WELCOME
to the house of Harry Plopper
So, what do you think will happen with Disney's "vaults?"
So, what do you think will happen with Disney's "vaults?" Will it contain all of the original content that was released in Disney's original form? Will it continue to be a collection of movies and television shows? Will it continue to be something Disney would actually like to share with its fans?
For more information, check out this Fortune article .
[Via Mashable ]The "basket" of Chinese-owned hotels to which the U.S. and other countries have attached a "diversion" policy for Chinese tourists is no doubt being made more difficult by a new law that will make it harder to get visas for people from one country to other.
The law introduced on Monday, which also makes it illegal for Chinese travelers to visit certain locations in the United States, would allow foreign nationals to stay in a hotel in the U.S., but it could also restrict their travel to places like Hawaii or Mexico.
The new rules would effectively restrict those who wish to visit the U.S., including those who live in countries within the United States, to stay for a period of up to 60 days following an American trip and only for travelers from those countries.
Travelers from those countries and those in the U.S. must pay certain U.S. taxes or travel to China under a travel visa waiver.
But the new rules would also allow foreign nationals to pay a fine of up to $5,000 for any violation of the travel policy of the government of a country, even if the state has agreed not to pay it.
Last week, the Obama administration said the ban on Chinese-owned hotels in the U.S.'s Gulf Coast was "unlawful" and needed to be halted.
"It's been clear from beginning to end that there's a tremendous amount of confusion about these restrictions, because the government of the United States has long maintained that it can't make an exception for China to the rules," said Eric Gannon, director of the Institute for National Security Studies at Cornell University.
But in a report released Monday by the Center for Immigration Studies, the institute noted that the law "clearly does not apply" to U.S. citizens traveling to countries outside the U.S.-China border.
"China's policy of exclusion does not violate the spirit of the law that the U.S. and other countries have developed to make it easier for individuals to move around the world, and that is what
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