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China, Iran & Russia: Blinken Sheds Light on Foreign Policy Aspirations of Biden Administration
Blinken’s confirmation hearing also saw the nominee state that any and all alleged challenges posed by the Russian state will be “very high” on the incoming Biden administration’s agenda.v
Sitting before a Senate panel, Blinken told lawmakers on Tuesday that there is “no doubt” that China poses one of the most significant challenges to the US, underscoring that Washington should approach Beijing from a “position of strength.”
Although Blinken acknowledged US President Donald Trump was “right in taking a tougher approach to China,” he stressed that he “very much” disagreed with the manner in which the president went about the matter.
“The basic principal was the right one,” he remarked.
The nominee also informed the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that there is a strong enough foundation in place that could help to build a bipartisan policy on China.
Additionally, the former official indicated that the incoming Biden administration intends to “convene a summit of democracies within the first year of his administration to bring democratic countries together to think together.”
More recently, the US doubled down on China, with US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo accusing Beijing early Tuesday of genocide over its policies regarding Muslim Uighurs in the Western Xinjiang region. Pompeo’s hard-worded Twitter post came months after reports first surfaced that the Trump administration was considering the label last August.
China has repeatedly rejected accusations of abuse.
As Trump withdrew from the JCPOA on the grounds that Iran reportedly violated the agreement, the move effectively reimposed tough sanctions on Iran and saw the start of the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign against Iran.
Issues between the two countries escalated even further with additional sanctions against Iranian officials, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, the designation of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a foreign terrorist organization, as well as the assassination of Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani, who served as the commander of the IRGC’s elite Quds Force.
In a parting shot against Trump and his strategic attacks, Iran sanctioned Trump and nine other US officials, including Pompeo, for their role in terrorist activities against the Middle Eastern country.
Two-State Solution Best Measure to Ensure Israel’s Future
Touching on Middle East conflicts, Blinken stated that the best manner to guarantee Israel’s future would be for the US to support a two-state solution in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“The President-elect believes and I share this conviction that the best way and maybe the only way to ensure Israel’s future as a Jewish democratic state and to give the Palestinians the state to which they are entitled is to through the so-called ‘two-state solution,’ obviously a solution that is very challenged at this moment,” Blinken commented.
“I think realistically it is hard to see near-term prospects for moving forward on that.”
Blinken also commented that he anticipated the Abraham Accords “might also create a greater sense of confidence and security in Israel as it considers its relationship with the Palestinians, because whether we like it or not, whether they like it or not it’s not just going away.”
Although a number of governments and world bodies have voiced their support for a two-state solution in the conflict, achieving the goal has been difficult due to a variety of issues including border lines, the return of millions of refugees who either fled or were expelled from the homes during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war that erupted after Israel’s creation, and also the fact that both sides claim Jerusalem as their capital. In fact, Trump’s decision to allow for the US embassy to move from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem prompted widespread outrage.
Blinken remarked during the hearing that he was in support of keeping the US embassy in Jerusalem.
Russia ‘Challenges’ Will Be High on Biden Agenda
Blinken’s confirmation hearing also saw the nominee state that any and all alleged challenges posed by the Russian state will be “very high” on the incoming Biden administration’s agenda.
“The challenge posed by Russia across a whole series of fronts is also one that is urgent,” he told the congressional panel. “This is very high on the agenda for the incoming administration.”
However, with the New Strategic Arms Reduction (New START) Treaty set to expire on February 5, Blinken revealed that the new administration would be looking into extending the arms control agreement, but would not be committed to limiting American missile defense programs in talks with Russia.
“I think we’re going to seek an extension. We will be coming to you very quickly, almost immediately to discuss that,” he said, opting to not give specifics on how long the extension may be.
Previously, in an interview with the New York Times, Blinken explained that Biden’s plans with Russia included extending the New START Treaty by five years with the hopes of expanding the agreement to include various other weapons and even additional signatories.
The New START Treaty was signed in Prague on April 8, 2010, and calls for cutting the number of strategic nuclear missile launchers in addition to establishing a verification system that would ensure both parties are in line with the treaty.
Tapping on the possibility of allowing new countries to join the NATO alliance, Blinken stated that the “door should be open” to countries like Georgia, explaining that Tbilisi could ultimately serve as a deterrent to Russia.
