China Decode: Hong Kong's AI Crackdown, Lululemon’s Marketing Backlash, and World Cup Fever

China Decode: Hong Kong's AI Crackdown, Lululemon’s Marketing Backlash, and World Cup Fever

JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs have quietly cut Hong Kong staff off from leading U.S. AI models, signaling the city is being treated as mainland China by the West.

Jun 23, 2026 39:45 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Alice Han and James Kynge unpack three stories shaping China's tech and culture landscape. JPMorgan Chase has cut Hong Kong employees off from Anthropic's Claude, mirroring Goldman Sachs's earlier move — a sign that Hong Kong is increasingly being treated like mainland China by U.S. firms, threatening its status as a global financial hub. Lululemon's Great Wall yoga event sparked a 50-million-view nationalist backlash over a drum that resembled a Japanese wadaiko. And despite China missing the World Cup, referee Ma Ning has become a national sensation. Key takeaway: the U.S.-China tech war is now drawing Hong Kong into its crossfire.

#AI export restrictions #Hong Kong geopolitics #EUV lithography #Chinese nationalist backlash #brand risk in China #World Cup China #grassroots football #Anthropic Claude #semiconductor war #LLM access #Chinese social media #Tencent Cloud broadcasting #Hong Kong AI #Anthropic #JPMorgan #ASML #EUV #Lululemon #China nationalism #World Cup #Ma Ning #US-China tech war #semiconductor #LLMs #Weibo #Tencent Cloud #Jiangsu Su Super League #Xi Jinping football #Xiaohongshu

Alice Han and James Kynge examine JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs restricting AI model access in Hong Kong, Lululemon's Great Wall yoga campaign that triggered a 50-million-view nationalist backlash, and China's World Cup fandom centered on referee Ma Ning despite the national team's absence.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with back-to-back sponsor reads. Odoo is pitched as an all-in-one business management platform eliminating the need for multiple disconnected software tools. Northwest Registered Agent offers business formation, registered agent services, and built-in privacy protection for free. BetterHelp rounds out the trio with an online therapy pitch, citing its 2026 State of Stigma report finding that 74% of Americans feel society discourages seeking help.

  • Alice Han and James Kynge open China Decode with the week's agenda: AI restrictions in Hong Kong, Lululemon's cultural misstep, and World Cup fever without a Chinese team. Before diving in, Alice delivers a market snapshot: Chinese equities surged after the Dragon Boat Festival holiday, with the Shanghai Composite up 1.78% and the Shenzhen Component up 2.13% — its highest level in 11 years. The People's Bank of China held rates steady. Notable gainers included Bank of China (+2.8%), semiconductor equipment firm Nara Technology (+3.3%), and electric battery maker CATL (+4.4%).

  • JPMorgan Chase has quietly barred its Hong Kong staff from using Anthropic's AI models over licensing concerns related to Greater China — a move that follows Goldman Sachs's earlier restriction. Alice Han frames this as evidence of a 'technological Cold War II,' an iron curtain being drawn between the U.S. and China that is now enveloping Hong Kong. The conversation pivots to whether Anthropic's decision is driven by genuine national security logic, distillation fears, or political signaling to Washington. Alice notes that financial services account for roughly a quarter of Hong Kong's GDP and employ 250,000 people, making AI access cuts directly threatening to the city's core economic identity. The vision of Hong Kong as an R&D hub that could bridge U.S. and Chinese AI systems has, in her words, become 'no longer apparent.'

  • At the heart of the U.S.-China tech war is a single irreplaceable machine: ASML's EUV lithography tool, which no other company or country can manufacture. The U.S. Department of Commerce has escalated its confrontation with ASML, presenting documentary evidence that the company shipped EUV-compatible transport equipment to Chinese entities — a claim ASML flatly denies. James Kynge, who has visited ASML's Eindhoven factory and seen the machines firsthand, stresses there is 'no wiggle room' in either side's position: either China has obtained the tools or it hasn't. Alice Han questions Washington's motives — whether this is genuine enforcement or political signaling to allied countries. She also notes that Anthropic has separately barred Chinese nationals from working on its frontier models Fable and Mythos, reflecting a broader tightening of tech nationalism across the industry.

