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Ben Shapiro: What Do We Do About China?
The U.S. debates strategies including tariffs, supply chain diversification, and alliance-building to counter China's economic and geopolitical expansion, seen as an existential threat.
- U.S. policymakers are debating treating China as a geopolitical adversary and isolating it by strengthening security and economic ties with Europe and Indo-Pacific partners and using tariffs and export limits.
- Officials say the threat stems from China, which they view as cheating on trade and aligning with rivals Russia and Iran, while analysts cite demographic decline and debt‑funded empty cities as vulnerabilities.
- Proposed tactics include using tariffs and export controls to pressure European governments to remove non-tariff barriers and stop United States microchip exports to China.
- Analysts warn failure to act would let Russia expand in Eastern Europe and China extend influence globally, while the United States risks withdrawing from world leadership and economic decline.
- Past examples, including 1930s Germany, show autarky often yields an initial boom but later causes stagnation and territorial expansionism.
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11 Articles
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Total News Sources11
Leaning Left0Leaning Right10Center0Last UpdatedBias Distribution100% Right
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources lean Right
100% Right
R 100%
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