Following China's harsh covid lockdowns, its economy bounced back quicker than most Western economies and appeared to return to pre-Covid normalcy. However, the affects from Covid, and the West's reaction to a more emboldened China, may not have been realized so immediately. Today, China's economy is hurting and its markets are experiencing brutal competition. For those companies that have survived it all, they are barely staying afloat. Tune in to understand what it all means for the future of China-U.S. relations.
Xi Jinping's rule has left China in a place much different from where its trajectory seemed to be taking it. However, this change is not a departure from the way the CCP wants to govern China; rather, it is a revival. Tune in to listen why.
The West continues to incorrectly view the Chinese people as separate from the CCP, expressing views that convey a feeble, weak, and oppressed people. But in reality, the opposite is true. How do Chinese people really view their government? And is there anything that Westerners can compare it with? The largest atheist country in the world may not lack what organized religion provides to people, after all.
China's continued efforts to replace the dollar with the yuan as the world's trade currency falls in line with its ambitions for global primacy. However, there is more to the picture beneath the surface. Why wouldn't the yuan replace the dollar? And what is the real source of power to the valuation of currency? Tune in to find out.
China was, no doubt, a rapidly developing nation with great potential until Xi Jinping took power. Since his rule, China has estranged old allies, lost the trust it once enjoyed from the international business community, and focuses on regional security over prosperity. However, these facts are unknown to most people, especially the youth, living outside of China. Seeking to export its "splinternet" model of control in the digital sphere abroad, many in the world are seeing China in a new light. But how, and why it does this, is only being discussed on The Sinofile!
What started the infamous Tiananmen Square Massacre in Beijing? What events led to this bloody day that most people connect with the "tank man" video that we remember so vividly? 36 years ago on the day of this recording, June 4th 1989, a nationwide protest was brewing that the CCP feared could topple the regime. Its response and efforts to erase this day from the public speaks volumes about its insecurity and greatest fear: the power of the masses.
Since its economic rise, China has been sending hundreds of thousands of its youth to study in the United States every year. That may be ending soon. The Department of State will be implementing new vetting standards for potential Chinese students wanting to study in the United States. Who are these young people? What do they want? How does the CCP view them? In this episode, I discuss how Chinese students in the United States have been manipulated and used by the CCP to benefit China's development, and what the State Department's new policy could mean about the U.S.'s resolve to thwart China.
What is going on in the South China Sea? Earlier this week, China and the Philippines clashed in disputed waters again, demonstrating China's resolve to defend what it claims as its sovereign territory. As the ASEAN annual summit approaches, unless it is willing to discuss and ultimately address relating to the South China Sea with Beijing, it will become a fully militarized zone for Chinese posturing and expansionism.
History does not live in the past; rather, it is well alive in the present. The CCP often references the "Century of Humiliation," when foreign powers occupied China and disgraced its sovereignty in order to create unity and control the narrative among Chinese citizens today. Of the Eight nations that occupied China during this era, its closest neighbor, Japan, wrecked the most havoc on China. How has Japan tried to build reconciliation with China today and how does it impact modern Chinese politics?
What has contributed to China's decades of impressively high levels of safety? In this episode, I analyze what those factors are and how under increasing economic instability, China is becoming less safe.
As the China-U.S. tariff war continues, the Chinese Communist Party has a secret weapon in the information war that is unfolding over who will come out on top. In this episode, we dive into China’s digital battlefield — where millions of fiercely nationalistic netizens, known as the Little Pink(ies), join forces with the state-backed 50 Cent Army to defend China's image online. Who are these groups? What drives them? And how are they reshaping global discourse, one comment at a time? We break down their origins, tactics, and what their rise tells us about modern Chinese nationalism.
As the United States and China continue to content for global hegemony, one aren that will determine the outcome is the digital landscape. It’s a battleground where narratives are shaped and messages are either disseminated freely or tightly controlled. One of the most formidable obstacles between the people of China and the rest of the world is the Great Firewall—China’s vast system of censorship and surveillance that keeps its citizens isolated, misinformed, and repressed. If the U.S. is serious about standing for freedom and openness, it must confront this digital curtain head-on. President Xi must be challenged—plainly and boldly—to tear it down.
As Chinese President Xi Jinping concludes his tour of three Southeast Asian countries this week, Myanmar stands as a stark reminder of what deep Chinese involvement can look like. Often overlooked, Myanmar remains embroiled in a civil war, yet maintains far-reaching ties with China across economic, military, and political sectors of the country. As Southeast Asia weighs its strategic choices amid Great Power Competition, Myanmar stands as a cautionary case—raising the question: will the region bandwagon with Beijing, or seek to balance between China and the United States?
The deal to transfer operating rights of the two main ports of the Panama Canal between the Hong Kong-based conglomerate CK Hutchison and U.S.-based investment firm BlackRock is facing quiet sabotage from Beijing. Why is the U.S. so invested in Panama’s port infrastructure? And what does China’s interference reveal about its expanding geopolitical ambitions and the future of U.S.-China relations?
What leverage does China really hold over the United States in the current tit-for-tat tariff war that is unfolding? What does this mean about China's future, its economy, and its power? A look at the past, when the first U.S.-China trade war took place, can provide insight into what the future might look like for China. However, Beijing's behavior has not changed since then, and it continues to bluff that it is in the fight "until the end."
Following remarks by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in Japan regarding the deterrence of Chinese military aggression, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) responded by conducting encircling military drills around Taiwan. As part of these exercises, the PLA’s Eastern Theatre Command released two amateurish and crudely produced videos reiterating its long-standing threats to use military force to achieve reunification with the island.
Chinese President Xi Jinping is taking China down a path that is losing face for the country. In the process, he is dismantling a social contract that has existed between the people and the CCP for decades. The result will be a weaker China as welathier citizens continue to emigrate.
Described by President Xi Jinping as China's "magic weapon," the United Front is a Chinese political tool used to “Sinicize” not only the ethnic minorities and their regions inside of China, but also the entire world. Recognizing and understanding its tactics are crucial for the U.S. to maintain the integrity of its democratic society and institutions.
Over the weekend, global business leaders attended the annual China Development Forum, where, following its record-low numbers of FDI in 2024, Beijing's Premier and Economy Tsar sought to lure in future investments from foreign corporations. Montana Senator, Steve Daines, also met with Chinese premier, Li Qiang, in an effort to arrange a future highly-anticipated Trump-Xi meeting to discuss tariffs and the fentanyl crisis.
Since Chinese President Xi Jinping ascended to power, he has increased the number of military incursions of Taiwan's ADIZ and disrupts its sovereignty. However, hear why I think China will not and cannot attack Taiwan.