  • James Kynge delivers a blunt verdict: U.S. technology restrictions on China have not worked when it comes to AI. Banning Hong Kong while leaving Singapore, the UK, and Silicon Valley fully open to Chinese engineers defeats the purpose entirely. He estimates China is roughly a few months behind the U.S. in developing world-class LLMs — a gap that restrictions have done little to widen. The hosts note that David Sachs, one of the few voices in the White House arguing export restrictions were counterproductive, has now left his role, which Alice Han fears will only accelerate a more aggressive and ultimately ineffective crackdown.

  • LinkedIn Hiring Pro is presented as a tool for small business owners to streamline hiring, from job post to AI-powered initial interviews, with the claim that nearly 60% of users find someone to interview within a week. SoFi follows with a pitch for private student loans covering up to 100% of school-certified costs — tuition, housing, food — at competitive rates with zero fees. Both ads are standard paid integrations.

  • Lululemon staged what should have been a brand triumph: a yoga event at the Great Wall of China, with top Chinese actor Zhu Yilong playing a large ceremonial drum. What unfolded instead was a nationalist wildfire. Chinese netizens identified the drum as a Japanese wadaiko, and the clip went viral at exactly the wrong moment — Japan-China relations are near their worst since the Senkaku Islands dispute of 2010-11. The Chinese firm that supplied the drum tried to defuse the situation, arguing it was a replica of an ancient Jie drum from the Tang Dynasty — a Chinese artifact that the Japanese may have later borrowed. But as James Kynge observes, the factual question became irrelevant the moment the online nationalists built momentum. Lululemon apologized and pulled the campaign, consistent with the playbook every foreign brand eventually follows in these situations.

  • Lululemon is far from alone. Alice Han traces a pattern of increasingly costly brand missteps: Dolce & Gabbana's 2018 chopsticks ad, which destroyed the brand's China standing; Versace, Coach, and Givenchy's 2019 controversy over T-shirts listing Hong Kong and Macau as separate countries; H&M, Nike, Burberry, and Adidas in 2021; Dior in 2022; Arcteryx in 2025; and La Mer in April 2026, whose advertisement was seen as alluding to China's 19th-century 'century of humiliation.' James Kynge expresses bewilderment at the regularity of the mistakes, wondering whether there is a structural disconnect between China offices and global headquarters. The underlying message is clear: in a market of 1.4 billion people with vocal, hyperconnected consumers and a history of grievance, the cost of a cultural slip-up is asymmetric and immediate.

  • Shopify promotes its all-in-one e-commerce platform with a free trial offer. A pharma ad for prescription Botox for chronic migraine (defined as 15 or more headache days per month, each lasting 4+ hours) follows, with full medical disclaimer. Ferragamo closes the break with a Father's Day pitch for its fragrances and Italian Francescina leather shoes, presenting the brand's 'Things I Have Learned From You' collection as a timeless masculinity offering.

  • In a country that hasn't qualified for the World Cup since 2002, Chinese football fans needed something to celebrate — and they found it in referee Ma Ning. Dubbed the 'Cardman' for his no-nonsense approach (he issued 9 cards in one match), Ma Ning has become a genuine celebrity, racking up 210,000 new social media followers and landing sponsorships from Lenovo and Hisense. Alice Han notes that the broadcast picture has also evolved: a last-minute deal between China Media Group and FIFA secured rights, with Xiaohongshu as the strategic streaming partner, bringing free live games to millions of Chinese users on their phones. The sports betting app ranked sixth on the Apple App Store, and the official CCTV streaming app hit second place — testament to the enormous appetite for the tournament despite the absence of a Chinese team.

  • The paradox is stark: China is the most football-mad country James Kynge — a Brit — has ever lived in, yet the national team hasn't qualified since 2002 and hasn't scored a World Cup goal since 1938. Xi Jinping famously declared in 2011 that he had three wishes — qualify for, host, and win the World Cup — and China has achieved none of them. James points to corruption in Chinese football's administration and problems with coaching pathways as contributing factors. Alice Han offers a sharper economic lens: Chinese parents, when choosing where to invest a child's athletic development, rationally favour individual sports like tennis, golf, and gymnastics, where the variables are controllable and financial returns more predictable. Team sports like football offer no such guarantee — the outcome is hyperdependent on collective performance. This economic calculus, Alice argues, explains why China excels at individual Olympic sports but consistently underperforms in the beautiful game.

