It’s here – the world-famous Beyond Burger is now available at the FCC!
It’s the burger everyone’s talking about, and we’re now serving it at the FCC.
The FCC’s Beyond Burger. Photo: carstenschael.com
Vegetarians and meat-eaters alike can now enjoy the Beyond Burger™, the world’s first plant-based burger that looks and tastes like a fresh beef burger. Packed with 20g of plant-based protein and with no GMOs, soy or gluten, this vegan burger is as similar to meat as you can get without being meat. And with added beetroot to give it beef colour, and even a bleeding effect, any meat lover will be hard-pressed to tell the difference.
Anna Healy Fenton, F&B Committee convenor, said: “Whether you’re a die hard vegan, a dairy eating lacto-vegetarian or omnivorous, there’s a version for you. Choose between cheese toppings, creamy mushroom sauce, even special vegan buns.”
So waste no more time – come down and try the burger that’s shaking up the food industry.
Dining Room – Extension of Opening Hours ON SUNDAYS
Dining Room – Extension of Opening Hours
ON SUNDAYS
Dear members,
With effect from 25 February 2018, FCC Dining Room will extend its opening hour on Sundays as follow:
Babies and infants, children under 12 are allowed in the Dining Room on Sundays.
Bookings for lunch or dinner are advised.
Tables will be held for 10 minutes after booking time.
12 persons is the maximum number of people permitted at a table.
Dress code will be the same as ground floor Lounge: Casual, which means wearing short, a T-shirt or beach footwear is allowed.
For more information about the booking policy and dress code, please visit http://www.fcchk.org/club-rules/ for further details.
Table reservations, please contact our restaurant directly at 2523 7734 or email to [email protected].
FCC Admin Office
De-stressing your life is easier than you think, says Buddhist monk (and Snoopy)
Working fewer hours and taking time out of each day to relax and reflect is the key to greater happiness which in turn leads to increased productivity, according to a Buddhist monk and theoretical physicist.
Ajahn Brahm divulged the secrets of a happy life. Photo: Sarah Graham/FCC
And to listen to Ajahn Brahm, it is evident that he is indeed happy. It was at times hard to distinguish the February 28 guest speaker from a stand-up comedian as he cracked jokes throughout the talk, leaving guests in fits of laughter.
Brahm, a graduate of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, where he studied Theoretical Physics, said much of life’s stress could be put down to the pressure many feel in living up to the expectations of others, and themselves. He said many people who committed suicide were perfectionists who could never live up to their perceived expectations.
Locking yourself in a cupboard, creating a ‘time out’ room at your office, or even heading to the rest room – “there’s a reason why it’s called a rest room” – are all ways in which we can reduce the stress of our jobs each day. And the less stressed we are, the greater the chance of higher productivity.
To much laughter from members, Brahm, a Theravada Buddhist monk for over 40 years, quoted “that great American philosopher” Snoopy to drive home his points: “Worrying about the future doesn’t stop the bad things happening, it just stops the good things occurring now.”
Last year, Hong Kong fell three places to 75th out of 156 countries ranked in the World Happiness Report. Not only is it one of the world’s most expensive for housing and living, it tops the list as Asia’s most depressed city with high rates of divorce and suicide.
But Brahm, who has given motivational talks to big corporations including Facebook and Google, said Hongkongers’ lives need not be so busy.
“Half hour of relaxing means you get more work done in the afternoon,” he said. “If you want to be successful in life you don’t have to work long hours – you have to work smart.”
Instead of worrying about the destination, enjoy the journey, Brahm added.
The health benefits of happiness were immense, he said, adding that he believed there was solid evidence that the power of the mind had an effect on cancer. Brahm said he had worked with cancer patients for more than 30 years and believed cancer to be an overreaction of the body to stress.
He recounted how he had once seen a man hypnotised into believing that a four-inch nail on the end of a piece of wood was red hot. When the man touched it, not only did he scream in pain, Brahm said, but a blister formed on his hand.
“If the mind can create damage, it can create healing as well,” he said, adding that mind-based science was under-explored by governments as a way to reduce healthcare costs.
