by | Feb 15, 2024

“TikTok Lands Its Biggest Fish,” editorial cartoon by Shaomin Li for The American Spectator, Feb. 15, 2023.

by | Feb 7, 2024

China offers a cautionary lesson on what happens when an elite exclusively rules. The Celestial Empire has come crashing down to earth: the latest sign being a $6 trillion stock loss over the last three years. The world’s largest country,…

by | Sep 19, 2023

“See You Later, General Li,” editorial cartoon by Shaomin Li for The American Spectator, Sept. 17, 2023.

by | Sep 13, 2023

In recent months, President Joe Biden sent his Cabinet members — including Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen, Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo, and climate envoy John Kerry — to Beijing one after another, as…

by | Sep 11, 2023

Obviously the group calling itself the communist “Revolution Club Chicago” thinks the American people are stupid. Here is the New York Post headline about the group’s recent appearance at a parking lot at a Jason Aldean concert: Communist revolutionaries set…

by | Aug 8, 2023

China’s purchases of United States farmland have increased 456 percent since 2011, with 384,000 acres purchased in 2021, said Rep. Mike Gallagher at a roundtable on Agriculture Technology Theft in Iowa, led by the House Select Committee on the Chinese…

by | Jun 3, 2023

“The Day of Infamy: Remembering the Tiananmen Square Massacre,” editorial cartoon by Shaomin Li for The American Spectator, May 31, 2023.

by | Jun 2, 2023

May the hopelessness of the century we live in not prevent us from considering that there are plenty of things that are right around us. We have overcome the greatest biological attack in the history of Chinese Communism, in spite…

by | May 30, 2023

From May 19 to 21, seven of the world’s most powerful democracies (Canada, Italy, France, Great Britain, Germany, Japan, and the United States) held the G7 Summit in Hiroshima, Japan. Coincidentally, China, the world’s largest dictatorship, also held a summit…

by | May 21, 2023

To the End of the Earth: The US Army and the Downfall of Japan, 1945 John C. McManus (Dutton Caliber, 448 pages, $35) The best historians use hindsight to place events in a clearer perspective than heretofore understood. Military historian…

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