  • Alice Han closes the football segment with a counterintuitive observation: while China's players are absent, Chinese technology is embedded in the very infrastructure of the World Cup. Tencent Cloud is responsible for two-thirds of the official FIFA broadcasting backend in the Asia-Pacific region. CCTV's streaming app peaked at second on China's Apple App Store. The official sports betting app ranked sixth. Xiaohongshu — China's Instagram — is co-streaming games to millions. The picture is one of Chinese tech companies quietly dominating the global sports media supply chain, even as their national team watches from home.

  • James Kynge stakes his prediction on a quiet revolution in Jiangsu province: the Su Super League, a grassroots community-driven competition that stands in stark contrast to China's government-directed football academies. Drawing a line from Messi to Maradona to Pelé — all products of street-level, unstructured play — he argues this bottom-up model is the only one that works, and bets it will carry China to qualification for the next World Cup. Alice Han's prediction is geopolitical: the U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding, she argues, hands China a strategic gift. Gulf states, already hedging between Washington and Beijing, will drift further toward China, creating an opening for Chinese telecom, AI, and tech companies to build out the smart city infrastructure of the Gulf — filling the vacuum left by their ring-fencing in Western markets.

  • Alice Han signs off, reminding listeners to follow China Decode wherever they get their podcasts. The episode closes with a comedic Mint Mobile spot featuring Ryan Reynolds, who jokes about his failed idea to print $15 bills before directing listeners to mintmobile.com/switch for unlimited premium wireless at $15 per month.

EUV (Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography)
A chipmaking technology that uses extreme ultraviolet light to etch nanoscale circuits onto silicon wafers; only ASML manufactures the machines, making them critical to advanced semiconductor production.
LLM (Large Language Model)
A type of AI trained on vast text datasets to generate and understand language; examples include Anthropic's Claude and OpenAI's ChatGPT.
Distillation
In AI, a technique where a smaller or new model is trained by learning from the outputs of a more powerful model, allowing capabilities to be transferred without direct access to training data.
CapEx (Capital Expenditure)
Funds a company or country spends on acquiring or upgrading physical assets or major infrastructure, used here to describe investment in AI data centres and compute.
ASML
A Dutch semiconductor equipment company that is the sole manufacturer of EUV lithography machines, making it a critical chokepoint in the global chip supply chain.
Wadaiko
A traditional Japanese barrel drum used in performance and ceremony; the term was central to the Lululemon controversy when Chinese netizens claimed the drum in its Great Wall campaign resembled a wadaiko rather than a Chinese drum.
Netizens
Internet users who actively engage in online communities and discussions; used in a Chinese context to describe the influential and vocal population on platforms like Weibo.
Kowtow
Literally, to bow deeply in submission; used figuratively here to mean capitulating to pressure, especially from Chinese consumers or government.
Greater China
A business and geopolitical term encompassing mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, and sometimes Taiwan, used in corporate licensing and regulatory contexts.
Piecemeal
Done in separate, disconnected stages rather than as a coherent whole; used by James Kynge to criticise U.S. AI export restrictions as fragmented and inconsistent.
Special Economic Zone (SEZ)
A designated area within a country that operates under different, often more open, economic regulations; Hong Kong has historically functioned as one within China.
Su Super League (Jiangsu Football City League)
A bottom-up grassroots football competition in Jiangsu province, China, drawing teams from local residents and students rather than government-selected academies.
Xiaohongshu
A Chinese social media and e-commerce platform often described as 'China's Instagram'; it won co-streaming rights to the 2026 FIFA World Cup for Chinese users.
MATCH Act
U.S. legislation referenced in the episode that underpins American export restrictions on semiconductor equipment, including curbs on what Dutch firm ASML can ship to China.
Virulent
Extremely hostile or aggressive in effect; used by James Kynge to describe the continuing intensity of the U.S.-China tech war despite diplomatic summits.
PLA (People's Liberation Army)
The armed forces of the People's Republic of China; mentioned in the context of the Pentagon banning companies with military ties to the PLA from U.S. markets.
Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
A non-binding agreement between parties that outlines intentions for future cooperation; referenced in the context of a U.S.-Iran diplomatic agreement.

