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超级猎场4 sale?

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发表于 2012-12-23 07:31:55 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
超级猎场4 sale?

并非“三维狩猎-阿拉斯加 3D Hunting Alaskan Hunt for Android 1.0.5 免费版” 。 颇具权威的《华盛顿邮报》资深编辑斯蒂夫-莫夫松提议,在美国政府不需增税和削减支出的情况下,最有效的解决方式就是卖掉阿拉斯加。他指出,中国财力充足,是美国最大的债权国,或将成为最有可能的买家。

近日,全球资本市场都随着美国“财政悬崖”的谈判进展而发生波动起伏,两党的唇枪舌战耗时良久已经让美国经济遭受损害。目前美国政府的债务高达16万亿美元,如果民主党与共和党在年底之前无法就财政方案达成一致意见,美国经济将在明年初摔下高达6000亿美元的“财政悬崖”。国际三大信用评级机构之一的惠誉也在19日发出警告,美国或因此丧失3A主权评级。

日前,《华盛顿邮报》资深编辑斯蒂文-莫夫松发表文章,为美国解决“财政悬崖”指出一条看似两全其美的方法—卖掉阿拉斯加州。莫夫松表示,这个想法既不疯狂也不荒谬,因为没什么东西能比16万亿美元的债务更荒谬。而中国目前现金充足,是美国最大的债主,并且正面临住地缺乏的局面,把阿拉斯加卖给中国或许是一个好办法。

莫夫松在文章中指出,中国现在拥有大量现金、但缺乏能源和住地。既然如此,中国在投资上为什么一定要忍受到美国外国投资委员会对国家安全的质疑呢?比如在收购加拿大Nexen公司或者美国电池制造商A123系列时遇到的不公待遇。而购买阿拉斯加可就容易多了!别忘了,中国还有1.1615万亿美元的外汇储备投资了美国国债,现在是美国国债最大的持有者。通过这笔交易,中美之间可以简单地取消债务,从而避免了中国一旦在公开市场出售这些债券而造成的金融动荡。

此外,买下阿拉斯加,有助于解决目前中国人满为患、严重污染的城市问题。随着北极冰层的融化和气候的变化,阿拉斯加也可以作为一条有价值的航线,让中国到欧洲的游轮或商业船只往来更节省时间。

同时,莫夫松也认为,俄罗斯或许会凭借其历史的渊源抢先在中国之前“收复失地”。在美国买下阿拉斯加之前,俄罗斯已经在这块土地上管辖了126年。鉴于普京正在寻求机会恢复俄罗斯的权力和荣耀,购买阿拉斯加给了普京一个重建前俄罗斯首都锡特卡小镇的机会。

文章指出,一些私人买家如美国“地产之王”唐纳德-特朗普以及中东石油富豪可能也会对此项交易有兴趣。对爱出风头的特朗普来说,他可以在北美最高峰麦金利山上做广告,或重新命名它为“特朗普山”。而坐拥大型主权财富投资基金的中东石油出口国,可能愿意在地球正在变暖的形势下为自己找个“冷静”的空间。更重要的是,如果一个OPEC中的国家购买了阿拉斯加,将会推动OPEC在世界石油市场的份额,并提升该组织的定价能力。

在欧美经济危机蔓延了三年之后,卖州卖岛已经不再是什么新鲜事。此前,希腊总理就表示,只要出售岛屿对国家安全不构成威胁,希腊的一些岛屿就可以用作商业开发。两年前,背负着1.18万亿英镑国债的意大利,也曾经大规模出售了包括多座岛屿、沙滩、王宫和城堡等国家财产。

原文:To solve our debt problems, let’s sell Alaska

By Steven Mufson, Published: December 14

Steven Mufson is a Washington Post reporter covering energy and other financial news. He has enjoyed visiting Alaska without needing his passport.

The prospect of once again hitting the federal debt ceiling has provoked the ritual round of hand-wringing about the intractable nature of this $16 trillion conundrum. But there is a simple, elegant option that involves no tax increases, no spending cuts and just a bit of imagination.

Sell Alaska.

That’s right. Put the entire state — from Juneau to Deadhorse, from the Bering Strait to the Beaufort Sea — on the auction block.

