common sense

"there is no arguing with one who denies first principles"

Monday, December 19, 2022

Gifts and The Meaning of Christmas

 


Christmas is near.

This is the last full week before the big day and I’m nearly caught up with gift buying. I still need to buy for mom and dad. Last year I got him a hand held massager. Companies started making nice ones a few years ago. These plug in to charge. Gone are the days of the throw away battery (like C and D) run devices that last just into the new year. How many foot baths and neck massagers have gift givers tossed after a few weeks?

Everyone, at one time has fallen for a ‘sham wow’ knick knack. Two years ago I got my mom one of those heating pods where you snap a device the size of dime inside a gel infused bag. It looked impressive at the fair. The demonstrator, speaking in I-can’t-believe-how-amazing tones, showed the various uses for the magic device. I’m not a heating pad type of guy. Unless I’m in the throes of a nasty flu, I’m not likely to tuck in under a big comforter with an additional hot bag. But my mom loves the heating pods and heating blankets. I’m sure she has a small space heater in her room as well.

My gift was the perfect complement to a permanently cold body. But like all the other gifts it eventually collapsed, like a failed business stock price shortly after its initial offering. But heating pods, like foot massagers and neck rollers aren’t meant to solve a long term problem. They’re meant to bulk up our pile under the tree and give us something to open, use, and discard. They’re also new ideas when we really need something. Gift cards are no one’s first or last choice. A gift card is better than a pair of shoes that don’t fit or a biography about a person you don’t like (Hillary Clinton).

But cards are also lazy. It’s like, “I couldn’t think of anything so here’s my obligation”. Yes I know, I give them too. Some people have everything they need and more that they don’t. And they’ll likely take that ABBA greatest hits collection right back and spend the credit on an air can cleaner for their laptop anyway. A gift card just makes sense most of the time so why all the pressure? I guess it’s the hunt. That elusive, perfect gift and the story behind how you found it, is what still motivates us to buy for others. Sure it’s risky. But you gain hero status with a hard fought search for an original copy of “Sharknado”.

It's not so much the gift, but how it proves your knowledge of the giftee that is the real reward. In cases like this it’s the gifter that is blessed. I looked for a new model die cast model car yesterday for a friend. He’s a big fan of Ford Mustang cars and never misses a chance to point one out on the road. After 5 stores I gave up. The gift had to be purchased that day. No amount of 2-day shipping from a vendor in South Carolina would work. I did find an embossed sign with “Mustang Ave” on it at Hobby Lobby. I picked up a hat with the iconic logo embroidered on the crown for good measure. It was hardly a search high and low type of gift, but I was pleased with my pick. Hopefully he was too.

It’s better to give than to receive. We need reminders every year.

Gifts and giving is only one part of Christmas anyway. The big part is Christ, the reason we gather and celebrate. Does Christmas carry the same weight as Easter in the holy day calendar? Does it even matter?

Both concern the Savior, His birth and resurrection. What’s important to me is recognizing both days and letting the ornamentation blur into the background like colored lights. Nothing is wrong with parties, dinners, presents and pageants. Paul reminds us in Romans 14:5-6 “One person esteems one day above another; another esteems every day alike. Let each be fully convinced in his own mind. He who observes the day, observes it to the Lord;” In other words, don’t get caught up in which festivals carry more importance or which group has a greater claim on piety. The birth of Christ unites us, as does His death and resurrection.

The presents we buy for each other represent something selfless we do with our time and money. In a small way it’s an effort to be more like Christ. It’s easy to get carried away with events and gifts and travel, but in spite of the heavy consumerism of the holiday it’s still about Jesus.

The significance of the Savior of the World cannot be overstated. No gift, given or received can match what God the Father offered to us over 2000 years ago.

Merry Christmas!

 

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Death and Life: Speech for Growth


The Prescription for A Creative Life: Speak Truth

The book of Proverbs shows the importance of speech for both the Christian in their own lives, and also for the non-Christian.

Provers 18:21 “Death and life are in the power of the tongue and those who love it will eat its fruit."

More specifically it shows the value of righteous pronouncements and positive speech. Why is this exactly? How is it that our words have such an impact on the direction of our life? It’s not fair if we’re having a bad day and happen to get down on ourselves. But not acknowledging our part in the direction of life is the same as ignoring gravity. It’s a natural law of the universe that exists, whether we acknowledge it or not.

 The words we speak contain the seeds that become our future.