Chapter 2 · 02:03

Episode Introduction & China Market Check

Alice Han and James Kynge open China Decode with the week's agenda: AI restrictions in Hong Kong, Lululemon's cultural misstep, and World Cup fever without a Chinese team. Before diving in, Alice delivers a market snapshot: Chinese equities surged after the Dragon Boat Festival holiday, with the Shanghai Composite up 1.78% and the Shenzhen Component up 2.13% — its highest level in 11 years. The People's Bank of China held rates steady. Notable gainers included Bank of China (+2.8%), semiconductor equipment firm Nara Technology (+3.3%), and electric battery maker CATL (+4.4%).

Chapter 3 · 03:58

The Hong Kong AI Lockout: JPMorgan, Anthropic & the New Tech Iron Curtain

JPMorgan Chase has quietly barred its Hong Kong staff from using Anthropic's AI models over licensing concerns related to Greater China — a move that follows Goldman Sachs's earlier restriction. Alice Han frames this as evidence of a 'technological Cold War II,' an iron curtain being drawn between the U.S. and China that is now enveloping Hong Kong. The conversation pivots to whether Anthropic's decision is driven by genuine national security logic, distillation fears, or political signaling to Washington. Alice notes that financial services account for roughly a quarter of Hong Kong's GDP and employ 250,000 people, making AI access cuts directly threatening to the city's core economic identity. The vision of Hong Kong as an R&D hub that could bridge U.S. and Chinese AI systems has, in her words, become 'no longer apparent.'

Claims made here

JPMorgan Chase has cut off its Hong Kong employees from accessing Anthropic's AI models, citing licensing concerns over Greater China restrictions.

Alice Han no source cited

Goldman Sachs has already made a similar move restricting AI model access for its employees in Hong Kong.

Alice Han no source cited

ASML is the world's only manufacturer of EUV lithography machines, without which the most advanced semiconductors cannot be produced.

James Kynge no source cited

ASML has denied every element of the U.S. allegation, stating it has never shipped an EUV machine, or any component specifically designed for EUV use, to China.

James Kynge no source cited

The U.S. Department of Commerce has presented specific documentary evidence that ASML shipped specialized transport equipment and components compatible with EUV lithography to Chinese entities.

James Kynge U.S. Department of Commerce

Chapter 4 · 10:20

ASML and the Semiconductor Battlefield

At the heart of the U.S.-China tech war is a single irreplaceable machine: ASML's EUV lithography tool, which no other company or country can manufacture. The U.S. Department of Commerce has escalated its confrontation with ASML, presenting documentary evidence that the company shipped EUV-compatible transport equipment to Chinese entities — a claim ASML flatly denies. James Kynge, who has visited ASML's Eindhoven factory and seen the machines firsthand, stresses there is 'no wiggle room' in either side's position: either China has obtained the tools or it hasn't. Alice Han questions Washington's motives — whether this is genuine enforcement or political signaling to allied countries. She also notes that Anthropic has separately barred Chinese nationals from working on its frontier models Fable and Mythos, reflecting a broader tightening of tech nationalism across the industry.

Claims made here

Anthropic has barred Chinese nationals employed at the company from working on its most advanced frontier AI models, Fable and Mythos.

Alice Han no source cited

China's AI capital expenditure is approximately ten times less than that of the United States.

Alice Han no source cited

Chapter 5 · 16:40

Are U.S. AI Restrictions Actually Working?

James Kynge delivers a blunt verdict: U.S. technology restrictions on China have not worked when it comes to AI. Banning Hong Kong while leaving Singapore, the UK, and Silicon Valley fully open to Chinese engineers defeats the purpose entirely. He estimates China is roughly a few months behind the U.S. in developing world-class LLMs — a gap that restrictions have done little to widen. The hosts note that David Sachs, one of the few voices in the White House arguing export restrictions were counterproductive, has now left his role, which Alice Han fears will only accelerate a more aggressive and ultimately ineffective crackdown.

Claims made here

Financial services account for approximately a quarter of Hong Kong's GDP and employ around 250,000 people.

