(Bloomberg) -- Americans are increasingly viewing China as an enemy and most think that limiting Beijing’s power and influence should be a top foreign policy priority for the US, according to a ...
Half of Americans think of China as a competitor, and only 6% consider the country a partner, according to the report. The findings come as the Biden administration is seeking to stabilize U.S ...
As the U.S. struggles to counter China’s dominance of mineral supply chains, Americans must recognize far more is at stake in ...
The vast majority of US politicians, media and scholars have a Cold War mentality, regard China as an existential threat.
With a $1.5 trillion deficit this year, $35 trillion in overall debt, and $1 trillion in interest payments this year, if the U.S. dollar is no longer the primary global reserve currency and there ...
Cyberattacks on water systems and other critical infrastructure, biological and chemical warfare, direct kinetic conflict ...
The original version of this story was published on American Lawyer Over the past 12 months, at least eight American law firms have closed or have announced that they will be closing their offices ...
Star Trek actor George Takei has a new picture book for children out about the three years he spent interned as a child ...
76 percent of Americans under 40 would consider buying a Chinese EV, study by AutoPacific found. Hesitancy among over 60s reduced the number of 18-80-year-olds open to Chinese EV ownership to 35 ...
China's growing military might push the U.S. Navy to consider some sort of hybrid vessel that merges the best ideas from ...
Older Americans, conservative Republicans and those with a sour view of the U.S. economy are more critical of China and more likely to consider the country an enemy, the report said. “Americans ...
As the U.S. struggles to counter China’s dominance of mineral supply chains, Americans must recognize far more is at stake in ...