The Natural World

Apple seeds create apple trees; it’s the same for all fruits. Plant, water and wait. The soil in which the seeds mature contains nutrients necessary for growth. It’s such a natural part of the earth we live in we don’t think about it often. Our natural world contains the perfect amount of water, air and soil for life to thrive. You can’t grow grapes in the Sahara Desert or expect fescue grass to cover the alps, but it’s a life giving place just the same. It exits to increase, fulfilling the mission of God in Genesis to “Be fruitful and multiply.”

That command isn’t just for people, it’s how our world is designed to function.

Language is the spark of life. God spoke, and it was. He put everything necessary for growth here on earth in the beginning. We shouldn’t be surprised that He calls us to use our speech for creation. How do we do this exactly?

We do this in our own lives through positive (biblical) confession and in the lives of others through scripture.

If God filled words are the spark of life, then negative words are the poison that destroys life. Both natural laws exist in the same environment, death and life. It’s the same with our words. We uplift and show people to Christ or we put them down and cause death in them.

A wholesome tongue is a tree of life, but perverseness in it breaks the spirit.” Proverbs 15:4

The Spiritual World

There were a couple of famous trees on the University of Auburn campus until about 10 years ago. If you ever watched an Auburn home football game the TV cameras always panned the iconic Oaks that stood for over 150 years. A hostile Alabama (tide) fan spiked the trees after a tough Iron Bowl loss in 2010. He called the Paul Finebaum show in 2011 to brag about it. The trees didn’t die all at once, that’s not how poison works. It moves slowly and penetrates all the way through the bark. You might not notice it for years.

A tree can look quite strong and rugged for years but be dead inside. First the leaves dry up and stop producing. Then the bark peels off in sheets while the wood softens inside and stops fighting off infection. It doesn’t fall over though. It stands there for years, taking up space. It’s quite easy to kill a tree. You could drill holes in just one or two roots and pour in an herbicide. No one would even know.

There are countless people walking around struggling with wounds from poisonous words spoken over their lives. The same growth that comes from life giving speech, can turn into death with negative speech. We don’t shrivel up and die when someone wounds us, we die over time because the poison works slowly. As Christians we have the ability to speak biblical truths over those around us. But it isn’t just truth the way that something is truthful.

The Ideal World

Oklahoma is much hotter in the summer than Illinois. That’s a true statement. But it doesn’t contain any creative power. It’s an observational truth and nothing more. It might make you prepare a little differently for a trip. You’re body will need to adapt to a steamier climate if you live in Illinois. But facts about the weather can’t help us grow spiritually or encourage growth in others.

But biblical truths are both facts and seeds. They contain the nutrients necessary to build the Kingdom of God in this world. The Creator uses us to reach others. We provide medicine or we provide poison. It’s never too late to turn poisonous words into Godly truth.

 There’s also good news for those who’ve been poisoned by a boss, a friend or even family.

We have an antidote. We have the words of life and the creative force that restores. Death can’t hold us because it couldn’t hold Him.

What’s the prescription for a creative life?

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths.” (Proverbs 3:5-6)

We acknowledge the Creator when we speak life and create growth.

 

 


Sunday, December 11, 2022

Last Week: Writing Again

 


Last week was a working week for me.

What I mean is, my writing increased to include 2 to 3 hours of evening work. It’s been a little while since I’ve been able to write anything for money. Thankfully now I’m writing consistently again for a one-time project. I don’t know how long this contract is going to go, but for now it’s paying. That’s a good thing because I was running out of ideas for how to attract business. I’ve neglected my website and even my email marketing. Email marketing isn’t quite right but it sounds more professional. In truth I’m just bombing digital marketers with “got any work” inquiries. I won’t say it’s a complete waste of time, but so far I haven’t had any hits.

I really hate doing that. There’s a reason I never wanted to sell insurance. I hate cold calls and cold emails. It’s seriously obnoxious to be hit with texts and calls about the same nonsense. Currently I’m getting spammed by local house flippers who desperately want me sell. My method is to just ignore it.

How are MY messages received I wonder? “No! I don’t want it, now go away” is what I always imagine them saying. Probably because that’s what I do. But still, there is a type  of person that responds. Usually it’s just like “thanks, we’ll add you to the list”. That’s at least a glimmer of hope in a dark sea of ignores though.

