The $67,000,000 Chinese mystery in New Hampshire
(NewsNation) — When a billionaire Chinese businessman and his company quietly purchased a commercial building in Nashua, New Hampshire, to ostensibly set up a water plant, the deal went largely unnoticed. That changed when the purchase price was publicly revealed.
The company, Nongfu Spring, is China's largest beverage company. The site is next to the Pennichuck water system and allows the company to use local water for a beverage plant. What's raising eyebrows is the mystery of why the company paid $67 million in cash for a property valued at $15 million.
'Being tied into our Pennichuck water system and taking millions of gallons a day of drinking water from the citizens of Nashua is very concerning,' local resident Bob Lozeau told NewsNation. He says most folks in Nashua didn't know about the sale before it happened.
State Senator Kevin Avard, a Republican whose district includes part of Nashua, shared his concerns.
'You have the airport here. You have our water supply they are looking to capture,' he told NewsNation.
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The building spans 337,000 square feet and is situated on 23 acres. It's close to the Nashua Airport, several defense centers and a Federal Aviation Administration control center.
Lily Tang Williams fled communism in China and is now running for Congress in New Hampshire as a Republican.
'I did research in English and Mandarin, which is my first language, and I was just shocked,' Williams told NewsNation's Brian Entin.
'I have been trying to warn people,' she says. 'Xi Jinping has a China dream, and his China dream is to use a soft power invasion. Business. Education. Apps like TikTok and WeChat. Media. Entertainment. Everything they can, without firing one shot, to expand into western countries like the United States.'
She says China doesn't want her to discuss what she calls the 'soft power invasion' and the national security concerns associated with projects like the Nongfu Spring plant.
We asked her what would happen if she spoke out about it in China.
'I would disappear. I'm afraid if I go back, and I go in, they won't let me go out. I would disappear. They want me to shut up,' she told us.
The Nongfu Spring expansion in Nashua isn't the only Chinese investment. A few miles away, a Chinese investor purchased the former campus of what was Daniel Webster College. The 50-acre site was sold for $14 million about seven years ago, but it is mostly abandoned today. The mayor of Nashua, Jim Donchess, says the investor paid double what the property was worth.
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We asked him why Nongfu Spring would pay more than four times the assessed value for the property by the water plant.
'It's very weird. Why they would do that, I have no idea,' he said.
The mayor says he's not against the project, and he doesn't believe there are any national security concerns. The city owns the Pennichuck Corporation water system itself, and the mayor says the city would never consider selling the water company.
But he, like everyone else in Nashua, is still wondering why Nongfu Spring paid so much for the property. 'It's very puzzling as to why that would happen,' he said.
Nongfu Spring has not yet responded to NewsNation requests for comment. We will update this story if they do.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Forbes
36 minutes ago
- Forbes
AWE 2025 Fueled By Android XR, Snap Specs, And AI
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Brent's Dream Park demo on the show floor's Playground allows players to interact with digital characters in the physical world. 'This isn't VR anymore,' he said. 'You are the game.' Palmer Luckey at AWE 2025. Palmer Luckey began by explaining his hoarse voice was the result of spending a week in Washington, DC with his main customers. In the news just weeks ago was his surprise reunion with Meta, seven years after being fired. They are together taking over the IVAS project from Microsoft. IVAS was a $22 billion contract to create AR equipped infantry that could use heads-up displays for threat detection, drone management, mapping, targeting, in addition to the thermal imaging (night vision) they use now. 'The best AR hardware isn't coming out of DARPA anymore,' he said. 'It's coming from the consumer sector. Meta, Snap, Google, they've pulled ahead.' His Eagle Eye platform, developed for the U.S. Army, is a high-resolution, multimodal sensor suite that fuses thermal, RF, and spatial data in real time. 'It's not entertainment hardware,' he said. 