Absurd? No more absurd than the spectacle taking place right now as we skid closer to the “fiscal cliff.”

Selling real estate at top dollar is all about timing, and now’s a great time to unload the 49th state. The federal government, which owns 69 percent of Alaska, could cash in on the vast, resource-rich state at a time when oil prices are high and wild salmon is flying off the shelves at Whole Foods. Selling Alaska could fetch at least $2.5 trillion and maybe twice that amount, enough to lop off a huge chunk of the national debt and perhaps as much money as President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner hope to save or raise over the next decade.

The return on investment would look great, too. Secretary of State William H. Seward — you might know him as the handsome fellow played by David Strathairn in the new Steven Spielberg movie, “Lincoln” — bought Alaska from Russia in 1867 for $7.2 million, drawing ridicule. One New York newspaper that year called Alaska a “sucked orange,” saying Russia had already drained all the value out of it. But even after adjusting for inflation, the price paid for “Seward’s folly” or “Seward’s icebox,” as it was known back then, looks pretty cheap — about $114 million.

What is Alaska worth today?

There are 3.7 billion barrels of proved oil reserves and 9 trillion cubic feet of proved natural gas reserves in the state, according to the Energy Information Administration. Oil companies are eyeing even bigger potential reserves in unexplored areas. The Interior Department estimates that the Chukchi Sea alone could hold up to 12 billion barrels, equal to half of the country’s proved reserves, and Cook Inlet and the Beaufort Sea as much as 8 billion barrels. The state has large shale areas where new hydraulic fracturing techniques could yield new supplies.

In the mid-1980s, Michael J. Boskin, a Stanford University economist, estimated that Alaska’s oil and gas reserves alone were worth at least $200 billion. But new discoveries have outstripped production, and Boskin was assuming a price of $26 a barrel for oil, less than a third of today’s prices.

Alaska has countless other natural resources, some in areas we hold off limits, such as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and others on state lands. Mining companies are salivating at the prospect of more than $300 billion worth of copper, gold and molybdenum at their proposed Pebble mine in the southwestern part of the state. The state’s forests could also be exploited.

I e-mailed Alaska Lt. Gov. Mead Treadwell (R) to ask him how he would feel about having his state sold out from under him.
“I can’t talk down our value,” he replied. “It’s a great piece of property. We love this place. Great views.”

He proposed that Alaskans themselves try to buy their state. I thought it sounded like an employee buyout; Treadwell said he preferred to think of it as a “citizens’ buyout.” He said, “I don’t think we want to leave the country to help save it, but if it comes to that, I’m sure we’d bid.”

There would be a lot of competitors. Imagine how many nations, even individuals, would rush to bid on the sale of the century, which would be held in the Treasury’s ornate Cash Room — whose very architecture of Italian-palazzo-style ceilings, bronze chandeliers and marble floors are a lavishness we can no longer afford.

First in line might be the Russian Federation, with its deep historical ties to the state. For 126 years, Russia governed Alaska, which has been part of the United States for just 145 years. Vladi­mir Putin, who is seeking to restore Russia’s power and glory, could reestablish the seat of government at the former Russian capital, Sitka, a southern seaside town that still has a Russian Orthodox church, St. Michael’s. First built in the 1840s, it houses icons from that era.

Russia already has plenty of space and oil. But if it hoisted its own red, white and blue flag over Alaska, Sarah Palin would actually be able to see Russia from her front porch.

Next would be the Chinese, flush with cash and starving for energy resources and open spaces. Why should China fiddle with acquisitions of companies such as Canada’s Nexen or U.S. battery-maker A123 Systems, hoping for approval from the government’s guardian of national security, the Committee for Foreign Investment in the United States?

It would be much simpler for Beijing to use its $3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves — a large chunk of it invested in U.S. Treasury debt — to vacuum up Alaska’s resources and to resettle some people from China’s overcrowded and heavily polluted cities. As the Arctic ice melts with climate change, Alaska could also serve as a valuable shipping route, saving time, fuel and money for cargo ships traveling from China to Europe.

The transaction could be done by simply canceling the Treasury debt, thus avoiding the financial upheaval that would result if China sold those securities on the open market.

