 👍
Same old same old. Americans wish the best for Vietnam as a partner, not as a vassal state. We hope that Vietnam retains its independence and unique culture.
Too late now. The education in vn today is teaching the way china gov way!
So, Vietnamese are grateful for the agent orange unleashed by the Yanks.
They know that China is no friend and the standard of living they want won’t happen following the Chinese way
As long as Vietnam can do the dirty work for America to "contain China", then Vietnam is the Good Commies. But when situation should change, that Vietnam is resisting USA, or Vietnam has the means and guts to move up the value chain to challenge USA hegemony, then Vietnam will be the Bad Commies.
Biggest danger may be politicians "on-the-take" in all the countries that are affected. When leaders seem to favor policies that benefit another country more than the domestic population, follow the money! Are they serving the people or their own pocketbooks?
China exports DEFLATION, Vietnamese should support Vietnam government for importing Deflation, so goods can be bought more affordably.
Vietnam government can always raise tariffs and tighten border control to avoid illegal cheap stuffs from flowing through. Those are Vietnam internal issues, do not point fingers and blame China.
With money saved, Vietnam government and Vietnamese populace can find ways to develop niches. It's common sense that it's silly to try to compete with your neighbor on anything and everything, that will only lead to craziness, even madness.
This is what international trading suppose to be about: each party to be the most optimized. Some protection is justified, but to cry "Dirty Wars", that Tanya Harding style and tactics.
US raising interest rates has been causing a lot of pain in most countries. US gets to see dollars returning, other currencies lowered, making buying other countries' assets a cheap bargain. That's where a lot of opposition ought to be about -- de-dollarization.
Buyers need to stretch their money. Most people in Vietnam consider 15 million VND a very good salary so you can’t blame the consumer for looking for a bargain.
Ben Thanh market is for tourist and you need to pay no more than 20% of the initial price.
I was in Cho Tan My in D7 and a pair of dinosaur sandals were 130K VND and you can probably get them for 100K, these same dinosaur sandals in Ben Thanh start at 400K to 500K so you need to research first.
I dont think in USD I use a different currency that I can’t disclose in here because I don’t want to be banned from this channel and blacklisted in TH-cam BUT having said that you don’t pay more that 4 USD for tshirts or sandals.
Shoes are more difficult because they have different grades of quality.
So you need to compare and keep it cool.
Sellers quote high but as a buyer you quote low then the seller will do a funny expression and let out a big sigh of other funny sound and then you bargain.
But I do agree that China has a stance that other Asian nations don’t accept or like.
Are you blaming the government for their failure to stop the Chinese?
@@ysw8291 what's wrong with your English comprehension?
The youtuber is spreading the ultra-nationalistic Vietnamese paranoia and antagonism against China. He blames all cheaper stuffs Chinese businesses selling to Vietnamese as a plot by China government to dominate Vietnam. Yeah if Chinese are selling cheap underwears to VN then that must be done under the direction by China government, to eventually conquer Vietnam! Spreading paranoia and hate, that's all.
Vietnam doesn't need to be at par with China on many things, Vietnam can find its comfort zone by finding niches to excel at. Spreading nationalistic hate against China will just drive the mind mad.
There are entire areas of Bangkok that nobody speaks English or Thai, only Chinese. Ratchadaphisek in Bangkok is dangerous and all Chinese.
So what is your point??? In most of the countries you have the so called CHINA TOWN !!!.
@@VK-tq4il This is Grey Business Chinatown. Bangkok already had. Chinatown, this is criminal Chinatown. Visit and try to speak Thai. Very dangerous for anyone not Chinese.
@@VK-tq4il even in Vietnam's China town then they're still be able to speak Vietnamese
I used to live in South Vietnam before 1975 in Chợ Lớn area of Saigon, now Ho Chi Minh city, which are 80% Chinese (Guang Dong ren) who speak Cantonese (Guang Dong hua) mostly, and the majority of our customers were Chinese (Cantonese), yet we thrived very well because my mom and my grand fathers on both sides speak fluent Cantonese (Guang Dong hua), even though we are 100% VNmese without any Chinese relative. 70-80% of VNmese words have root in ancient Han Chinese anyway, so learning Chinese isn't so difficult, and it just come natural when you use it daily. Now living in the USA, my mom, I and my brothers and sisters now speak fluent Spanish to our Hispanic customers, and we are doing very well economically.
Not only there, I passed thru Singapore the other day, plenty of china chinese in the island now, you can notice them miles away from the way they wear clothes and they can only speak mandarin!. In a decade or so, SG will just be another china province 😅
The majority of their products from the online platform are absolutely rubbish.
If you buy garbage, garbage comes to you. If you buy quality, quality comes to you.
People want to vilify will find nasty words to disparage.
I really wish I could buy Vietnamese products all the time. I really don't like to buy Chinese. But there are 2 problems. First: The VN goods I buy all break. I normally buy 2 of everything because I know I will have to replace them very quickly. The production quality needs to get much better. For example, I buy brooms for sweeping. They all have the same design fault, and they all break. I cannot buy a version that does not break. Second: The products are not available. For example, I have bought many water pumps in the last few years. The VN water pumps all fail because they have design faults. I have to lift the pumps out and fix them. But I can buy a Chinese pump that has some small design differences, and it doesn't fail. I originally bought 2 and now I'm buying 2 more. They are not cheap, and they are not delivered quickly. But I cannot buy an equivalent pump in Vietnam.
I believe that Vietnam can prosper even without depending to China..Vietnam should understand that China is not a friend. It's about time that Vietnam will bring their case to UNCLOS. Vietnam and Philippines have started to join together to protect their respective EEZ.
Western companies are investing money into Vietnam. It is the newest rising economy in the world. Bill Gates was just there this year.
Yeah Marcos jr does not have a corrupt family history 😂
He is not a U.S puppet 😂
And U.S does not have 100s of millions of his frozen Assets 🤣
@@minhloi4536 I never said that Marcos is not corrupt. PH UNCLOS case was filed by former President Aquino Jr and not Marcos nor Duterte.
@@terrymckenzie8786 agree. Hence, no need to depend to China
@@macolet9711 there is no friends ⁉️
Only benefits and self interests ⁉️
What case ⁉️
Ben Thanh Market is the place to know for scams that why, and locals people do not go there. If the tourist is just there for one time, and does not come back. The place is know for scam.
Ben Thanh market is not a scam, its a place for tourists to take their negotiating skills to the test. Quite an enjoyable experience IMO.
Seriously! Who needs negotiation skills on a vacation? DA
All around the world this is happening. Physical shops are closing and all is going online.
Cheap goods How cho Bến Thanh struggles?
$750k for 3 pairs of sock
If you aren't scared of dogs maybe you should be scared of robot dogs
Telling people this for years
Vietnamese should stand up to China
small man, huge ego
@@krischeng9743 as usual - Chinese gods bark too much
And, Laos and Cambodia should stand up to Vietnam.
You are saying Vietnam should do the dirty work of America to "contain China", so that Vietnam can be rewarded with the moniker of being a Good Commie.
Much better to stand up against US first. US has little issue to stir conflicts all around the world. Will fight China to the last Filipinos, and will have no hesitation to do the same to Vietnam IF Vietnam government should be willing accomplice.
But much more immediately, the printing of USD in the $Trillions has been causing the whole world crying in the pain of Inflation.
That's much more immediate and REAL challenge and disturbance. Let's see how Vietnamese stand up to that.