When asked by a member of the audience whether he agreed with a move in the United Arab Emirates to appoint a Minister for Happiness, Brahm said that trying to be happy when we’re not often makes us suffer.
“A minister would put a tax on happiness,” he said.
Women will rule the world, says author Surjit S. Bhalla
Women are going to rule the world, predicts a male author and analyst, and it’s largely thanks to empowerment through education.
Author and analyst Surjit S. Bhalla put forward the case that education is the unifying factor behind the decline of poverty and rise of equality. Photo: Sarah Graham/FCC
And what’s more, recent economic growth in developing countries like India and China can also be linked to better education over the expertise of economists, said Surjit S. Bhalla, senior analyst for a New York-based macroeconomic policy advisory firm. Outlining various data sets used in his research, Bhalla put forward the case that education is the unifying factor behind the decline of poverty and rise of equality.
For the first time in its 1,000-year history, Bhalla said, Oxford University has more women undergraduates than men. Women in Saudi Arabia are now allowed to drive cars and watch soccer matches, he added.
“We kill the girl child in India before she is born. That is going to end,” Bhalla said.
These developments have come about as a result of better education opportunities and outcomes in schooling for women – they are no longer expected to stay home and bear children, Bhalla added.
“Now there’s nothing to differentiate in terms of the labour market. This transformation is permanent,” he said.
Bhalla was promoting his latest book, The New Wealth Of Nations, at the February 26 club lunch. The premise of the book is that education increases incomes, creates wealth, reduces inequality and empowers women. To support his arguments, Bhalla used India and China as examples of the East catching up with the West first in terms of education, then as economies.
His book, he said, draws from the works of two well-known economists: Arthur Lewis (“one of the greatest economists of the 20th Century”), who studied patterns in the growth of developing economies after World War Two; and Gary Becker, who studied the effects of education on society. Bhalla applies the findings of both to support his theory of education as a major factor in economic growth.
“Education is the biggest ever transformer and biggest ever developer of growth,” Bhalla said. “The only one factor that the world knows is that education is necessary. I happen to think it’s sufficient.”
New book charts China and Israel’s long and dramatic relationship
China’s massive investment in Israel as a start-up nation comes on the back of a long and sometimes complicated relationship between the two countries, as highlighted in a new book exploring their history.
Mark O’Neill, author of Israel and China: From the Tang Dynasty to Silicon Wadi. Photo: Sarah Graham/FCC
From an early influx during the Tang dynasty (618-907 AD) to a wave of immigration during the Second World War, Jews have played a significant role in the China we know today, said Mark O’Neill, author of Israel and China: From the Tang Dynasty to Silicon Wadi.
Early Jewish settlers found their place in Chinese society as businessmen, civil servants and professionals who were given the same rights as the Chinese. However, despite building synagogues they lost their Jewish character as they assimilated into a Chinese way of life. The majority learned Mandarin and took local wives, losing contact with the outside Jewish world.
Later, more Jews came to China with the opening of trade ports, settling in Shanghai in the mid-19th century. They were largely traders in opium who subsequently used those profits to go into property, manufacturing, finance, public transport and retail, said O’Neill at the February 21 club lunch. One of those descendants was Silas Hardoon, whose property empire still dominates parts of Shanghai today. Another notable business influence in the early 20th Century was Sir Victor Sassoon. He not only made his fortune from property, pumping millions of US dollars into the Chinese economy, but also managed to successfully take his money out of China before the arrival of Mao Zedong and his establishment of the Communist Party of China.
Meanwhile, Harbin – the “Shanghai of the North” – became another destination for Jewish settlers after the opening of the China Eastern Railway in 1903. This time, the Jewish settlers built synagogues, schools, social clubs, hospitals and elderly care homes.
During the Holocaust, between 25,000 and 30,000 Jews arrived in Shanghai, one of the only cities in the world to open its doors to those fleeing the horrors of Hitler’s Nazi Germany. Shortly after, in 1942, the Gestapo representative in Tokyo visited Shanghai to order the Japanese occupiers to implement the Final Solution. However, Japanese forces refused.
Moreover, several Asian diplomats defied their governments to issue visas to Jewish refugees at this time.
