Rebirth: Super Banking System Chapter 2406 - 2246: Inspection
Previously on Rebirth: Super Banking System...
If this gets out.
Word spreads to the world.
It's likely.
Numerous nations would ache a little inside. This is a classic example of the well-fed ignoring the famished; in countless places, folks are desperate to visit, but here you're being choosy.
Yet Kan Qin approves.
Over these recent years.
Through relentless work.
Should folks keep pinning hopes on sick visitors, Kan Qin views it as utterly disgraceful. Ling's vision points to a genuine boom in tourism.
To draw crowds solely via tourism.
If not.
Eventually, the image of Myanmar in minds everywhere will paint it as merely a hub for the ill. Back then, visitors probably came due to sickness.
Such a view.
Clearly won't do.
On this front.
Kan Qin grasped early that Myanmar's signature can't rely on this; it ought to shine as a proper vacation spot, and that's the upcoming aim.
"We can definitely achieve it."
Kan Qin brims with assurance.
Now.
Things have shifted from before. Stepping into the global top fifteen economies, it's prime time for bolder ambitions. As nations reveal their 2009 GDP figures one by one, the rankings take shape.
Myanmar.
Has overtaken South Korea, securing thirteenth place worldwide in GDP.
Reflecting on it.
Kan Qin can't stop grinning widely. Holding thirteenth spot, with focused push, it could crack the top ten soon, emerging as a major force no one can overlook on the world stage.
Just last month.
At the G20 Summit in Canada.
A few nations suggested adding Myanmar as a full member, turning G20 into G21, and the idea met no pushback from existing members.
Regarding this.
Kan Qin feels a rush of national pride.
Still.
For official entry, voting happens at the next gathering, which isn't distant; come November, the following summit convenes.
Actually.
On membership, swayed by Ling, Kan Qin's enthusiasm runs mild.
Becoming a member.
Offers few real perks; it merely boosts global standing slightly. Unlike the World Trade Organization, though prestigious, it focuses on dialogue and alignment.
Pretty flexible.
Sure.
Being in is still positive.
...
Over the next week.
The United Kingdom.
France.
Germany.
Japan.
South Korea.
...
A wave of Western-aligned countries started mirroring the US, permitting Transcription Fluid imports. On health coverage.
Policies differ.
Some.
Claim more review needed, such as Greece, burdened by billions in euro debts—how could they afford public funds for this cost?
No choice.
They must keep bargaining with the European Union.
For support.
Loans.
As the crisis worsens, Greece drops its old standoffishness, shifting from hidden loans to public pleas for EU help.
But.
The EU replies: this... and that... we must deliberate further.
So.
It lingers unresolved, leaving Greek officials, once so sure, now uneasy since EU calls for Greece's departure grow stronger.
Especially locally.
Demands to leave the union surge.
Demonstrations.
Processions.
Rejections.
They firmly refuse to let Greece keep draining funds, enjoying easy lives without effort, just waiting for handouts daily.
When Greeks notice, they slam the money pipeline shut?
Blast it.
They strike back hard.
Truth is.
Since year's start, this issue sparked dozens of protest clashes, heating up steadily without any deaths.
Even so.
Chaos reigns.
Tensions.
Deepen further.
...
Germany.
Berlin.
In the heart of the city, protesters grip signs as they advance.
"Oppose aid to Greece."
Repeatedly.
The throng shouts the slogan, sharing the message with onlookers and, via press, spreading it across Europe, frustrating reporters.
Previous year.
It buzzed nonstop.
One figured this year it'd settle.
But surprise.
It turned routine.
Nearly monthly in Germany, and with varied timings, EU nations see anti-Greece rallies at least fifteen days a month.
What a disaster!
For goodness' sake.
Can't you ease up? We're reporters, and even we're worn out from hearing it.
Sadly.
No one listens; endless coverage has turned anti-Greece sentiment into a dominant issue in EU public opinion; folks now hold one main idea.
---Greece must pay back or leave the union.
Meanwhile.
Another call rises to boot out Eurozone laggards, safeguarding the zone's economic steadiness and sound growth.
Actually.
A quiet push for EU exit simmers.
From.
Mostly non-Euro EU states, like the United Kingdom, who feel Britain's influence wanes post-EU join—unacceptable!
Not just shouldering extra loads to aid weaker partners, but as the Eurozone expands under France and Germany's lead.
Thus.
Bit by bit.
France and Germany dine lavishly while Britain gets mere broth, and occasionally the broth's decent.
Unbearable.
The mighty British Empire must reclaim its eternal sun glory, yet the EU and Euro outlook stays foggy, direction unknown.
...
Right now.
After six months of care, throngs of advanced Alzheimer's sufferers are recovering, wondering if they've jumped through time?
What's happening.
After years in a fog.
Snapping awake.
Why's the world so transformed? Cancer's now curable, and even untreatable Alzheimer's has a fix.
After asking around.
Myanmar?
Wasn't that a barely noticed, struggling Southeast Asian spot? Now it flips to rescue countless global patients.
Conveniently.
These old frames still function, so off to see it. Plenty think alike; alive means pensions flow.
Money's there.
Hence.
Though many treatment-bound patients to Myanmar ditched flights, fresh tourist interests swiftly plug the void.
By year's close.
Flights to Myanmar stay in short supply.
...
On the 29th.
Morning.
Within.
The airport.
Sun Jiang greets the latest inspection team arriving in Myanmar.
Hydropower.
Development and Reform.
State Council.
Key ministries and agencies dispatch reps to tour and check hydropower projects. Sun Jiang knows the draw: real successes shine here.
Amid heavy downpours.
Before.
Myanmar faced sure floods; summer brought many disasters, and extreme rains hit vast areas hard.
But.
This year.
Zero incidents; each storm prompts Myanmar's major media to highlight successes, drawing heaps of acclaim.
So.
Back home, they notice.
Impressive!
This approach looks solid, sparking this probe. Honestly, Sun Jiang admires Myanmar's tactics; people have long invaded river wetlands.
Disrupting natural flow.
Eventually, rains overwhelm some channels beyond limits.
Thus.
Reclaiming land for rivers works well, and Myanmar adds another: carving fresh channels for storage.
This way.
No land return needed; mere digging suffices.
Naturally.
Combining both proves ideal, allowing broad rollout where Hua Xia might dodge city flooding, safe from hydro perils.