China selling things cheap to Vietnam is called a problem "of control and domination", that's just raw hate, no reasoning.
I don't agree with this Western narrative. I was in Vietnam for the past 6 months. Most Vietnamese make 6-10 millions VND, that's about $250-$400 USD. They do what they have to do to live somewhat of a comfortable life. Until wages go up, I don't blame the average person in Vietnam. They don't have the money like you to pick and choose. I know the Vietnamese government is working on getting the average person wage up but until then this is how people are surviving. When we can control our own supply chain like in the coffee and food industry to have open competition to drive down prices. This is why Starbucks and Western food industry can't compete with our locals.
We understand the struggle that many Vietnamese face with low wages and the need to make ends meet-this is a harsh reality. But let us not confuse survival tactics with the broader issue of economic manipulation. The point we are making is not about blaming the average Vietnamese person for buying cheaper goods; it is about exposing how China’s unfair trade practices-like dumping goods below market value and violating anti-dumping laws-are crippling Vietnam’s ability to build a self-sufficient economy.
Yes, local industries like coffee and food have shown resilience and strength against foreign brands, and that is commendable. But what happens when Chinese products dominate every other market sector, making it impossible for local industries to grow and compete? That is not just about wages-it is about China systematically undermining Vietnam’s economic foundation.
We are not pushing a “Western narrative”; we are shedding light on a critical issue that affects Vietnam’s future. It is not just about survival-it is about securing Vietnam’s long-term economic independence and prosperity.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Even in Indonesia, I was shocked to learn that a fish canning factory uses most of their tin cans from China.. if China does not have the size they need they cannot make that product they want.
-- So now there is subtle blackmail --- your local factory is controlled by the supplies that china will sell you, if they not willing to sell there is no alternative as other tin can factories are closing down.. --
With advancement in robotics, AI and so on.. Factories even in China could
have massively reduced workforce.
It also affects the China public as even in China, automation to squeeze out all human costs will cost massive loss of jobs...
So its the policy of the regime that serves the purpose , not its people , or even benefit other people in other countries.
With massive amounts of people out of jobs, it creates a crisis of instability, even within China itself.
New technology (AI, quantum computing) requires massive amounts of power and I think its time for Vietnam to go its own way and go Nuclear Power, Nuclear Fission and so on.. All the big boys ordering people to go "green" is not doing so themselves.. So Going nuclear for power is one of the way out of being strangled to death..
Eg: New York Nuclear power plant is to be restarted for Microsoft AI FARM.
I give you 10likes👍👍👍
I am Vietnamese, and I totally disagree with you. This is not Western narrative. China took our islands, and now they are taking our economy and jobs. You only live in Vietnam for 6 months and you think you know it all? Try talking to more Vietnamese people, and see how they think about China and CCP.
you are a lying clown... like kenny 😂🤡😂
Talking about China unfair pricing in front of the place that has 100% overpriced items. LOL 😅
alot of people struggling offcourse they gonna buy something cheap not everybody can afford good quality products
One minute you say how Chinese products are hurting economy but then the next minute you say come start a business because economy is booming which is it
We understand why it may seem contradictory, but let us clarify: Chinese products are indeed hurting certain sectors of the Vietnamese economy by undermining local industries through unfair competition. However, Vietnam’s economy as a whole is still growing and offers immense opportunities for businesses-particularly for those that can add value, innovate, and compete on quality.
Encouraging businesses to enter Vietnam is not about ignoring the challenges-it is about recognizing the opportunities to strengthen the market, diversify supply chains, and create a more resilient economic environment that is not reliant on cheap Chinese imports. We are advocating for strategic investments that build up Vietnam’s economy, not for a blind race to the bottom.
So yes, we expose the problems, but we also highlight the potential for growth and development. It is not one or the other-it is about navigating the challenges and leveraging the opportunities. That is the reality of doing business in a dynamic market like Vietnam.
The economy in Vietnam aint booming. The GDP number that the govt pushed out is all fake numbers to lure FDI (foreign direct investment) and masks the troubling economy.
While some aspect of the VNmese economy are hurt due to Chinese's low-cost goods, other aspect of the economy like tourism, service, real estate, agriculture, etc...can gain much more benefit from deeper economic ties with China, while cheaper Chinese goods at the same time can lower inflation and increase living standard. VN should make more effort to make VN tourism and agricultural products more appealing and promote these aspect of the economy to China and neighboring countries.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting What is "unfair competition"? Is someone selling Pho noodle $3 unfair to the guy selling $6? If China is dumping, then is WTO really so badly disabled by US? So Vietnam has to suffer and has to play the blame China game .. I see. Oh, the whole VCP got bought out by the CCP so blame the CCP. What else to blame the Chinese? Constipation next.
@@ysw8291Nationalistic Vietnamese like to paint any dealings with China as Zero-sum, but that does Not need to be. The money saved from buying Chinese goods can be used to develop, doesn't need to be wasted on beer if you get the meaning, and then blame blame China for not able to rise up further.
Let's not overstate that there are many in Vietnam who are in bed with China.
I hope vietnam does something about it vietnam should be number one
Dude dont put misleading title to increase views.
There is nothing misleading about the title. China’s economic tactics in Vietnam are aggressive and calculated, and calling it an “invasion” accurately reflects the severity of the situation. We use strong titles because we are discussing serious issues that deserve attention.
just stop lying to your audience baldy 🤣😂
Lot of Chinese influence in Thailand and Malaysia too
Vietnam needs China more than China needs Vietnam in my opinion.
Why does Vietnam need China?
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting why does china need vietnam?
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting in 2023 Vietnam exports products to China valued at $61.2 billions. Vietnam exported more products to China than it imported from China. China has more buying power than Vietnam. As a business lawyer you should know this.
LOL if hes even asking why does vietnam need China. This man is a fraud barely knows geopolitics
@usaguru1, we appreciate your engagement, but your information is incorrect. In 2023, Vietnam did not export more to China than it imported. The reality is that Vietnam has a significant trade deficit with China, with imports far exceeding exports. Vietnam imported around $130 billion worth of goods from China while exporting only about $61.2 billion. This imbalance is precisely why China’s economic leverage over Vietnam is so concerning.
Having “buying power” does not justify predatory practices like dumping goods below market value or violating anti-dumping laws to dominate the market. As a business lawyer, we are fully aware of these dynamics and their implications for Vietnam’s economy. This is not about numbers alone; it is about the broader impact on local industries and economic sovereignty.
If you are interested in a serious discussion, it is crucial to get the facts straight. We are here to highlight these issues because they matter for Vietnam’s long-term stability and prosperity, not to present a skewed view of trade relations.
China's industrial output has reached impressive levels, largely due to the globalization movement over the past four decades. In addition to foreign direct investment (FDI) flowing into China, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has controlled investment options for its citizens, primarily directing funds into state owned banks low-interest savings accounts and real estate. This approach has allowed the government to channel substantial banking resources into strategic sectors such as infrastructure, high-speed rail, solar panels, steel, Huawei, semiconductors, green energy, and electric vehicles through significant subsidies.
However, this has led to overfunding and excess capacity in many industries. Without similar extensive government support, private enterprises in other countries struggle to compete.
The situation has worsened recently: the real estate sector in China is deflating, domestic consumer spending is declining, and FDI is decreasing. Many Chinese companies are now in survival mode. With excess production capacity and a slowdown in domestic consumption, these goods must be exported at very low prices. It's no surprise that many countries are imposing tariffs or investigating the dumping of predatory goods from China.
