A classroom assistant at the school i worked at. very hard-working, curious and funny guy who likes to learn things all the time, so we exchanged Chinese and English and hung out all the time for barbecue and hotpot and all that good stuff.
still friends more than a decade later even though I travel a lot; we got to meet up a few times when I visited Beijing last year and we still talk occasionally on wechat.
correct.
there's also the maybe more important scientific literature ban that is forcing scientists like those who make sure crops grow correctly in the US out of their jobs because they aren't able to talk about the gender of the seeds they are breeding.
or the physicists who can't talk about the "status" of the material they're using, because that word is banned.
countries don't want to buy American military equipment anymore because they rightly cannot trust the US, which is a huge loss of revenue.
the disastrously policies already enacted are going to economically and socially hobble the country for decades.
the scientist who goes to another country rather than the US to practice physics, agriculture, anthropology, anything, that's an entire career of innovation and scientific benefit lost to the US.
and those scientists are already avoiding the us, that's already happening.
the market numbers are the tip of the iceberg here.