During the 1980s, as an idealistic, ambitious Uighur growing up under repressive Chinese conditions in the city of Kashgar, there was one nation to which I pinned my hopes for freedom and democracy. To me, the United States was a symbol of my aspirations to live with dignity. I was not alone. Educated and ready to make a mark in the world, many of my Uighur friends and I felt
City-dwellers in China and the United States are among the against, but the two groups responded differently to the outcome of the U.S. election, and the contrast was palpable between the thousands of posts on the Chinese Internet and a proclamations from the campaign trail as an opportunity for Beijing to advance its foreign policy interests around the globe.
While other nations have shipped an "unprecedented" number of products to America, the U.S. cannot keep up with demand as its supply chain workers age out.
Xi s monumental efforts have tilted the global balance of power, locking China in a contest with the U.S. that some observers believe could last for generations