My experience living in Vietnam for the past 5 years is that the people hear understand that: "You get what you paid for" Accordingly, people in the middle class avoid low quality Chinese goods and opt for better quality options.
Part of that is intended discrimination against China, or some intention to "not to enrich China", because China has been portrayed by Vietnam nationalism as the "eternal adversary".
China used to make cheap stuffs, and Vietnam merchants made quick money by importing questionable low quality stuffs to enrich themselves - and blame China for it.
Reality is China has been moving up the quality ladder for many years. The most expensive commodities have been made in China for more than a decade.
But people in their intention to vilify will spew out nasty words to disparage.
@@ysw8291 Yes, we are high class people who can afford to boycott crappy Chinese junk when we have a choice.
have you seen what products they have in China? let me tell you...they have very good products and they are cheap
@@havencat9337 I'm familiar with the Chinese products sold here in Vietnam. Their cheap, for sure, but good???? Definiteluy NOT!
Can you make this video in Vietnamese so my family can understand the situation
I think Vietnamese have enough anti-China nationalism already, nothing more to add to it, and frankly very unhealthy to add to it. Nationalism can be poisonous.
The fellow said China selling stuffs cheap is a plot by the China government to dominate Vietnam. That's crazy paranoia. As if the China government is all powerful to direct all businesses to follow the same script. Ask yourself this: do Vietnamese businesses follow the directive by the VCP government, to do what the government order them to do? Or do the Vietnam government order businesses to do things to dominate and crush its smaller neighbors Laos and Cambodia? If you don't think VCP would bother to do those things, then think the same about CCP.
Too much ultra nationalism can make people crazy.
1.6 billion anti-China propaganda oversea funding must have floating thought this channel.
That is quite a creative theory, but it could not be further from the truth. We do not need “anti-China funding” to expose the reality of China’s economic tactics. The facts speak for themselves: breaking international trade laws, dumping subsidized goods, and undermining local markets are tactics that hurt economies like Vietnam’s. Our mission is to shed light on these issues, regardless of where the chips fall.
Throwing out baseless accusations about funding is just a distraction from the real conversation. If you have actual arguments to counter our points, we would be happy to engage. But until then, we suggest focusing on the facts we have presented rather than inventing conspiracy theories. We are here to discuss reality, not fantasies.
kenny can't make it in the US nore Vietnam so he has to apply for the smear china subsidies 😉🤭😉
exactly!
Dear Vietnam,
Good luck, we failed to stop the Chinese.
Best,
Thailand.
Better to try to stop America for staging color revolutions here and there to screw around the world, Thailand is on the radar.
Ken, you are mixing apples with bananas.
There is no “mixing apples with bananas” here. The facts are straightforward: China’s aggressive economic tactics-dumping goods below market value, violating anti-dumping laws, and manipulating local markets-are a direct threat to Vietnam’s economic stability. These are deliberate actions, not random fruit comparisons.
If you cannot see the connection between China’s economic strategies and their impact on Vietnam, then you are missing the bigger picture. We are exposing how these tactics are systematically undermining Vietnam’s economy. This is about economic warfare, not fruit baskets.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsultingKen, your labor theory of value was refuted by the subjective theory of value, of the economists E.von Baverk and Carl Menger.
We appreciate your attempt to dive into economic theory, but this is not a classroom debate about 19th-century economic philosophers. Our focus is on exposing China’s manipulative trade practices that violate international laws and harm Vietnam’s economy. The “subjective theory of value” and “labor theory of value” are academic discussions that have little to do with China flooding markets with cheap, subsidized goods that cripple local businesses.
If you want to engage in a philosophical debate, that is fine, but we are here to discuss the real-world impacts of these predatory tactics on Vietnam’s economic future. Let us not get sidetracked by irrelevant academic theories while China continues to undermine Vietnam’s economic stability. The issue is not about abstract value theories-it is about economic sovereignty and the survival of local industries.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting So y would you like to prohibit, for "protection", chinese products to be chosen by vietnamese consumers ?
It has no sense. There is no better practice than a good theory.
We are not advocating for “prohibition” of Chinese products. What we are calling for is fair competition. When China dumps goods below market value and breaks international anti-dumping laws, it creates an uneven playing field that crushes local businesses and undermines Vietnam’s economic stability. This is not about stopping Vietnamese consumers from choosing what they want; it is about ensuring that they have a real choice, not one dictated by China’s economic manipulation.
Fair competition is not about shielding local industries from superior products-it is about protecting them from predatory practices that distort the market. Allowing these tactics to continue unchecked does not lead to a healthy economy; it leads to dependency and long-term harm.
So yes, there is “no better practice than a good theory,” but theories must be grounded in reality. The reality is that China’s actions are designed to dominate, not to compete fairly. If we ignore this, then we are not protecting consumers-we are handing them over to a system designed to eliminate their choices in the long run. That is not the future we want for Vietnam.
Greetings, no country is forced to revive foreign merchandise or investment. In the event that abuses are taking place, the responsibility falls on the government of the country. Whether we like it or not, China is a commercial and industrial power.
Greetings. You are correct-no country is forced to accept foreign goods or investments. But when a powerful nation like China uses illegal tactics such as dumping goods below cost and manipulating trade policies to dominate another country’s market, it is no longer just a matter of choice. It becomes a deliberate strategy to undermine local industries and create dependency.
Yes, China is an economic powerhouse, but that does not excuse violating international trade laws and crippling smaller economies in the process. The responsibility does fall on governments to protect their markets, but we cannot ignore the root cause of these economic issues-China’s predatory practices. Acknowledging China’s power should not mean accepting its abuses.
We are here to shed light on these realities because recognizing the problem is the first step toward finding solutions. Ignoring these issues only allows them to grow unchecked, and that is not an option for Vietnam’s future.
I understand, for those cases if you are right in your opinion there is the recourse to file a claim before the international trade organization. Those responsible for allowing this alleged abuse It is the Vietnamese government
You are correct that filing a claim with international trade organizations is one way to address these issues. However, it is not always that simple. Political and economic pressures often make it difficult for governments like Vietnam’s to take strong actions against a powerful neighbor like China. It is not just about filing complaints-it is about navigating a complex web of diplomacy, economic dependency, and regional stability.
The responsibility does lie with the Vietnamese government to protect its economy, but the scale of China’s manipulation makes it an extremely challenging task. That is why we are discussing these issues openly-to raise awareness and push for stronger measures that protect Vietnam’s economic sovereignty.
We are not here to point fingers without offering solutions. Highlighting these problems is the first step toward finding viable strategies that help Vietnam stand strong against these predatory practices. If we ignore them, we risk compromising the country’s economic future.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting What "solution" do you ever have? Regurgitate the phrases "decouple from China", "derisk from China", "national security risk" ... That would work huh
Let me imagine, maybe you wish there to be this "Contain-China Union" that VN will be a faithful participant, that the rest of the world will join together to fully trust each other, to freely share resources and technology, but doing all these things to "contain China", so Vietnam can be big in status in that part of Asia -- Isn't this a nice fantasy?
What are you Really after here? Wishing China would give a blank cheque to VN, that VN can get anything: raw materials, technology, anything and everything from China at next to no cost, then that would be the outcome that suit Vietnamese?