'It's a tool built for life-and-death decisions, but it will trickle back to consumers.' Author and entrepreneur Tom Emrich signing copies of his new book, Next Dimension. Emrich announced ... More at the show that he is launching a new spatial/XR news site, Remix Reality. Vicki Dobbs Beck of ILM and researcher and author Helen Papagiannis approached XR from a cultural and narrative perspective, emphasizing its potential as a medium for identity, expression, and immersive storytelling. Beck framed ILM's evolving mission as a shift from 'storytelling to storyliving.' Drawing from a decade of immersive projects under the Lucasfilm banner, she described the next frontier as emotionally responsive worlds, powered by real-time AI and character memory. Papagiannis, author of Augmented Human, unveiled her new book Reality Modding, which proposes that reality-like software which is now editable, customizable, and increasingly aesthetic. 'This is about identity and presence,' she said. 'We're no longer just users of technology, we're becoming the medium itself.' Mentra AR glassess will soon be compatible with Android XR. The tone of the show was celebratory but not naive. Inbar acknowledged the ghosts of past hype cycles. XR has been 'the next big thing' for nearly two decades. But this year, the combination of stable platforms, purpose-built hardware, and AI-native developer tools made the proposition feel more grounded. The term 'ambient computing' came up repeatedly—devices that disappear into daily life, interfaces that respond without friction. On the floor, dozens of demos aimed at enterprise deployment, not just entertainment: spatial planning, logistics, training, and field service. Enterprise now represents 71% of the XR market, and it showed. All 5000 people must have tried the new Snap Spectacles by the end of the show. The AWE Playground is always a highlight as it features entertainment experiences for both in-home and out-of-home audiences. Installations ranged from social XR games to large-scale multisensory exhibits. A highlight was an expanded version of Brent Bushnell's Dream Park, a walkable mixed-reality experience that allowed users to embody virtual characters without controllers. They just raised $1.3 M to expand from their Santa Monica pilot. Their 'theme park in a box' can literally be run by a couple of kids in a park. Auki's robot had a. lot of fans. Auki Labs placed QR codes on the floor of the convention center for indoor navigation. This mobile AR experience helped guide their attention-getting robot. 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You plug them into your phone and see a 200' screen in a compact form factor. It's favored by gamers but popular for content consumption and productivity as well. They've come a long way in three short years, diversifying into software, including an app that uses AI to transform movies into 3D, spatial experiences, much like Leia, which does it with a 3D display in tablet form. It is even more impressive when fully immersed in Viture's lightweight headset. With Google and Apple entering the market they're hoping their software will give them a way to leverage the competition into even greater success. Trying out Flow Immersiver on an Xreal AR headset. In the hallways and informal corners of the convention center, old ideas resurfaced in sharper, more polished form. Jason Marsh, founder of Flow Immersive, gave one of his signature roaming demos—an evolving tradition that began seven years ago when he first cornered me outside a session room with a prototype on his tablet. This year, Flow's layered, interactive data visualizations ran smoothly on headsets, phones, and smartglasses. What once felt like an ambitious idea now looked like a viable product, complete with enterprise traction and UX refinements. The evolution of Flow mirrored the tone of the show itself: confident, capable, and finally ready for primetime. Patrick Johnson and the team from Rock, Paper, Reality, with the hideous yet coveted Auggie Award, ... More which they won for their extraordinary work with Google maps on the history of Paris. This year's Auggie Awards reflected both breadth and maturity across the XR spectrum. With a record number of nominations and public votes, the 16th annual ceremony honored excellence across 19 categories: LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 11: Director for Medical Virtual Reality Institute for Creative ... More Technologies Albert "Skip" Rizzo at Participant Medias screening of That Which I Love Destroys Me in Los Angeles on Wednesday, February 11, 2015 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo byfor Participant Media) Ten new XR Hall of Fame inductees were honored on June 11, celebrating pioneers whose work has shaped today's $40 billion industry: Their induction honors the foundational work they've done while helping the next generation of creators. The packed theatre was a reminder that today's XR movement is not new, but finally catching up to its own imagination.
