In the News
Human rights defenders on Capitol Hill are imploring the United Nations to suspend China from its human rights council after Beijing has repeatedly broken international agreements by repatriating hundreds of North Korean defectors back to their home country to face torture, forced labor, sex trafficking, and possible execution.
A bill to tighten reporting requirements for universities that receive donations from foreign entities is one step closer to becoming law after it passed the
President Biden recently rolled out the red carpet for Chairman Xi Jinping, ready to make nice with the regime responsible for reprehensible human rights violations and an ongoing campaign to undermine democracy around the world.
“They’re fast,” Rep. Michelle Steel says of car racers who tear up the roads at dangerously high speeds.
In a bipartisan vote Wednesday, the House Committee on Education and Workforce advanced a bill that would require colleges and universities to report foreign contributions at a level at which the law does not currently mandate.
A House Republican is warning an international body that represents port authorities and operators across the globe that they are facilitating the Chinese Communist Party’s drive for global dominance by partnering with a Chinese government-run shipping-data platform, National Review has exclusively learned.
Imagine yourself at the doctor’s office, seated next to your mother who only speaks Korean. You listen intently, focused on each and every word the doctor said while furiously taking notes. It’s easy to feel frustrated.
After the mass terrorist atrocity along the Israel/Gaza border on October 7, we had the horrific sight of radicals on American campuses siding with Hamas.
Foreign adversaries have found a friend in the Biden administration.