How about an individual buyer? Donald Trump comes to mind. He could advertise on Mount McKinley — or just rebrand it Mount Trump, the highest peak in Trumpistan. He could even issue his own birth certificates to avoid any confusion about the national origin of public officials there. Of course, this 570,640.95-square-mile bauble would be a tad expensive for him, and he’d have to make it a very leveraged buyout, but he’s gambled big before.

Mideast oil exporters, sitting on large sovereign wealth investment funds, might want a place to cool off as the planet heats up. What’s more, if an OPEC nation bought Alaska, it would boost the cartel’s share of the world oil market and enhance the group’s pricing power.
Treadwell makes a strong case for a home-grown offer. He notes that of Alaska’s 365 million acres, the state government already owns 103 million, which were deeded at the time of statehood. An additional 44 million acres came with the Alaska Native Claims Act.

“U.S. cash in our till would barely cover a week of federal deficits, but we believe the potential here is worth trillions, especially if we gained freedom to drill it,” Treadwell said. “Location, location, location.”

And he said Alaskans wouldn’t need to borrow money to fund their offer. “We could print our own currency to complete the sale,” Treadwell said, “but unlike yours, ours still could be backed by gold as well as vital rare-earth minerals, oil and gas, timber and fish, fur-bearing critters, geothermal and hydro power, flyover rights to Asia, valuable military bases, and of course our fastest-growing export — reality TV shows.”

Like many absurd ideas, the notion of auctioning off Alaska has legs planted on solid ground. The idea comes from Jim Millstein, a former senior Treasury official for restructuring who oversaw the successful, and profitable, federal overhaul of collapsed insurance giant AIG. He now has his own investment and advisory firm.

He floated the proposal (tongue in cheek) in a paper for a Wharton Business School conference on U.S. government debt. Speaking on a panel called “U.S. Ability and Willingness to Pay: Unwinding the Empire,” he also tossed in the possibility of selling off vast federal lands in the Rocky Mountain states and offshore areas. In a book based on the conference, his chapter was called “Burning the Furniture to Heat the House — The Potential Role of Asset Sales in Funding the Federal Government’s Deficits.”

As Millstein noted, there is a serious point beneath all this: Countries that spend with abandon and ask little of taxpayers end up facing some unpleasant choices.

Selling off the national furniture isn’t unusual or far-fetched in other parts of the world. When governments spend beyond their means, the International Monetary Fund usually rolls up and offers aid, often with a condition: Sell state-owned assets. Sometimes that means the state-owned airline or phone company. After the fall of communism, Eastern European countries sold off state-owned enterprises.

This can wound national pride, as in Greece recently. Two right-wing German politicians triggered outrage in Athens in 2010 when they said Greece should sell historic buildings, artwork and unpopulated islands.

But it’s not without precedent. In 1803, France was in a position that should sound vaguely familiar. France, the superpower of continental Europe, had suffered a severe setback in Haiti, where fighting had exacted a steep cost in lives and treasure. Napoleon wanted to bring the troops back home to confront England. So rather than maintaining all of his far-flung empire, he decided to sell the Louisiana Territory — including part or all of 14 modern-day U.S. states — to us for $15 million.

What could selling Alaska do? It could shrink the federal debt by 10 to 25 percent of gross domestic product, bringing it well within the range considered safe. Even without a budget deal to cut spending and boost revenue, there would be no need to ask Republicans to raise the debt ceiling for another five or six years. Now that’s long-range planning.

The deaccessioning of Alaska would also slash the interest the government pays on the national debt. Under the budget plan Obama proposed in February, those interest payments would otherwise grow to more than $600 billion in 2017, and in 2018 they would become the third-biggest item in the federal budget, after defense and Social Security.

There would, of course, be objections. Some Alaskans might want to resettle in the Lower 48. Others might become squatters. Environmentalists would certainly squawk. Alaskan Inuits might not want to give up their special status, and certainly, neither the Russians nor the Chinese would want to create yet one more unhappy autonomous region.

And then there is the $16 trillion question: How much time could be bought by selling Alaska? How long would it take before the federal government would be groaning once again under an unsustainable debt?