Or maybe even more immediately, that China will retreat from Cambodia and Laos and SCS, so Vietnam can be as dominant as it wishes, in return for VN (or yourself) won't talk bad about China (for a while). Thinking of that as a more realistic goal?
What do you really want China to do? Sell things cheaply is bad, sell things as Western prices is bad, so China has to just lie down and let Vietnam to walk all over -- some mental picture hey?
Underhanded anti-China propaganda? I hope not. The world is no longer unipolar. Countries that adapt best will have a competitive advantage. Overall, Vietnam is doing it smartly, He plays the game with both hands, he doesn't bet his future on a single country.
Victor Salas, coming from you who owns a media company is China talking about propaganda is hilarious. There is no “anti-China propaganda” from us here-just facts. Acknowledging and exposing China’s unfair trade practices and economic manipulation is not propaganda; it is a reality that affects Vietnam’s economic future. Vietnam’s strategy of balancing relations with multiple countries is indeed smart, but that does not mean turning a blind eye to economic threats.
The world is no longer unipolar, as you mentioned, and that is precisely why it is crucial for countries like Vietnam to protect their markets from predatory practices. Playing the game with both hands means being aware of the tactics being used against you and taking steps to counter them. We are not here to bash China-we are here to highlight the challenges Vietnam faces so that it can continue to navigate these complex dynamics wisely.
If that makes some people uncomfortable, so be it. We will continue to speak the truth about these issues because Vietnam’s economic sovereignty should never be compromised.
This is old news. Yes China do subsidies, other countries do the same as well for their strategic industries. Vietnam needs to understand its a small country, big and powerful countries has been playing the capitalist game for a long time and always been having an upper hand. It’s kinda hard to assert power without your own technology and a strong military.
What Vietnam really need to develop fast is not related to politics at all. It’s about its own culture. East Asian countries like China Korea Japan has developed quickly due to a strong masculine culture of hard working men. Vietnam on the other hand from my observation is that majority of men are weak and lazy that mostly prefers a matriarch family structure. You fix this and Vietnam would prosper like crazy .
completely alarmist take not sure how this can benefit business in any way
You are missing the point entirely. Highlighting the challenges posed by China’s economic manipulation is not “alarmist”-it is about being realistic and proactive. Ignoring these issues would be far more damaging to businesses than confronting them head-on. Awareness is the first step toward creating strategies that allow businesses to thrive, even in a challenging environment.
Exposing unfair trade practices, such as breaking anti-dumping laws and flooding markets with subsidized goods, helps businesses understand the landscape they are entering. This is not about scaring anyone; it is about preparing businesses to compete strategically and protect their interests.
If you think discussing real challenges is not beneficial, then perhaps you are not looking at the bigger picture. We are here to provide the information businesses need to navigate and succeed, not to sugarcoat the reality. Knowledge is power, and we believe in empowering our audience to make informed decisions.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting 'flooding markets with subsidized goods' damn near every country is dealing with this. Almost every point you bring up is easily debunked or heavily exaggerated and shows a very surface level knowledge of China, assuming every second order effect stemming from the country is somehow malicious in intent.
Furthermore, how is this 'invading Vietnam'; the countries share a border, of course goods are going to flow into the country, China is the no.1 trading partner of most of the world. Implement tariffs if it's such a problem. Titling a video 'China is invading Vietnam' is completely alarmist or intentionally deceptive, or both. The whole world knows that China is formidable in manufacturing lol acting like they're invading your country doesn't educate anyone. You can discuss a business landscape in a serious manner without resorting to warmongering. Besides, VN sits in a relatively privileged position, already absorbing high value manufacturing that doesn't want to be in China (or India), and some textiles manufacturing as well. VN even has a national EV company. VN is the second fastest growing economy in the past 25 years, second only to China. This is better than what many emerging markets can claim. Bashing China in this manner is just distasteful, you don't even see this level of fearmongering in the US.
Your comment reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of the issue at hand. Yes, many countries deal with subsidized goods, but what China is doing goes beyond normal trade practices-it is economic manipulation. Breaking anti-dumping laws, using forced technology transfers, and flooding markets with artificially cheap products are not “surface-level” concerns. They are strategies designed to destabilize and dominate markets like Vietnam’s.
As for calling this an “invasion,” let us be clear: we are talking about an economic invasion, not a military one. It is about China systematically gaining control over Vietnam’s economy through these predatory practices. Sharing a border does not justify these actions, and your suggestion to “just implement tariffs” ignores the complex political and economic dynamics that make such decisions challenging for Vietnam.
You mentioned Vietnam’s economic growth, which we do not deny. But that does not mean we should ignore the very real threats posed by China’s economic tactics. Vietnam’s success should not come at the cost of its economic sovereignty. A booming economy is not immune to being undermined by unfair competition and dependency on a single dominant trading partner.
If you think discussing these issues is “fearmongering” or “distasteful,” then you are choosing to overlook the reality of the situation. We are not here to bash anyone-we are here to inform and expose the truth, even if it makes some people uncomfortable. If that is not your cup of tea, you are free to watch elsewhere, but we will continue to discuss these issues in a serious and straightforward manner.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting economic manipulation is a stretch. I don't think very many manufacturers or Chinese govt officials are losing much sleep trying to 'control VN'. Calling business something other than business when you're not getting the result you want is dishonest. The IP theft thing has some ground - not in VN though lol don't see how you can complain about that. You also paint with a VERY broad brush, making it seem like every 'Made in China' product was paid for by Xi himself. You make 1 and a half good points and the rest of the vid is literally fearmongering discussing things that are easily debunked. This is not how subsidies work at all, it's even much less direct than the way that they work in the US, and definitely doesn't apply to much of the products that would find their way to VN. What is an 'artificially cheap good', please tell me lol. If it's cheap it's cheap, VN has much lower labor costs don't see why it can't compete on that front. Just read over your own words, what you're claiming to be happening just doesn't make sense and is not something that can happen over a sustained period of time. China is a formidable trade partner, everyone knows this. There are actions countries can take to mitigate this, why doesn't VN implement these strategies? 'Cheap goods are not benefiting VN consumers', than why do they keep buying them? Is the govt supposed to hold everyone's hand and make them buy local? The VN consumers themselves, and the VN govt, should both be blamed 1st in this scenario, before Chinese manufacturers, who I doubt think about 'invading VN economically', at all. You mention China has already 'invaded' Thailand. This is not what has happened at all, it has more to do with the rise of ecommerce and less to do with Chinese goods. This isn't even a talking point in Thailand, because there's nothing to talk about. They may implement tariffs, but they leave it at that, they don't claim that China is 'invading Thailand'. This is a byproduct of global trade, you're making it seem intentional. VN has the potential to have a very strong domestic market with it's own manufacturing hubs and even ecommerce platforms. You don't have to blatantly lie to encourage this. I suggest having at least some level of background knowledge not just citing English media headlines and purporting false facts on a foreign subject. "Our reporting needs to reflect that nuance", in your own words.
Your comment raises several points, but it also reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of the issues we are discussing. Let’s break it down:
The term “economic manipulation” is not a stretch-it is a reality recognized by international trade bodies. China’s practices of dumping goods below cost and leveraging subsidies are well-documented. This is not just business; it is about using economic tools to dominate and destabilize markets, which does directly impact Vietnam’s economic sovereignty. To think that Chinese officials are not strategizing about controlling regional economies is to ignore decades of documented evidence.