But the glimmer isn’t enough for me. If I have to do only that to get business, I’ll do something else. I don’t want to write for online companies that bad. I’ll deliver Amazon packages or answer phone calls and help people fix their internet or something. That’s why this marketing stuff with Sam is a good start. It allows me to get better at writing in a particular industry while learning how to do key word research. Not to mention, learning about SEO and SEM strategies and putting that knowledge to good use. Once I get over the “I’m not in the mood to do this right now” attitude it usually goes well. Writing a big blog with various pieces and connections is a puzzle; it takes at least 2 of us to put it together.

One to write and one to say, “Fix this, change that. Is that a fragment? Do you even speak English?”

Depending on how quick Sam get’s me the updates, next week will probably look a lot like this one. Multiple nights spend cleaning up my outline, then watching an hour of Netflix before going to bed. I love and hate spending my evenings writing for work. The content is less fun than whatever newsy stuff I decided to read and regurgitate for my blog. But it keeps me accountable in a way that updating the blog could never do. I work harder when there is a project on the table. Even a project that drags a little and forces me to do more research than writing, is still better than no projects at all. Because as much as I like to pretend otherwise, I’m lazy when given the chance.

I don’t mean I’m lazy necessarily, let’s say…content with my effort. Does that make sense? I’m not great at that last 2% of finishing touches if it requires an extra hour. I’m more the “I’ve already worked on this for a whole two weeks and you’re telling me the formatting needs to look different? Umm, No. I’m done. You clean it up.” I guess it’s my fixation with checking boxes. I’ve gotten better at this over the years. Awareness is the first stage I suppose. I like to finish, because the stuff inside the package is better than whatever fancy ribbon you tie on it.

Not everyone sees it this way, editors for instance.

Speaking of ribbons and packages, Christmas forces me to tie up all my lose ends here before the New Year. I’ll be taking a week of vacation between Christmas and New Year’s Day. Before that I’ve got family in town so It’s closer to a week and a half of play time. I don’t want any projects to bleed into that if I can help it. I love Christmas. It’s not just the gift exchanges and seasonal joy, it’s the promise of hope through the birth of the Savior. I know it seems like Christmas is about families and travel and time off. Anyone unfamiliar with the roots of Christmas would think it’s an end of year bash, with eggnog and ugly sweater contests. Nothing wrong with any of that, but the importance will always be Christ and His death, resurrection and second coming.

Without Him, the celebration is empty. Merry Christmas!

 

 

Friday, December 2, 2022

Sick of the Lockdowns in China

 


Is the Tide Receding for the CCP?

Calling the medical tyranny in China “lockdowns” is making a mockery of the term.

Lockdowns are what occurred in the United States and a lot of other nations. Canada and Britain saw tough measures, while Australia and New Zealand tossed their liberal credentials aside and let the goons loose on anti-lockdown protests. On some level most countries’ governments overstepped their bounds by giant leaps. Police harassed elderly couples with curfew citations out walking their dog.  Most countries imposed mandates for masks and vaccines. Largely because of what the truckers did in Canada, governments backed off after that.

The truckers didn’t go far enough in their rebellion, but they did make their point. When the law finally did break up the demonstrations, Justin Trudeau paid an awful price. He’s the most hated man in the country by regular citizens. All because of vaccine mandates for cross border truckers, Ottawa’s overreach caused other mandates to fizzle. A lot of vaccine mandates in the US were a non starter as well. Especially now that the jab has cost more lives to Covid than natural immunity alone, leaders look silly in their insistence.

China lockdowns are otherworldly. When you realize that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) takes the position that the country is theirs and everyone else just occupies space, their thuggish behavior makes sense. Not only did the virus begin there, in a Wuhan lab, but the party has insisted on an inhuman policy of Zero Covid. That means hazmat suited teams test everyone where they live. If positive, the individual can’t leave his/her apartment. Some have been welded inside their room, many are beaten for protesting the demand. Business owners have had enough too. I saw a great video of a restaurant owner with a hammer, destroying the barricade around his shop and shouting about the injustice of it.

Some of the blue states like California and New York had draconian lockdowns but nothing like a communist state. I complained loudly about the mask requirements here. I sent emails to my governor and my city council member, who voted on masks for Tulsa. People in the US didn’t complain enough in my opinion. They let fear of a pandemic take out their rights as citizens to live, work and worship. And that’s in Oklahoma, where the response was mild relative to much of the country. I won’t go down another trail and rehash 2020. But there has been no retribution for government overreach during those dark days.

 There needs to be a full accounting, or it WILL happen again.  

