Y'all keep supporting mass incarceration Biden and bedwench Kamala.
Democrats and Biden are deep with the Chinese connections and they will gladly support that mass surveillance over here too. Y'all can't see this right in front of your eyes.
What's Biden's real China policy? Unlike Trump, he's done a 180
Biden’s support of the Chinese Communist Party is long and personal. In 2000-2001, as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Biden led the Senate’s efforts to shepherd China into the World Trade Organization and to end annual congressional reviews of China’s status as a U.S. trading partner. At the time, Biden
welcomed China’s emergence “as a great power, because great powers adhere to international norms in the areas of nonproliferation, human rights and trade.” As vice president in 2011, Biden said he believed “that a rising China is a positive, positive development, not only for China but for America and the world writ large.”
The benefits of embracing China were not merely diplomatic. Biden’s son, Hunter, may have benefited financially from his father’s cultivation of Beijing.
The younger Biden found his way into
acquiring a stake in a billion-dollar
private equity fund partly owned by a Chinese state-owned enterprise and funded by Chinese state-owned venture capital. Among the firm’s investments was Face++, a Chinese
surveillance firm. Hunter Biden began building
investments and business deals in China based on his proximity to Chinese government and business figures in 2010, two years after his father was elected vice president. A
new report from the Senate Finance and Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committees’ majority staffs further details Hunter Biden’s business ties with Chinese nationals linked to the Chinese government and military.
Even out of office — and as recently as last year — there was no indication Joe Biden thought any of this might be a problem for his presidential candidacy.
His foreign policy adviser,
Jake Sullivan, has been storming the panels of think tanks and the pages of establishment magazines to argue
that the rise of Chinese hard power is the “the natural outcome of a positive-sum mindset,”
that “China’s extraordinary development was the result not of failures in U.S. foreign policy but of its successes,” and
that the U.S. should do “everything we can to both facilitate and encourage China’s rise and to support it.” As one of Biden’s presumptive foreign policy or national security chiefs, Sullivan has also argued strongly
against the containment of Chinese power and
that “the United States and China should be working together to expand the areas where we can cooperate on the major global challenges of our time – on proliferation, on climate change, on the global economy, and on so much else.”