You dismiss IP theft as not relevant to Vietnam, but it is part of a broader strategy that affects global markets, including Vietnam. When Chinese companies steal IP to create cheaper alternatives, it undermines the entire ecosystem, from original manufacturers to local businesses trying to compete. Ignoring this issue is shortsighted.
When we talk about “artificially cheap goods,” we are referring to products sold at prices below their actual production cost, made possible through government subsidies and unfair practices. This is not about a natural market outcome-it is about distorting the market to the detriment of other players. Vietnam’s labor costs may be lower, but they cannot compete with products that are sold at unsustainable prices due to state intervention.
Yes, Vietnamese consumers buy these goods, but that is not the point. The availability of these cheap products, driven by subsidies and dumping, skews consumer choice and destroys local competition. It is not about blaming the government or consumers-it is about addressing the root cause, which is China’s predatory economic behavior.
You mention Thailand and e-commerce without recognizing the bigger picture. E-commerce is just a channel; the problem is the flood of subsidized Chinese goods dominating those platforms. If you think that does not matter, look at the impact on local businesses struggling to compete with prices they cannot match. This is not fearmongering-it is a reality that affects livelihoods.
If presenting facts about unfair trade practices and economic manipulation is “fearmongering” to you, then perhaps you are not fully grasping the stakes involved. We are here to provide a nuanced view, but also to be clear about the challenges Vietnam faces. Ignoring these issues does not make them go away.
We suggest diving deeper into the realities of these economic dynamics rather than dismissing them as “English media headlines.” We stand by our analysis because it reflects a nuanced understanding of these complex issues. We are not here to spread fear but to shed light on the strategies being used against Vietnam and the region. If you are willing to engage in a serious discussion based on facts, we welcome it. Otherwise, dismissing these concerns as “lies” only undermines your own credibility in this conversation.
Is there any way to know if ordering from Shopee or buying at a Market if what you are buying is from China or if it’s Domestic or from USA ,Japan etc.
very good reporting. I didn’t know that it was so rampant here in Vietnam. With China dumping their cheap goods here. My Wife and I are careful not to buy from China. We look to see where it is manufactured but that too can be misleading because they produce their junk in other Countries to avoid tariffs and such.
Thanks,Ken. Love your Channel. US Expat in Saigon.
Good luck.
Shopee Has a Better Transparency Over Lazada. Shopee clearly Includes the Country of Origin or the Shop Country so it is Easy To Avoid Chinese Shop or to choose Shops that are Within Vietnam, Chn Products couldnt be avoided as they Have a lot in anything. Also Shopee Should the Review stars Selection so a buyer could just choose the 1 to 3 stars of the product Review while Lazada is Hiding The Bad Review of a Products which is Not very transparent. Lazada has Many Many Shops from China. That are Pretending to Be A Vietnamese Shop and It SUCKS .
Actually all his talking points are verbatim like the ones use by US politicians. I am sure he is paid by cia. He is a lawyer by heart. I would definitely hire him if I need legal representation in VN.
Again?! You are just repeating yourself!
Ken Duong - Interesting upload , very much so you did here - K. D. - hasn't your government in Hanoi taking action on this issue , as it can't be unknown to them?? 🤓😎👽💀
I’m Singaporean,look Vietnam is a sovereign country again it’s your decision please don’t blame china blame your government ok?
Breaking anti-dumping laws is Vietnam too??
Cheap good? Can China sell cheap goods to improvised country like Vietnam?
Vietnamese do not buy Chinese cars and electronic products if you didn’t already know.
@@Target-zo7fbyou only buy cheap useless vinfast cars😂 a corrupt company
@@alexzhangdragonn3438 wahhh… does it hurt your ego realizing Vietnamese do not buy Chinese products or something ?!? The most popular cars in Vietnam are Japanese and Korean, not even Vintast, if you didn’t already know, ok wumao ?!!
@@alexzhangdragonn3438 the most popular cars in Vietnam are Japanese and Korean, not even Vinfast, if you didn’t already know 😌
@@Target-zo7fbthe Japanese and Koreans are invading Vietnam too.
The Chinese products are getting better each day and selling it at very reasonable prices. How can we resist it?
😂 it’s been like that for forever. Don’t worry they only can sell cheap products here.
coming from spore n malaysian , we see the local vn perception toward CHINA is quite narrative , regarding some polictic issue we leave to the court n polictician to deal with while we still can partner n trading with whoever that give mutual benefit and both side on good wills . Why mixed up politic issue in the trading and it quite bad to generalised Made in china is low poor quality , some information Spore MRt are buying cabin from china and ruk well ,the social housing HDB is contracted to China developer on some project , As a business POV we just make sure customer get the value and worth every penny with good quality . in the 90s msia nor spore we also face the confident or quality of china made ,,As a importer or business pov we make sure the good quality good must be bring in and comply with countries import safety standard . . be open minded and treat all with fair in trade while hoping all SEA countries benefit and developed well . Gov n the business must work hand in hand and let the Citizen to enjoy with more affordable ,valued and choices As the trend is globalisation , It borderless now in trading
I just subscribed.
Well thought.
Good point about dumping of Chinese goods at lower prices.
Viet Nam can impose higher tariffs.
Thanks for subscribing.
What about Philippines ?
Philippines is already US lackey. Tis youtuber is broadcasting anti-China rant, so wanting more anti-China flavor? Marcos has his family $Billions controlled by the US, so all actions will have to please his Masters. Enjoy the ride to the bottom.
I have travelled to Thailand, Cambodia, and China for my visa renewal. First, as a foreigner visiting these neighbor countries, I felt very comfortable buying products on the street vendors. Why? Simply because they are honest merchants, unlike the local Vietnamese you don’t mentioned at all. They are intent to whip you off by charmed you, [hi handsome or hi honey] slogan. The world is much bigger than anyone’s head, social media has become the most powerful source of information of do vs don’t. Everyone knows the true. If Vietnam’ merchants start selling the right price, I would know and will consider buying it again. Blaming China for low quality and cheap goods doesn’t work.
The information in the videos literally is going over your head. Recommend you read between the lines. Honest and dishonest merchants are literally everywhere there’s a major tourist hub, and not just in Vietnam. Unfortunately, that’s just too much for you to comprehend.
it's their work, US government are paying them for propaganda,1.6b dollars, holly molly😅
Name a country where all tourists are 100% sastified! If you aren’t happy in Vietnam go to other countries. My compatriots complaining about thief pockets in Milan, robberies in Paris, racisms in US, scams in Australia…should they blame the whole western world for those incidents?
@@DaiCaThanh71 No need to get emotional. The point is some countries have more scams than others *as of the current social conditions". Japan and China for example have far less scams by street hawkers compared to Vietnam. That's because the social conditions in Japan and China have developed to a better place now, that hawkers don't feel a big pull to cheat others. Vietnam can get to a better place too.
I'm bullish VN as much as anyone but be serious bro lol. China manufactures a ton of stuff, how is it their fault that ecommerce platforms (not based in China) impact VN. VN is a small fry lol China doesn't gain anything from putting Thailand or VN street and market vendors out of business. At best, this is complete nonsense, at worst, this blame the select few Chinese individuals and companies. Or better yet, blame the VN population for buying these Chinese goods in the first place. Please go to China to at least have some credibility, I don't think anyone can be taken seriously on this topic when they mention the Xinjiang 'labor camps' with a straight face. Do you know people who have been there?
Vietnam invaded Laos and Cambodia. So why can't China invades Vietnam? Hypocrisy!!!!!!!!