According to Treasury, as of Nov. 30, there was $11.6 trillion of federal debt held by the public. That comes to about 75 percent of GDP — uncomfortably close to the 90 percent level that the respected Harvard economists Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart say is an unmanageable albatross that damages growth and threatens national solvency.

Add in the $4.8 trillion that on paper is owed to, and not actually sitting in, the Social Security fund, and the national debt comes to $16.369 trillion, more than GDP and just $63 billion shy of the statutory limit. The Republicans are threatening not to budge on that limit.

Say we get a premium price of $4 trillion for Alaska. That would slash the debt held by the public to $7.6 trillion, about half of GDP.

But not for long. The Obama budget proposal forecast that the deficits from 2013 through 2017 would add back $3.44 trillion to the national debt. Over the next decade, deficits would total $6.7 trillion. We’d be bumping our heads against the ceiling again in six years — assuming, plausibly, that Democrats and Republicans can’t agree on a budget deal and fiscal deadlock continues.

And at that point, we wouldn’t have Alaska anymore.

The solution then would be, as Millstein suggested, to sell more assets. After all, that’s what happens in the private sector: Companies that run in the red are forced to restructure, trim unnecessary costs and focus on their core competencies.

With manifest destiny looking manifestly unaffordable, the federal government could auction off more territory. There’s plenty there. The government owns 40 percent or more of California, Nevada, Oregon, Idaho, Arizona, New Mexico and Wyoming. Then there are the oil-rich federal waters of the Outer Continental Shelf.

Millstein said he proposed a federal asset sell-off to embarrass “the current crowd” of lawmakers and administration budget-writers. He wanted to suggest that things are so bad, it could come to this.

“I think selling all this stuff would be criminal, but in the absence of compromise on spending and tax policies, it may be necessary, even if totally humiliating,” he said.

It all depends on the budget talks over the next two weeks and the tax reform efforts next year. Our fate — Alaska’s fate? — is in Washington’s hands.

Treadwell said, “Let me know when we can put together a bid.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/bu ... 23a991d6_story.html

猎况比较?
https://www.crossna.org/forum.ph ... 2%B6%D9%D6%DD%D3%EB
发表于 2012-12-23 14:58:21 | 显示全部楼层
卖了好啊,靠卖地就能家财万贯了。其实美国不必强出头当霸主,有些欧洲小国连军队都没有,照样国泰民安。
 楼主| 发表于 2017-4-4 13:49:43 | 显示全部楼层

转帖 《把阿拉斯加卖给美国150年后,俄罗斯人后悔了?》

把阿拉斯加卖给美国150年后,俄罗斯人后悔了?
纽约时报   EVAN GERSHKOVICH2017年3月31日

http://dhsrfw0pwt246.cloudfront. ... campaign=newsletter


弗拉基米尔·V·普京(Vladimir V. Putin)担任总统期间一心想要恢复俄罗斯的伟大荣光,而他对军事力量和网络攻击能力的投射,在某种程度上导致俄美关系处于冷战结束以来的最低点。

因此,周四作为俄罗斯将阿拉斯加卖给美国的150周年纪念日——可能没什么美国人会注意到这件事——成了某些极右派民族主义者的哀悼日。他们认为这项交易是孱弱的沙皇帝国犯下的一大错误,其影响一直延续到今天这个气候变化时代——眼下,一些大国正竞相争夺对北极及其自然资源的控制权。

“如果俄罗斯现在还拥有阿拉斯加,世界地缘政治局势就会是另一番景象,”本月,克里米亚总理谢尔盖·阿克肖诺夫(Sergei Aksyonov)告诉克里米亚一家电视网。

小众军事杂志《军工信使》(Military-Industrial Courier)最近刊发了一篇分上下两部分、题为《我们失去的阿拉斯加》的文章,不满地设想了事情本来会是什么样子。

就连俄罗斯外长谢尔盖·V·拉夫罗夫(Sergey V. Lavrov)最近接受俄罗斯一家报纸采访时,也被问到了与阿拉斯加有关的问题。“诚然,这个纪念日会激起各种各样的情绪,”他说。“但这是一个很好的机会,可以让我们重温俄罗斯人为探索美洲大陆作出的贡献。”

