they do.or i said, all right, you havee a a great sense of show. see i ll see you . i ll see you the week after next in new york . ll se e all right.on let s see it then. thanks for. all right., lara i am. laura ingraham. this is the ingraham angle . thanks so much for spending some time with us tonight. athe big china sell out. that s the focus of tonight s angle. now, whether it s friendship or romance,wh or a strategic alliance, all relationships start somewhere. some and sometimes there s the longwh buildup of anticipation. on so guys worry about gettingut shot down and girls, they wonder if he ll ever call. well, ukraine s president zelenskyy finally got his call, the one he had beent e lenshoping for from president xn sot ze was there a spark thatwa? seemed like it from the readout? zelenskyy describe the hour long call as meaningful and ari powerful impetusth to the development of our bilateral relations. deve in fact, there s a followp up date that is already pla
and defend our interests. and that s the angle. joining mening now, i m delighth senator tom cotton, who sits on the senate armed services committenate e. e thin now, senator ,ks everyone thinko that i talk way too much abouthh chinina and i have for, what, twenty five years now. but other than cultural cultura marxists on the left here inmars the united states , is therethrt any greater threat to our future than with china in what they re doing today? d what they no, there s not lara is the gravest threat to america and our way of lifett and the other threats really don t even come close. chincomea is maybe the mostersay powerful adversary we face as a nation, in part because for the last 40 years, we ve helped e helpedgrow our economy, whichi has grown growing their military. we ve never facetawed a competir soke china, soviet russia, nazi germany, thesvie are not countries had economies anywhere near the size of ours that they therefore coul d