Let us clarify the difference here: Vietnam’s historical involvement in Laos and Cambodia was driven by complex geopolitical dynamics, including responding to threats like the Khmer Rouge, which was committing genocide and destabilizing the region. It was not about economic domination or territorial conquest.
China’s economic strategies, on the other hand, involve using unfair trade practices, violating international laws, and creating dependency to exert control over Vietnam’s economy. Comparing this to Vietnam’s past actions is not just misleading-it is a false equivalence.
Respecting a country’s sovereignty means recognizing its right to determine its own economic and political path without interference or coercion. That applies to all nations, including Vietnam. Attempting to justify one country’s invasive actions by pointing to another’s history ignores the principles of international law and respect for sovereignty.
We are here to discuss these issues openly because they impact Vietnam’s future and stability. We cannot afford to ignore these realities, and we will continue to speak out against any actions that threaten Vietnam’s sovereignty, no matter where they come from.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting I'm not referring to historical events or in past tense. This is what is still going on now. Who installed the dictatorship in Cambodia for the last forty years, not Vietnam? The government running ruling over Laos, are NOT all Vietnamese? Why is the Chinese and Korean still hates Japan and Japanese for the event during WW2.
It is crucial to address these topics accurately. Vietnam’s involvement in Cambodia was about ending the Khmer Rouge regime, which was committing genocide and destabilizing the entire region. Since then, Cambodia has been a sovereign nation, making its own choices (with China!). The same goes for Laos-its government and policies are decided by its own people (and China!), not by Vietnam.
As for historical grievances, each country has its own context and reasons for how they view the past. We are not here to justify or judge those feelings, but to focus on current issues that impact Vietnam’s economy and regional stability. We should avoid conflating unrelated historical events with the topic at hand.
Our focus remains on highlighting economic and geopolitical dynamics that affect Vietnam today. If you want to discuss these topics constructively, we welcome your insights. But let’s keep the conversation relevant to the issues impacting Vietnam’s future, rather than getting lost in historical debates.
@@Jayvaraman7 looks like jayvara is a pol pot supporter 😂
@@qk.6535 I don't support Hypocrisy. :) lol
10yr warranty - go vinfast
Buy Vinfast stocks, hold long term. Put your money where mouth is.
It is called "soft power"
China also has a strategy to smear Vietnamese goods. Most recently, there was an article by a Chinese financial expert saying that Vinfast cars imported spare parts from this country for assembly.
Yet there are also Vietnamese people who translated this article into Vietnamese. Very dangerous.
this is an article written by 1 man in China. This is not representative of China. Simple concept, no?
"a Chinese financial expert" said Vinfast uses China spare parts -- How is that a smearing? Apple and Tesla both have large operations in China and uses a lot of China parts.
Or are you afraid US won't let Vinfast to operate? Or what?
And even let's drop this "smearing" thing, how's one Chinese guy said something equate "China has a strategy" ??
So one Vietnam guy commits a crime, then Vietnam government has a strategy?
Too much C-h-i-i-n-n-a in the mind, too much poisonous Vietnamese nationalism.
i never heard of that...trust me people in CN dont care about articles, and there are 1.4 bil people...there will be articles written for everything
when cheap China stuff start flooding the market in Australia 2095 I actually said that the little money we were paying at least was real money, but their crap couldn't even be used for what they sell it for.
Not only Vietnam, but Cambodia and Laos also
@@ysw8291 I think you are lacking in the comprehension department if you can't connect the dots on your own. Or maybe you can and that's why you're here spamming bull💩
Mad that people are talking bad about your country? Maybe you should tell your country to not do bad things
china act like USA acts with america
Ben thanh market sells tons of chinese crap
SO DO NOT BUY IT.
@@VK-tq4il good luck dummy
Hey Ken n’ team. Important video and points made here in very good lingo. I usually hate on this fishy snack my students get from China, it’s unhealthy , too sugary and smells awful, but they’re addicted to it. I wish everyone can wake up on matters cheap goods and their effects on local industry.
Nice propaganda
Good job Ken of consolidating data into a very good video.
Sky-Scraping Tariffs!
Thank you Ken. Keep up the good report.
To spread poisonous nationalism against China is not a good report, it's not healthy for the mind and soul of Vietnamese. China is doing business. China sells things inexpensively should be appreciated, not as a force of "control and dominance". Do you curse a Dollar Store or Liquidation Mart?
Doesn't need to see any issues or dealing with China as zero-sum, wishing for China to fall so Vietnam can be bigger -- that's childish, prideful and unhealthy. Maybe a day will come when Vietnam can grow to have better sense of self-peace, and don't need to keep using attacks to deal with China.
I will unsubscribe this channel.
We are sorry you cannot tolerate different opinions. You can unsubscribe now and stay in your safe space.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Inciting nationalistic antagonism is much worse than an opinion. Inciting Zero-sum hatred is much worse than an opinion. You present no fact in your diatribe, only "China is bad, others have said so". Let me spell these out one more time how you incite anti-China antagonism:
There is no international anti-dumping "laws", only anti-dumping Duty.
You have no proof China is subsidizing all forms of exports into Vietnam, period. To suggest even consumer commodities would be subsidized by China government is silly in very juvenile way. Things like Chinese steel, China has not subsidized that for four years.
You certainly have no proof at all that China government is offering subsidies for selling in Vietnam to weaken and then to dominate Vietnam, but that has been your disparaging claim.
Temu is an abomination here in the USA. Products are simulated. They resemble something functional, but fall apart the first use. My Vinfast e34 (in Vietnam) car is fantastic. No problems after the first software update years ago.
Buy Vinfast stocks and hold long term, not day trading manipulation, put your money where mouth is.
Learn from the failures of the US.
It’s not even failure, it’s greed by business leaders.
They come to do business but not war with any country
lol, I hope you don't travel to China.
❤❤❤ God bless Vietnam
This is your best informative video, i will subscribe now
Thanks and welcome
Cut the crap An immigration attorney, what do you know about economics. Chinese stuff is everywhere. In US, India, EU, including Vietnam. We all know Cho Ben Thành is for tourists. Locals don’t go there. I was there a couple of months ago. It was packed If you want to rent a stall there, you can’t. None available and it’s super expensive. They know it’s a gold mine if they have a stall there. All the times you were talking about doing business in vn. Passports and citizenship and all. Now spreading lies about China. China is a powerful country and they are only interested in doing business. They are not concerned about invading vn economically. They are everywhere including the moon. Your bias agenda is not going to take you anywhere. Stick with passports, citizenship…
Cut your crap. Everyone now knows what the ccp is doing. I don’t buy China made stuffs.
Yeah. Business men knows better to stay away from politics. Ken getting into sensitive politics, you know he has issues.
Now I understand why he couldn’t cut it as a lawyer in the states. As a lawyer he should know better than to sensationalize and regurgitate debunked allegations regarding slave labor and Xinjiang concentration camps; very unprofessional.
Any lawyer worthy of his degree wouldn’t be peddling his service on youtube. What a shame.
@@Henry-bl3lz
Maybe your just another Bought by China mouth piece. Ken is doing a great service to us ExPats and Vietnamese people. Stop trash talking him and start your own BLOG.
@Henry-bl3lz, it is clear that you are missing the point entirely. This is not about whether China is "everywhere"-it is about how China’s economic tactics are deliberately undermining local markets, including Vietnam’s. And for the record, our expertise is not limited to immigration; we have extensive experience in international business and legal strategies, which is why we can speak confidently about the economic manipulation that is happening.