I know the Chinese are used to just keeping their heads down and avoiding certain activities. But they’ve been through a crazy number of restrictions from an oppressive government that’s scared of its population. It pushes them hard because if the population ever knew their power, the communist party would cease to exist. Every town, city or rural area would lock up the local official in an apartment and weld the door shut. But no one can convince a population to cast off restraint and fight for their future, for their children’s future. It must come from exhausted, angry people who’ve decided they’d rather die or go to prison than live under this regime another day.

I do hope the people of China are there.

But it’s also a great time from the regime’s point of view to start a war. They’ve been looking for a reason to attack Taiwan and subdue those “rebels”. It’s a wealthy country that got rid of their dictatorship a while ago. Beijing has always claimed it as a province. But Beijing also claims a massive chunk of the South China Sea that’s very far off the coast of China. In all international relations though, it depends on how far your influence extends and not what proclamations you make. They can claim it, but can they control it?

I’m optimistic on the future of China and the Chinese people, but I won’t put a date on the collapse of the CCP. They’ve handled these situations before, including the Hong Kong protests just a few years ago. Is Hong Kong more or less free of Beijing’s grip? They are less free today and no one disputes this.

But there is another big reason I’d love to see a little short term chaos among the communist leadership, American businesses and their unscrupulous practices. Apple just made a deal with the CCP to disable the Airdrop feature on the iPhones of Chinese citizens. It’s the way regular citizens share data, phone to phone, bypassing the heavily censored towers. I know at this point, tech companies working with the CCP to throttle dissent is as common as smog over the cities. But it’s despicable; here as well as there. A collapsing system would expose much of the dirty secrets of Americas top companies and their business practice.

The Chinese government covers up for a lot of mischief like a high tide. But when the tide goes out, we’ll see who’s been swimming naked.

 

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Popular Uprising in China: Zero Covid Exhaustion

 


The Chinese are Fed up with Lockdowns Finally

The Chinese are protesting in various cities against the zero Covid lockdowns. Whenever I read a story about the Chinese people it amazes me what they put up with. From the lack of press freedom to the social credit scores, they are constantly hounded by their oppressive CCP (Chinese Communist Party). Ever since Covid 19 escaped from one of their labs in Wuhan (I believe) the party has instituted a “Zero Covid” requirement on the public. Health officials in hazmat suits stand outside of apartment buildings testing and retesting citizens. No one who tests positive is allowed outside of their apartment. In some cases they are literally locked inside.

It's monstrous, and it’s been going on for too long. Maybe they’ve finally had enough. An apartment fire broke out in the city of Urumqi on November 24. Some reports said firetrucks weren’t able to get close due to blocked parking. 10 people were killed and 9 were taken to the hospital with smoke inhalation. The local officials issued some boilerplate statement about the building not being on lockdown. In other words, hey they weren’t under quarantine. They could leave whenever.

 Some residents apparently “lacked the knowledge or capability to rescue themselves”.

Ham fisted responses from officials, plus irritation from lockdowns is creating a backlash in major cities. It’s unclear how many of the demonstrations are due to the fire deaths and how many are Covid and lockdown related. Some protesters shout against the chairman (Xi Jinping) and the Communist Party, calling for his removal. From all the accounts I’ve read, there is an exhaustion with the loss of freedom. It’s not even the big ideological freedoms that westerners like, speech, press and religion. Losing the ability to walk to the market and buy groceries without being harassed is more to the point.

I’m surprised we haven’t seen this anger from the public on a massive scale. The Chinese put up with too much. The CCP is finding out how discontented people are being forced to stay home for months at a time. Has Xi Jinping overestimated his power or will this popular uprising fizzle out? China cracks down quickly on any form of dissent. During the 2011 Arab Spring when uprisings happened all over the Muslim world, China kept it from happening at home. I remember a few weak attempts by protestors to start shouting and marching in Shanghai against Communist rule. The government stopped it quickly by sending in goons and arresting the leaders. So this might be nothing.

But I like to think, hope, that this is the start of something big in that country. If the Tiananmen Square crackdown from 1989 tells us anything, it’s that Beijing doesn’t play around. That year was a rebellious year all over the country. University students engaged in marches and demands for much of the year. But unleashing the military on them at the most famous spot in all of China ended the rebellion. The fear of another big crackdown has kept the public in check for the most part.

But you can only push people so far. The best case scenario for the Chinese people is that the CCP gives up power completely and puts some form of democracy in place. This won’t happen easily and likely it will take long revolution, and lots of death. But how powerful is the Communist party anyway? I imagine in most cases the local functionaries won’t be able to do anything against an angry mob. Don’t forget how large of a country China is, 1.5 billion people. Violent protests in every major city across the country will force some kind of change.