Alice Han no source cited

Chapter 6 · 18:20

Sponsor Break: LinkedIn Hiring Pro & SoFi Student Loans

LinkedIn Hiring Pro is presented as a tool for small business owners to streamline hiring, from job post to AI-powered initial interviews, with the claim that nearly 60% of users find someone to interview within a week. SoFi follows with a pitch for private student loans covering up to 100% of school-certified costs — tuition, housing, food — at competitive rates with zero fees. Both ads are standard paid integrations.

Chapter 7 · 21:21

Lululemon's Great Wall Disaster

Lululemon staged what should have been a brand triumph: a yoga event at the Great Wall of China, with top Chinese actor Zhu Yilong playing a large ceremonial drum. What unfolded instead was a nationalist wildfire. Chinese netizens identified the drum as a Japanese wadaiko, and the clip went viral at exactly the wrong moment — Japan-China relations are near their worst since the Senkaku Islands dispute of 2010-11. The Chinese firm that supplied the drum tried to defuse the situation, arguing it was a replica of an ancient Jie drum from the Tang Dynasty — a Chinese artifact that the Japanese may have later borrowed. But as James Kynge observes, the factual question became irrelevant the moment the online nationalists built momentum. Lululemon apologized and pulled the campaign, consistent with the playbook every foreign brand eventually follows in these situations.

Claims made here

Lululemon's Great Wall yoga promotional campaign generated a nationalist backlash on Weibo that topped 50 million views.

Alice Han no source cited

Chapter 8 · 25:30

The Pattern of Western Brand Disasters in China

Lululemon is far from alone. Alice Han traces a pattern of increasingly costly brand missteps: Dolce & Gabbana's 2018 chopsticks ad, which destroyed the brand's China standing; Versace, Coach, and Givenchy's 2019 controversy over T-shirts listing Hong Kong and Macau as separate countries; H&M, Nike, Burberry, and Adidas in 2021; Dior in 2022; Arcteryx in 2025; and La Mer in April 2026, whose advertisement was seen as alluding to China's 19th-century 'century of humiliation.' James Kynge expresses bewilderment at the regularity of the mistakes, wondering whether there is a structural disconnect between China offices and global headquarters. The underlying message is clear: in a market of 1.4 billion people with vocal, hyperconnected consumers and a history of grievance, the cost of a cultural slip-up is asymmetric and immediate.

Claims made here

Dolce & Gabbana's 2018 ad showing a Chinese model eating pizza with chopsticks caused massive boycotts, and the brand has not recovered its China presence since.

Alice Han no source cited

Chapter 10 · 31:41

Referee Ma Ning: China's World Cup Hero by Proxy

In a country that hasn't qualified for the World Cup since 2002, Chinese football fans needed something to celebrate — and they found it in referee Ma Ning. Dubbed the 'Cardman' for his no-nonsense approach (he issued 9 cards in one match), Ma Ning has become a genuine celebrity, racking up 210,000 new social media followers and landing sponsorships from Lenovo and Hisense. Alice Han notes that the broadcast picture has also evolved: a last-minute deal between China Media Group and FIFA secured rights, with Xiaohongshu as the strategic streaming partner, bringing free live games to millions of Chinese users on their phones. The sports betting app ranked sixth on the Apple App Store, and the official CCTV streaming app hit second place — testament to the enormous appetite for the tournament despite the absence of a Chinese team.

Claims made here

Chinese FIFA referee Ma Ning gained approximately 210,000 new social media followers and secured sponsorships from Lenovo and Hisense during the 2026 World Cup.

Alice Han no source cited

Chapter 11 · 33:43

Why Can't China Qualify for the World Cup?

The paradox is stark: China is the most football-mad country James Kynge — a Brit — has ever lived in, yet the national team hasn't qualified since 2002 and hasn't scored a World Cup goal since 1938. Xi Jinping famously declared in 2011 that he had three wishes — qualify for, host, and win the World Cup — and China has achieved none of them. James points to corruption in Chinese football's administration and problems with coaching pathways as contributing factors. Alice Han offers a sharper economic lens: Chinese parents, when choosing where to invest a child's athletic development, rationally favour individual sports like tennis, golf, and gymnastics, where the variables are controllable and financial returns more predictable. Team sports like football offer no such guarantee — the outcome is hyperdependent on collective performance. This economic calculus, Alice argues, explains why China excels at individual Olympic sports but consistently underperforms in the beautiful game.