You mentioned Cho Ben Thanh being packed and expensive to rent-yes, it is a tourist hotspot. But that is not the issue we are discussing. The real problem is that Chinese goods are flooding every market, not just the tourist areas, pushing local businesses to the brink and making it impossible for them to compete. This is economic aggression, not just “business as usual.”
We find it amusing that you think calling out China’s unfair practices is “spreading lies.” If you believe that China’s only interest is “doing business,” you are either uninformed or willfully ignorant. China’s actions are not about fair competition; they are about dominance and control, and we are here to expose that, whether it fits your narrative or not. Stick to the facts before throwing accusations around.
@thomaskim3128, Your comment is as predictable as it is uninformed. The fact that you think a lawyer should “stay away from politics” shows a lack of understanding of our role. We are here to discuss the real issues affecting businesses and economies, whether they are geopolitically sensitive or not. Exposing economic manipulation and human rights abuses is not “sensationalism”-it is standing up for the truth. And it is geopolitics, not politics. We hope you understand the difference.
Your attempt to dismiss credible reports about forced labor and human rights violations in Xinjiang as “debunked” is not only ignorant but also irresponsible. These are well-documented facts recognized globally, and denying them does not make them any less true.
And as for your claim that no respectable lawyer would use platforms like TH-cam to share their expertise-welcome to the 21st century. We reach out through all mediums to inform, educate, and expose. If that makes you uncomfortable, then it is probably because we are saying things you do not want to hear. We have no issue confronting uncomfortable truths. The question is, do you?
That's just about a country doing business in another country. I think you misleading info about invading a country
He is highlighting the unfair trade practices. Chinese government is truly pathetic.
@@Sly2C How about US ? Jut GM get from US govement more than 50 billions in last two years !That is not "subsidized"? whee is the money? Even with that help from US goverment need to put 100% tariff on chinese EV! TRuly pathetic is US :D
@natenay5730, we disagree completely with your comment. This is not just about a country doing business-it is about economic aggression. China is using dirty tactics like dumping goods below market value, breaking international anti-dumping laws, and destroying local industries. This is economic warfare, plain and simple.
Calling this an “invasion” is not misleading-it is the harsh reality. China’s goal is to dominate Vietnam’s economy and force dependency. If you cannot see that, you are missing the entire point. This is not business as usual; it is a calculated strategy to undermine and control.
We will not sugarcoat it: China’s actions are aggressive and dangerous for Vietnam’s economic sovereignty. That is the truth we are exposing.
Tell me this. Has China ever been caught stealing innovative technologies from the US by their spies?
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Ken Im sorry but you truly do not know what is going on.. If another country invest in there industries that is a natural advantage.. its rules for thee and not for me
What happened to this channel? Now becoming a virulent China bashing channel now? Jeez..
What happened to this channel or what's happening in Vietnam? It is called telling the truth, even when it is uncomfortable. Our mission has always been to provide real, unfiltered information that impacts Vietnam and the region. If exposing China’s illegal trade practices and economic manipulation to protect local businesses and economic sovereignty is “bashing,” then so be it. We are not here to sugarcoat the truth to appease anyone.
We discuss what matters, and right now, China’s actions are a major concern for Vietnam’s future. If you think that highlighting these issues is “bashing,” perhaps you need to ask yourself why these facts make you uncomfortable. We are not here to play nice; we are here to inform and expose. That has always been our focus, and it will not change.
keep up your clown show 😂🤡😂
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Duong, I appreciate your channel that espouses extensive knowledge involving legal matters relating to Viet Nam which has greatly helped out many of us, and most of time, for free. Many people, including me, appreciate that. And I believe you are a good person with a good conscience that's why you took your time to response to me and that's why I decide to take my time to response to you here.
The 'truth' is a very subjective term catering to each of our own exposure to the related topic in question. What is the ultimate purpose of consuming news? I believe that the ultimate purpose of consuming news is to objectively understand it and hopefully be able to see the bottom of the truth. How to get to the bottom of the truth is not an easy task since we are surrounded by fakes news, misinformation, disinformation, propaganda ect. So what the hell am I talking here? Well, when presented with news, we should view it in the role of a judge, and not as a lawyer for the plaintiff or the defendant. It's your expertise you know too well that as a judge, we should impartially listen fully to both sides of the stories from both the plaintiff and the defendant. After carefully weighing presented evidence, facts and testimonies from all sides and all sources until which, the judge can finally and objectively make a final judgement, or so we hope🙂. That's a fair and objective way to go about making the right judgement in a court case. The same approach should be taken when consuming news, all news not just news about China.
I think that we should be very careful not to fall into the Confirmation Bias trap, meaning we formed a pre-determined notion about something and tend to only look for things that support that notion and completely dismiss any contrarian viewpoints or facts.
The US and China are now at loggerheads against each other in all spheres. So if we are only consuming news from Western media, which occupied 97% of total world news outlets, we are only reading and consuming the West narratives and forming our perception based on that. That is not enough. We need to also listen to the viewpoints on the other sides as well and see what they have to say. We need to listen to contrarian viewpoints. We need to listen to viewpoints even that might create cognitive dissonance within us. Only after having an objective take on all sides on a subject matter that we can hopefully come up with a more informed and objective understanding of the matter at hand.
As regard to China, a lot of people fan opinions about China have never actually lived or even set foot there. They formed opinion based on one-sided coverage by mainstream media which is prohibitively anti-China. I'm not here to defend China or the US per se. All I'm saying here is that we should strive to objectively consuming news from both sides before concluding something, otherwise we are making an uninformed opinion. There are many expats who actually lived for many years in China that can give a more accurate picture of what's going on in China if you can spare a bit of your time to view 'Jerry's Takes On China', or Cyrus Janssen, or Trip Bitten among others including those who have travelled there recently.
And this is from a Vietkieu like you.
Cheers.
@UBERAPPRAISAL, thank you for your thoughtful response and for acknowledging the value we try to provide through this channel. We genuinely appreciate viewers like you who engage in meaningful dialogue and take the time to consider all perspectives.
You are absolutely right-truth is often nuanced, and understanding it requires looking at all sides of a story. As a lawyer, I agree that we should approach any issue like a judge: weighing the evidence, considering multiple viewpoints, and avoiding the trap of confirmation bias. This is precisely why we strive to back our statements with well-documented information and credible sources, even if they challenge popular narratives.
We also agree that consuming news from diverse sources is crucial, especially in the current polarized global climate. Our intention is not to promote a one-sided view but to highlight specific challenges that Vietnam faces due to certain economic practices and geopolitical dynamics. When we discuss China’s influence in Vietnam, we do so because it has direct implications for the country’s economic future-a matter of great importance for anyone invested in Vietnam’s growth and stability.
We respect your call for balanced consumption of information, and we encourage our viewers to look at multiple sources, including those you mentioned. Our goal is not to create an echo chamber but to provide a platform for informed discussions on topics that are sometimes overlooked or misrepresented.
Thank you again for your thoughtful insights and for being part of this community. We welcome constructive debates and appreciate your perspective.
UNSUBSCRIBED former subscriber...you are spreading hate and is absolutely dumb what you say. Go visit the country and see their factories, they are just very very well made and have huge scale. Also very dumb to say they have no profits, how can this continue? as a business man you hear yourself? Second thing USA companies, due to the scale, do the same thing in IT, they have all the big companies. when you have scale and tech you can become powerful!