The next best case is that XI Jinping has to step down and the rest of the government eases restrictions dramatically. This isn’t as good of a deal for the people of China because the same system that brought them zero Covid is still in place. But at least the arrogant Xi would be gone, as well as the lockdowns. I don’t think this is likely to happen however. Once the demonstrations prove useful the people will keep them going until the whole system collapses. But as a practical matter, having the government give up this medical tyranny would be better than what they have now.

Third, the government effectively stops this popular revolt and puts a chill on future revolts. That’s basically what the nineties looked like following the Tiananmen Square massacre. The security state got bigger and scarier. But they’ve gotten bigger and scarier since the lab leak at Wuhan so what’s the difference? That may be the conclusion the citizens eventually draw. We can suffer under this medical tyranny or we can fight to get back our basic rights. Either way, we aren’t going to live like this anymore.

I’m praying for the people of China.

Wednesday, November 23, 2022

King or Judge? Fix the Corruption First

 




I Samuel 8

I’m unfamiliar with large swathes of the Old Testament. Or if not unfamiliar, at least like a pond where the sediment needs to be stirred. A lot of it comes back to me when I start reading in I Samuel. It’s a famous passage where the children of Israel ask Samuel, the priest, for a king to rule over them. Samuel’s sons were judges in Beersheba but were known for their graft.  

“Then all the elders of Israel gathered together and came to Samuel at Ramah, and said to him, ‘Look, you are old, and your sons do not walk in your ways. Now make us king to judge us like all the nations”. (4-5)

When this story is told in Sunday school classes it’s usually accompanied by a warning to those ‘foolish’ Israelites. Samuel as well gives them a lecture about what’s to be expected when electing a king. He tries to talk them out of it. But I’m sympathetic to their concerns. Who wants to live under leaders that are knowingly corrupt? That’s why they started with a complaint about Samuel’s sons, the future judges of their country. And I can guarantee it wasn’t as clean as the text makes it sound. I think the people let him know that this was at least somewhat his fault.

That’s just me reading into this story.

It makes sense. Large companies run like this sometimes. A competent CEO prepares to step down and hand the business over to his son. The son’s always been someone who couldn’t organize a beer run for a tailgate party, let alone make consequential decisions. Nervousness sets in with the executives as they plead with the old man to consider an alternative. What they never say, but really could, is that this is kind of your fault sir.

But here is where the story takes a turn. Samuel hears their complaints and prays to God. “And the Lord said to Samuel, Heed the voice of the people in all that they say to you; for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected Me, that I should not reign over them.” (verse 7) We would expect God to say something to Samuel not raising up the next generation right. But God knew the heart of the matter was not corrupt leaders, it was a collective hardness of heart among His people that created selfish leaders.

Corruption grows in the soil that surrounds it. In other words, the same culture that rejected God’s commandments, permitted corrupt judges. This doesn’t let Samuel’s kids (Joel and Abijah) off for the hook. But it does point to a lack of the fear of the Lord in the hearts of the people.

 Samuel’s sons were not capable of judging righteously because they didn’t follow God. Samuel represented the last of the honest, God fearing servants in the land. He managed to paper over the cracks of his sons’ dishonesty while alive, but how long can that go on?

We all get disgusted by selfish people who take advantage of those they’re supposed to watch over. This is true in all areas of life, business, entertainment and nonprofits. But corrupt leaders don’t just fall out of the sky. There are warning signs at an earlier stage of development. Think of the talented football player that keeps getting off with a warning when the police arrest him for DUI or vandalism. Without accountability, anyone is a potential victim of their recklessness. They learn no lessons except that someone will handle it.

Individuals are responsible for their own behavior, always. But societies get more of what they permit in their leaders. It looks like Israel, in the time of Samuel, is no different. God tells him to explain to the people what having a king will mean.

“He will take your sons and appoint them for his own chariots and to be his horsemen, and some will run before his chariots, he will appoint captains over his thousands and captains over his fifties, will set some to plow his ground and reap his harvest, and some to make weapons of war and equipment for chariots. He will take your daughters to be perfumers, cooks, and bakers. And he will take the best of your fields, your vineyards, and your olive groves, and give them to his servants. (11-15)

It goes on like this for another 3 or 4 verses. This is God saying ‘you think you’ve got it bad now, just wait’. The crux of their problem with judges (God’s appointed rulers) is the lack of honesty they exhibit. But under a king, the people give up so much more. And, they get to pick a king from the same group of dishonest leaders. I love they respond though, essentially “We want a king like everyone else to fight our battles.”