Yahoo
an hour ago
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Announcing the 2025 Hall of Fame Philadelphia Titan 100 Recipients
PHILADELPHIA, June 12, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Titan CEO is pleased to announce Robert Mesmer, CEO of RMG Erectors & Constructors as a 2025 Philadelphia Titan 100 Hall of Fame recipient. The Titan 100 program recognizes Philadelphia's Top 100 CEOs & C-level executives. They are the area's most accomplished business leaders in their industry using criteria that include demonstrating exceptional leadership, vision, and passion. Collectively, the 2025 Philadelphia Titan 100 and their companies employ over 111,000 individuals and generate over $145 billion in annual revenues. This year's honorees will be published in a limited-edition Titan 100 book and profiled exclusively online. They will be honored at the annual awards ceremony on September 18th, 2025, and will be given the opportunity to interact and connect multiple times throughout the year with their fellow Titans. Titan award recipients are allowed to make the Titan 100 list for up to three years, with each year getting progressively more difficult. To make it to the Hall of Fame, Titans must complete on-camera interviews and answer a series of questions where they do not know what will be asked in front of a live judging committee. The Titan 100 Hall of Fame is a class of elite executives that have consistently shown over the past three years their ability to demonstrate the characteristics of a Titan who is a pillar of our community. This year's Titan 100 embody the true diversity of Philadelphia's business landscape. Representing construction, marketing & advertising, financial services, food & beverages, information technology & services, and non-profit sectors, among others. "Philadelphia's Titan 100 are redefining business with vision and purpose, setting new standards for growth, innovation, and impact. These trailblazing leaders inspire transformation across industries, uplift communities, and drive meaningful change. We proudly celebrate their legacy of excellence and unwavering commitment to shaping a brighter future for all," says Jaime Zawmon, President of Titan Bobby Mesmer, CEO of RMG Erectors & Constructors, LLC, the world's largest Pre-Engineered Metal Building Erector Company, is a highly successful entrepreneur. In addition to RMG Erectors & Constructors, LLC, Mesmer is also the founder and CEO of Iron Will Racing, LLC a professional prototype race team, and RMG Luxury Services, LLC a new startup providing Black car SUV and luxury Jet services to the national market, created to disrupt the current market sector. Mesmer was born and raised in Southern New Jersey. He grew up in the farmlands of the Garden State, just outside of Philadelphia. He made his first foray into business when he started his construction management and general construction firm in the year 2000. "Being inducted into the Titan Hall of Fame is an incredible honor. To be recognized among such an inspiring group of leaders is both humbling and motivating. It's a reminder that hard work, vision, and surrounding yourself with the right people truly make a difference," says Mesmer Robert Mesmer will be honored at the annual Titan 100 awards celebration on September 18th, 2025, held at 2300 Arena. This elegant, cocktail-style awards event will unite 100 Titans of Industry for an unforgettable evening of celebration, camaraderie, and networking—an evening unlike anything that exists in the Philadelphia business community. Media Contact: Connie Guaracini | RMG Erectors & Constructors | Social Media Manager & Executive Assistant to the CEO | Email: constanceg@ | Phone: 856-777-7641 | Website: About RMG Erectors & Constructors Founded in 2000 by Bobby Mesmer, RMG Erectors & Constructors is the nation's largest and fastest-growing steel erection firm, specializing in pre-engineered metal buildings (PEMB). With headquarters in Sewell, New Jersey, and offices in Tennessee, Montana, and Costa Rica, RMG delivers steel projects BETTER, FASTER, and SAFER. For more information about RMG Erectors & Constructors and its full suite of services, visit View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE RMG Erectors & Constructors Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
Israeli strikes on Iran lead to new test of Trump's ability to deliver on 'America first' agenda
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The push by the Trump administration to persuade Tehran to give up its nuclear program came after the U.S. and other world powers in 2015 reached a long-term, comprehensive nuclear agreement that limited Tehran's enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. But Trump unilaterally withdrew the U.S. from the Obama-administration brokered agreement in 2018, calling it the 'worst deal ever.' The way forward is even more clouded now. 'No issue currently divides the right as much as foreign policy,' Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA and an ally of the Trump White House, posted on X Thursday. 'I'm very concerned based on (everything) I've seen in the grassroots the last few months that this will cause a massive schism in MAGA and potentially disrupt our momentum and our insanely successful Presidency.' Jack Posobiec, another prominent Trump supporter, warned a 'direct strike on Iran right now would disastrously split the Trump coalition.' 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