当年,在一个热线节目上被问及阿拉斯加相关问题的普京曾说,“我们没必要为此费神。”但他于周四在俄罗斯阿尔汉格尔斯克出席国际北极论坛(International Arctic Forum)时却表示,美国在阿拉斯加的活动可能会破坏世界秩序的稳定。“我们的所作所为的影响仅限于当地,而美国在阿拉斯加做的事情,会产生全球层面的影响,”他说。他还把美国在那里部署导弹系统称为“最紧迫的安全问题之一”。

当然了,没有谁当真建议俄罗斯应该像在2013年侵吞乌克兰的克里米亚一样,夺回阿拉斯加。但俄国人和美国人对于这项交易有着不同的记忆——至关重要的是,阿拉斯加的各原住民社区对此也有着不同的记忆——由此突显出阿拉斯加作为一个文化和宗教十字路口的历史。

俄罗斯人从1784年开始在阿拉斯加定居,建设贸易站和东正教堂——大多都是沿海岸而建。到1860年代,已经在克里米亚战争中输给英国的沙皇,担心未来一旦发生冲突,英国便会占领阿拉斯加,于是决定达成一项交易。

纽约史泰登岛学院(College of Staten Island)的历史学者苏珊·史密斯-彼得(Susan Smith-Peter)说,对当时蓬勃发展的皮毛贸易极为重要的海獭此前几乎被赶尽杀绝了,俄国人还担心,如果发现黄金——就像在始于1896年的克朗代克淘金潮中所发生的那样——美国人或许会蜂拥而至。

“从俄国人的角度看,这项交易非常有意义,”她说。“他们可以刺激英国,还可以拉近同美国的关系。”

马萨诸塞州伍斯特圣十字学院(College of the Holy Cross)的历史学家格温·A·米勒(Gwenn A. Miller)说,美国也觉得买下阿拉斯加可以让它离中国更近,便于与之开展贸易,还可以遏制英国人对西海岸的不轨图谋。

“它其实关乎昭昭天命(Manifest Destiny),”她说,“关乎美国的扩张。”

俄国驻美大使爱德华·德·斯多克尔(Eduard de Stoeckl)和美国国务卿威廉·H·苏厄德(William Henry Seward)达成并签署了阿拉斯加易手协议,作价720万美元,约合今天的1.25亿美元。当时,大多数人都认为此项交易对两个国家都有好处,但一些批评人士却戏谑地称之为“苏厄德的蠢行”或“苏厄德的大冰箱”——直到现在,还有学者争论这笔买卖是否划算。

在俄罗斯的某些地方,阿拉斯加的转手留下了苦涩的余味。“和阿拉斯加一道被你出卖的,是俄罗斯人民,”去年秋天,历史爱好者弗拉基米尔·科利切夫(Vladimir Kolychev)在写给沙皇亚历山大二世(Alexander II)的诗中表示。

在华盛顿,一些庆祝活动于周四举行,其中包括全美新闻俱乐部(National Press Club)的一场午餐会,国务院的一场招待会,以及把大半生时间都给了阿拉斯加的作曲家约翰·路德·亚当斯(John Luther Adams)作品专场音乐会。在阿拉斯加,研讨、讲座、艺术展等活动将一直持续到10月18日,即阿拉斯加日(Alaska Day),它是这片土地被正式转交给美国的标志。阿拉斯加在1959年成了美国的第49个州。

俄国人当初抵达阿拉斯加时,曾征募住在海岸边的人们去狩猎海獭。土地转手后,原住民获得了自由,但在新罕布什尔州达特茅斯学院(Dartmouth College)从事美国原住民研究的谢尔盖·A·卡恩(Sergei A. Kan)教授说,美国人也制造了一些问题。

“俄国人做主的时代进行的是家长式控制,但俄国人的目标不是从根本上改变人们的生活,而是利用他们达成经济目的,”卡恩说。“与美国人一起到来的,则是更具强迫性的西化进程。”

万古不变 狩猎为生

万古不变  狩猎为生

广袤丰饶 异域风情

广袤丰饶 异域风情

一纸文书 成就了千古奇冤

一纸文书 成就了千古奇冤
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