It’s like when the contractor tells you that pool you want to build won’t work because your ground is too sandy. You say “So…when can you start?”

The short lesson is this, if you’re seeing rampant corruption in leaders you need to look deeper. Chances are the culture is rotten and permitting of it at multiple levels. This isn’t moral relativism, but it would help to root it out closer to home first. We don’t have a fear of God and it shows up in various ways when we let corruption slide.

The children of Israel never went back to the judges model. I’m sure they wished at times for a simpler, less invasive, style of government. But even in their ignorance He rescued them from total destruction and raised up Godly leaders.

 

 

 

Thursday, November 17, 2022

Spying for the CCP: A New Era of Confrontation

 

Chinese Spy Sentenced in the US

A Chinese Intelligence officer was sentenced to 20 years for trying to steal proprietary information. It’s an important case because it’s the first time a Chinese citizen has been extradited to the US. I’m not sure how all the diplomatic/legal back and forth play out. 

Xu was convicted last year; this year we finally got the sentencing part of it. The FBI has been aware of his ‘fishing expeditions’ since 2013.

He was arrested in Belgium. The FBI had been monitoring his communications with a former GE employee. Xu wanted information on GE’s composite aircraft fan that no one has been able to replicate. That’s only his latest episode, the crime they actually got him for. Using various aliases, he sought out current and former employees of aviation companies and paid them to come to China for university talks. The junkets were paid for by Xu, with the intention of capturing as much technical information as possible.

The GE employee convinced him to come to Belgium for a trade show. It was here the illegal exchange happened, Xu asked for a digital company manual. 

He is set to do 20 years. How high up was this guy on a spy grade anyway?

If he’s a foot soldier it’s likely Beijing takes the loss and moves on. If he’s a high ranking official they’ll want him back and probably offer trades to get him. I wonder how it works on a diplomatic level though. Do we trade spies or offer up some other deal? Like waving certain legal cases currently on the docket at the WTO (World Trade Organization)? The US and China both sue each other all the time at the WTO. Part of signing the agreements to engage in trade requires recognizing the legitimacy of the court. But that’s small potatoes stuff, breaking tariff agreements and dumping complaints. Stealing technological trade secrets is serious business that requires old fashioned diplomacy.

Xu worked for the Ministry of State Security (MSS) which is responsible for foreign intelligence and counterintelligence. It will be interesting to see if Beijing arrests American foreigners for the similar crimes. It’s not unusual for them to do this anyway. Apparently the case against Xu is very strong. These cases are always so murky. When you extradite a foreign national you better have a damn good reason for it, especially one working for the government. Hopefully the blowback isn’t too severe on Americans living and working in China.

This story caught my eye because of the increasing amount of spying happening from the CCP every year. Americans are starting to get a sense for how the Chinese government operates but it’s taken a long time. I think we were all naïve in the late nineties about their goals. I certainly was. I believed prosperity through private business and foreign capital could raise the living standards. And, that prosperity would create an ownership society, laws to protect capital and free (ish) markets. It looks now like that was a ruse from Big Business to open factories and save money. No one believes the ‘wealth leads to freedom’ campaign anymore.

The problem is the US can’t just decouple in one swoop. At the very least, our federal and state laws need to take a skeptical approach to all Chinese investment. They don’t take our companies there without forcing local partners on them that steal their data and intellectual property. American companies with a presence in China will be expected to give up any useful, legally protected R&D. I’m not opposed to free markets either. But we should only be free with those countries that reciprocate.

No matter how many of these spy stories pop up our feeds I wonder how many people think it’s a big deal. Intellectual property theft between businesses in the same country is bad enough. But losing IP to a foreign country, especially one that sees itself as an enemy could be devastating. Not just devastating because our industries will no longer compete, cutting edge R&D often determines what kind of military your country will have. If we don’t stay on top and protect our critical industries, we will lose out to a more powerful China.

We are very close to being there. Our navy is getting chased out of the South China Sea. Beijing is collecting allies in the region and using ASEAN to support its claims about the ridiculous nine dash line. Eventually the US will get pushed out, unable to keep its hegemony in the region. But we can stop helping Beijing. 

Keep arresting spies, and make it as public as possible.