First, if you're going to unsubscribe because we expose hard truths, that's your choice. But let’s address the facts before you throw around accusations. No one here is spreading hate-we're laying out the economic realities that affect Vietnam and other countries that trade with China.
Sure, China has well-made factories and massive scale, but that’s part of the problem. They leverage this scale, backed by subsidies, to undercut prices and dominate markets. That’s why smaller businesses in Vietnam can’t compete. It’s not about whether China’s factories are good; it's about the unfair advantages they have in global trade due to government backing.
And as for profits-China's model, in some cases, isn’t even about short-term profitability. It's about dominating the market, gaining control, and pushing out competitors. Look at how Amazon and other U.S. companies do it in tech-same playbook, but China applies it across sectors.
So yes, we hear ourselves. You should too before accusing us of “spreading hate.” We’re here to discuss real issues, not brush them under the rug.
I usa egg is worth 19,000 vn eggs?
why let them in your country in the first place, accept the consequences. the government of is so incompetent.
It is not as simple as “letting them in” or not. Vietnam, like many other countries, must navigate a complex web of economic and geopolitical realities. China’s economic influence is not just about opening the door; it is about a powerful neighbor using its leverage to dominate markets and create dependencies.
Blaming the Vietnamese government for “incompetence” oversimplifies the issue. The challenge lies in balancing economic growth, maintaining sovereignty, and managing the pressures from a dominant trading partner. It is a tightrope walk, not a black-and-white choice. Recognizing these challenges is the first step in pushing for stronger measures that protect Vietnam’s interests without jeopardizing its economic stability.
Accepting the consequences blindly is not an option. That is why we are exposing these tactics and advocating for strategies to mitigate their impact. It is about protecting Vietnam’s future, not just accepting the status quo.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting What "tactics" are there that the "bad China" is using to invade and dominate Vietnam? China is doing business. It's the same tactics that the $3 Pho shop (China) are doing, and then the $6 Pho shop (the West) is smearing, and nationalistic Vietnamese wanting to see any dealing with China as a Zero-Sum game and so siding with and cheering on and regurgitating the smears as the West.
You sir still want to write in good English to show you're "not at a low level", so the intellect certainly is there, but I wonder why so obsess at nationalism, to see China as zero-sum. The Paracels, the SCS, let those things get to you so much, why? Lots of peoples have grievances with Vietnam too. But why let the pride be grown so big? My questions are sincere.
A lot healthier to see things as cooperative, rather than Zero-Sum. The wishing that the West could somehow destroy China so Vietnam could gain some benefits is ... too damaging to the mind and soul.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting Things are "complicated" only if you want to see all things as dark and zero-sum. There's the win-win angle, but the hateful antagonistic nationalism turn people mad and in turn spread more madness.
I mean look at Cambodia. It's a shadow of what it could have been. Its just a modern time colony of the CCP at this point. And its all mainly because of the greed of Cambodian governance and elite. Most building in the capital are Chinese owned, rent are so high Cambodians can't afford them and Chineses are replacing them. Most construction sites are mainly employing Chinese immigrant, same for shops, restaurants. And I'm not talking about Sihanoukville obviously... the rest of Cambodia is just going the exact same path.
Excellent video! Thank you!
Too bad that you have chosen to politicize your channel without proper geopolitical information. Unsubscribed.
Bye Felicia 🫰 😂
What geopolitical information?
China has been waging trade wars on the West for decades now and they are now experiencing pushbacks. Dumping practices are no longer acceptable here. When Trump is back in office, it will get worse for them. It is therefore natural for them to start dumping their overcapacities on developing nations. If you don’t think this will destroy the local industries then you are either a Wumao or a very naive person.
He’s a phony lawyer that somehow knows how to string a few big English words together without understanding the words nuances, and then he thinks he’s a competent lawyer.
@fyoo1484, we appreciate your feedback, but let us clarify something: our channel discusses critical geopolitical and economic issues that directly impact Vietnam and the region. If that makes you uncomfortable, it says more about your unwillingness to confront these realities than it does about us.
We do not shy away from the truth just because it is inconvenient. Our content is backed by facts and analysis, and we will continue to expose China’s economic manipulation and its impact on Vietnam. If you prefer to ignore these issues, that is your choice. But for those who seek real, unfiltered information, we will be here. Unsubscribing is your loss, not ours.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting “Our channel is backed by facts…” Ok. Ken regurgitated about issues relating to slave labor and Xinjiang, despite the fact that these allegations have been debunked many times. Perhaps you could educate us on the EVIDENCE you have gathered. Other issues about Chinese economic practices, I don’t care about. It could be true or not.
Same in America 🇺🇸
Snot rockets, nose picking, same in vietnam and china
Vetnam is a county in China. Everybody knowing this.
China is a county of Taiwan. Everybody also knows this 😂
It is called Việt Nam city, country china!
@@didierduplantier8359vietnam has no culture of their own, all their culture is Chinese or Cambodian😂
Every single word he said about China was true
Good
This is hate guy
this youtube channel just basically switched from real estate to subscribing to U.S $1.5 billion/year media funding program, GOOD JOB getting steady money from the state department $$$usd, i'm gonna do that too, i got a few youtube channels doing anti china propaganda, i like my easy money $$$usd.
This comment would be amusing if it weren’t so detached from reality. We have never received a single dollar from any government or media funding program. Our channel has evolved to cover a broader range of topics, including lifestyle, economic and geopolitical issues that impact Vietnam, because they matter to our viewers and the region.
If you believe discussing the challenges that China’s economic practices pose to Vietnam is “anti-China propaganda,” then you are missing the point entirely. We are here to provide real information and analysis, not to cash in on conspiracy theories.
If you have actual evidence to support your claim, feel free to share it. Otherwise, we suggest focusing on the content and the issues we discuss, rather than making baseless accusations. We will continue to cover the topics that matter, regardless of who it upsets. This is not about “easy money”-it’s about real issues that impact real people.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting hey i don't blame you, $1.5billion/year steady funding is GOOD $$$ money and good income guaranteed by U.S government. IF you think i'm making it up, you can check public records on state department media funding programs and the N.E.D. for journalists training and other media program funding.
@@duongglobalbusinessconsulting we have a couple of people making very good $$$ money, here is an example of media topics you could do in order to keep making those cash cows, $$$$. Serpentza and laowhy86, both great youtube channels for multiple income streams of money $$$ from adsense, subscriber base, advertisement and best deal of all, U.S state department funding $$$, $millions dollars per year is great income stream.
And who is paying you for being a troll? It is always interesting to see how quickly some people jump to conspiracy theories when they cannot engage with the content. We are not here to chase “cash cows” or push any external agenda. Our channel is focused on providing real, valuable information about issues that matter to Vietnam and the region.
We have no connection to any government funding or organizations like the U.S. State Department. Our mission is to shed light on economic and geopolitical dynamics affecting Vietnam, not to profit from spreading misinformation. If you think the only motivation for discussing these topics is money, then you are missing the point entirely.
We are committed to providing honest, fact-based content because these issues are important for anyone interested in Vietnam’s future. If you have genuine questions or topics you would like us to cover, we are always open to suggestions. Otherwise, let’s keep the conversation focused on the real issues instead of entertaining baseless theories. Last comment, as it is a complete waste of time and very childish.