The rise of Communism saw many Jews leave China for the United States, Canada, Australia and Israel. Despite declaring in 1949 that it recognised Israel as a Jewish state, during the 1950s and 1960s, China began to support the Arabs and Palestinians. In 1992, China established formal diplomatic relations with Israel.
“China sells many weapons to Israel’s most bitter enemies despite Israel asking it not to,” O’Neill said.
He added that now China “is on the way to becoming the biggest investor in Israel”. O’Neill gave Li Ka-shing as an example. The Hong Kong tycoon made more than US$145 million when it sold Israeli mapping and navigation start-up, Waze, to Google. He further invested US$130 million of those proceeds to Israel’s version of engineering school MIT – Technion – through his venture-capital fund, Horizons Ventures Ltd.
Not being Jewish himself, O’Neill said he relied on Jewish friends to connect him with rabbis, businessmen, entrepreneurs, professors and journalists in Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Israel to help write the book.
Born in England and educated at Marlborough and New College, Oxford, O’Neill came to Hong Kong in 1978. He has lived in Asia ever since, working in Taiwan, Japan, China and India, for Reuters, South China Morning Post and many other publications. Since 2006, he has written eight books on Chinese history. The last five, for Joint Publishing, have editions in Chinese and English.
Hello word
Hello word
AGM Notice
11 April 2018
NOTICE OF AGM
TO ALL MEMBERS,
NOTICE IS hereby GIVEN that the Annual General Meeting of The Foreign Correspondents’ Club, Hong Kong will be held at the First Floor, North Block, 2 Lower Albert Road, Central, Hong Kong on Thursday, 24 May 2018 at 6:00pm for the following purposes and to vote on proposed new Articles of Association detailed in the special resolution hereby attached:
Approval of the minutes of the Annual General Meeting held on 25 May 2017;
Approval of the President’s report;
Approval of the Treasurer’s report;
Approval of the audited financial statement for the year ended 31 March 2018;
Appointing Baker Tilly Hong Kong auditor of the company to hold office until the conclusion of the next annual general meeting at a fee to be agreed by the Board;
Amending the Articles of Association Article no. 8. Subject to Article 7, the rights and privileges of Members shall be personal to the Member, they shall not be transferable by his own act or by operation of law and shall cease upon his death or upon his ceasing from any cause to be a Member under the provisions of these Articles, save that the surviving spouse shall, at the discretion of the Board, be permitted to enjoy the rights and privileges that would otherwise attain to an Honorary Member for a period to be decided as a matter of general policy by the board, provided that the surviving spouse confirms they wish to take up this benefit within one year of the member’s passing. At the end of the specified period, these rights and privileges will cease at which point the surviving spouse will be invited to join the Club as a full member in the Journalist, Correspondent or Associate category as appropriate. The entrance fee will be waived but the surviving spouse will be subject to all other rights and conditions pertaining to full membership including the payment of monthly subscriptions;
The inauguration of the new Board of Governors for 2018–2019 as per results of the election.
The meeting is open to ALL MEMBERS of the Club.
Under the Companies Ordinance, a majority of members representing at least 75% of voting rights of total votes cast is needed for the amendments to be ratified.
You are entitled to appoint a proxy to attend and vote on your behalf at the AGM. We enclosed a proxy form for your completion. Please make sure your proxy attends the AGM with a completed original proxy form, and identification document, and hands it in to the relevant member of staff 48 hours before the AGM, i.e. by 6:00pm on Tuesday, 22 May 2018.
SECOND VICE-PRESIDENT:
(The position of Second Vice President can be voted by Correspondent, Journalist or Associate members)
(Vote for not more than one)
ASSOCIATE MEMBER GOVERNORS:
(The position of Associate Governor can be voted by Correspondent, Journalist or Associate members)
(Vote for not more than four)
Ms Anna Healy Fenton has informed the club that she wishes to withdraw her candidacy for the post of correspondent governor in the election to the 2018/19 board of governors. As the ballots for the election had already been printed at the time this notification was received and as reprinting would not allow the ballots to be distributed to members within the schedule required by the articles of association, Ms Healy Fenton’s name remains on the ballot for correspondent governor.