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China’s Reckless Labs Put the World at Risk
Wuhan Institute of Virology. (Photo by HECTOR RETAMAL/AFP via Getty Images)
The world must hold the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) accountable when it fails to uphold global biosafety standards, Mike Pompeo and Miles Yu argue in The Wall Street Journal [[link removed]]. The evidence that COVID-19 came from Wuhan is enormous, though largely circumstantial, and most signs point to the Wuhan Institute of Virology as the source. In America, concern about the site is now broad and bipartisan. Lives and livelihoods across the world are on the line, and the international community must be prepared to hold China accountable on this critical issue.
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Virtual Event | The Future of Politics in an Evolving Information Ecosystem
Join Hudson Institute Senior Fellow Peter Rough and experts Roshan Patel, Josh Holmes, and Jon Lerner today at 12:00 p.m. EST for a discussion [[link removed]] on the impact of the information revolution on the media and political landscape confronting policy organizations, corporations, and campaigns in the 2020s.
WATCH HERE [[link removed]] PODCAST LAUNCH: Counterbalance
Join Hosts Michael Doran and Marshall Kosloff kick off the newest podcast from Hudson Institute, “Counterbalance,” focusing on foreign policy through discussions that challenge the conventional wisdom. Listen to the trailer and subscribe today [[link removed]]–then tune into Episode 1 on March 3.
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The Polar Bear Paradox
Photo by Getty Images.
Climate change is back on the agenda and key positions within the government will be filled with individuals committed to achieving green goals, writes Walter Russell Mead in The Wall Street Journal [[link removed]]. Paradoxically, as climate change assumes a more prominent place on the international agenda, climate activists will lose influence over climate policy. Activists see climate change as an existential threat that the world should unite around fighting—but individual countries inevitably see even the most urgent global problems through the lens of their own interests.
READ NOW [[link removed]] The Economic Case for Prioritizing a US-Taiwan Free Trade Agreement
Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen visits Penghu Air Force Base on September 22, 2020. (Photo by SAM YEH/AFP via Getty Images)
The United States should move quickly to accept Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen’s offer to enter into negotiations for a Free Trade Agreement (FTA), writes Thomas Duesterberg in Forbes [[link removed]]. Taiwan faces clear threats to its economic and political success because it has become overly dependent on trade and investment with China. Taiwan thus has ample motivation to enter into a more stable, longer-term relationship with its leading supporter, the United States.
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Join Hudson Institute Senior Fellow Eric Brown and Adjunct Fellow Nury Turkel for a discussion [[link removed]] with veteran journalist Kai Strittmatter this Thursday on his groundbreaking book We Have Been Harmonised: Life in China’s Surveillance State, which examines the rise of “digital Leninism,” explains how the CCP has perfected techno-tyranny to maintain its grip on power, and explores the global impact of these practices.
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