The time saved in crossing the ocean in the spaceship would be eaten into by the ime it'd take to get from your destination (say, New York) to New Mexico, and then from wherever China's theoretical spaceport might be (presumablythe south of the country, although near-equatorial launches might not be neccesaryfor spaceplanes the way they are for rockets) to where you want to go. Not to mention the inonvenience of changing planes twice or more. It'd all add up - even conservatively, giving yourself say, an hour and a half in the air for each sub trip, half an hour to board each plane and get takeoff clearance, you're looking at a 6 or 7 hour trip. Time's saved for sure, but is it enough to justify the presumably massive price tag for the individual flights and the facilitys to launch these vessels? (The new mexico one is costing 200 illion) I just don't see there being enough of a market for it, even if you're dual using facilities for tourism and travel.
20 or 30 years down the road, maybe we'll see it s cheap enough to justify, very similar to the way early aviation went from enthusiasts to the rich to the general public over a few decades, but not now, and not with this ship.