Claims made here

Xi Jinping stated in 2011 that his three wishes were for China to qualify for, host, and win the FIFA World Cup.

James Kynge no source cited

China has only qualified for the FIFA World Cup once, in 2002, and has not scored a World Cup goal since 1938.

James Kynge no source cited

Chapter 12 · 39:20

Chinese Tech Is Running the World Cup Behind the Scenes

Alice Han closes the football segment with a counterintuitive observation: while China's players are absent, Chinese technology is embedded in the very infrastructure of the World Cup. Tencent Cloud is responsible for two-thirds of the official FIFA broadcasting backend in the Asia-Pacific region. CCTV's streaming app peaked at second on China's Apple App Store. The official sports betting app ranked sixth. Xiaohongshu — China's Instagram — is co-streaming games to millions. The picture is one of Chinese tech companies quietly dominating the global sports media supply chain, even as their national team watches from home.

Claims made here

CCTV's World Cup streaming app was the second most downloaded app on China's Apple App Store during the tournament week.

Alice Han no source cited

Tencent Cloud is responsible for two-thirds of the official FIFA World Cup broadcasting infrastructure in the Asia-Pacific region.

Alice Han no source cited

Chapter 13 · 40:36

Predictions: China Qualifies Next Cup & Gulf States Tilt Toward China

James Kynge stakes his prediction on a quiet revolution in Jiangsu province: the Su Super League, a grassroots community-driven competition that stands in stark contrast to China's government-directed football academies. Drawing a line from Messi to Maradona to Pelé — all products of street-level, unstructured play — he argues this bottom-up model is the only one that works, and bets it will carry China to qualification for the next World Cup. Alice Han's prediction is geopolitical: the U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding, she argues, hands China a strategic gift. Gulf states, already hedging between Washington and Beijing, will drift further toward China, creating an opening for Chinese telecom, AI, and tech companies to build out the smart city infrastructure of the Gulf — filling the vacuum left by their ring-fencing in Western markets.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

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2 / 16 cited (12%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

JPMorgan Chase has cut off its Hong Kong employees from accessing Anthropic's AI models, citing licensing concerns over Greater China restrictions.

Alice Han no source cited

Goldman Sachs has already made a similar move restricting AI model access for its employees in Hong Kong.

Alice Han no source cited

ASML is the world's only manufacturer of EUV lithography machines, without which the most advanced semiconductors cannot be produced.

James Kynge no source cited

The U.S. Department of Commerce has presented specific documentary evidence that ASML shipped specialized transport equipment and components compatible with EUV lithography to Chinese entities.

James Kynge U.S. Department of Commerce

ASML has denied every element of the U.S. allegation, stating it has never shipped an EUV machine, or any component specifically designed for EUV use, to China.

James Kynge no source cited

Anthropic has barred Chinese nationals employed at the company from working on its most advanced frontier AI models, Fable and Mythos.

Alice Han no source cited

Financial services account for approximately a quarter of Hong Kong's GDP and employ around 250,000 people.

Alice Han no source cited

Lululemon's Great Wall yoga promotional campaign generated a nationalist backlash on Weibo that topped 50 million views.

Alice Han no source cited

Dolce & Gabbana's 2018 ad showing a Chinese model eating pizza with chopsticks caused massive boycotts, and the brand has not recovered its China presence since.

Alice Han no source cited

China has only qualified for the FIFA World Cup once, in 2002, and has not scored a World Cup goal since 1938.

James Kynge no source cited

Chinese FIFA referee Ma Ning gained approximately 210,000 new social media followers and secured sponsorships from Lenovo and Hisense during the 2026 World Cup.

Alice Han no source cited

Tencent Cloud is responsible for two-thirds of the official FIFA World Cup broadcasting infrastructure in the Asia-Pacific region.

Alice Han no source cited

CCTV's World Cup streaming app was the second most downloaded app on China's Apple App Store during the tournament week.

Alice Han no source cited

BetterHelp's 2026 State of Stigma report found that 74% of Americans believe society still discourages asking for help.

Ad Narrator BetterHelp 2026 State of Stigma report

China's AI capital expenditure is approximately ten times less than that of the United States.

Alice Han no source cited

Xi Jinping stated in 2011 that his three wishes were for China to qualify for, host, and win the FIFA World Cup.

James Kynge no source cited

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