In late December the Trump administration imposed sanctions on Turkey over its multibillion-dollar acquisition of Russia’s S-400 missile system, a move which prompted outrage from the US and the cancellation of Ankara’s participation in the F-35 program. At the time, US and NATO allies argued that the S-400 system purchase posed a risk for the alliance.
Weighing in on Turkey’s purchase of the Russian missile system, Blinken remarked the S-400 deal was “unacceptable,” and that more needs to be done in response.
US Should ‘Not’ Stop Recognizing Guaido as Venezuela’s Interim Leader
Switching gears to the politics of South America, Blinken stressed to congressional lawmakers that the Land of the Free should by no means stop recognizing Juan Guaido as the so-called interim leader of Venezuela.
When asked whether the US’ opinion of Guaido should be altered, Blinken responded by saying, “No, it is not.”
“I very much agree with you, Senator, with regard to a number of the steps that were taken toward Venezuela in recent years, including recognizing Mr. Guaido and recognizing the National Assembly as the only democratically-elected institution in Venezuela.”
Additionally, Blinken stated Washington needed to reconsider how it could better target the Bolivarian Republic so that “the regime enablers really feel the pain of those sanctions.”
Blinken’s remarks came as the Trump administration announced a slew of sanctions against three individuals, 14 business entities and six ships – a network accused of moving oil under the orders of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. The US claims the group allegedly was attempting to circumvent earlier sanctions.
Over the last two years, the Trump White House has been placing an increasing amount of pressure on Venezuela as Washington sought to remove Maduro from power by all means necessary, including by trying to organize a coup and installing US-friendly Guaido as the country’s new leader.
Although the US Treasury Department reaffirmed the US’ recognition of Guaido as Venezuela’s leader in early January, the same could not be said for the European Union, which dropped its acknowledgement after Guaido lost his position as head of parliament.
Biden Administration Will Review ‘Entire’ North Korea Approach
Noting the troubled ties the US currently has with North Korea, Blinken went on to state that the incoming administration would be taking an entirely new approach on its relations with the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
Moving forward, the newly sworn in Biden administration intends to review options and consult with US allies as it hopes to focus on improved ways to ease tensions with North Korea, according to the nominee.
“This is a hard problem that has plagued administration after administration, and it’s a problem that has not gotten better, in fact it’s gotten worse,” Blinken, referring to halted US-North Korea negotiations, said at his nomination hearing. “We do want to make sure that in anything we do, we have an eye on the humanitarian side of the equation, not just on the security side of the equation.”
Under the Trump administration, the US was handed a major breakthrough as negotiators managed to score a first face-to-face summit between Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Despite a slew of heated words being exchanged between the two world leaders early on in the Trump administration, the pair agreed to meet in Singapore in June 2018 and walked away with a deal that outlined normalizing ties between the two countries.
However, by the time the pair were set to meet a second time – this time in Hanoi – the summit abruptly ended after two days, with no agreement in sight. It was later revealed that talks were shuttered after Trump officials failed to budge on lifting sanctions against the DPRK despite the country agreeing to denuclearize. Talks between the two countries have been largely silent since the second round of talks failed.
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Mayor de Blasio Tells NYPD to Pay People Home Visits For “Hurtful” Comments
What could possibly go wrong?
New York Mayor Bill de Blasio says NYPD officers should pay people home visits if they engage in “hurtful” behavior to others even if the action isn’t criminal.
What could possibly go wrong?
“Even if something is not a criminal case, a perpetrator being confronted by the city, whether it’s NYPD or another agency, and being told that what they’ve done was very hurtful to another person — and could, if ever repeated, lead to criminal charges — that’s another important piece of the puzzle,” de Blasio told reporters.
The Mayor failed to define precisely what he meant by “hurtful,” but since he framed it in the context of non-criminal behavior, he can only be referring to mean words.
De Blasio urged officers to “confront” people to tell them their behavior is “not appropriate,” urging alleged victims to make more reports to authorities.
He then even suggested that cops, instead of responding to actual crimes, should visit New Yorker’s homes to police their speech.
“I assure you, if an NYPD officer calls you or shows up at your door to ask you about something you did, it makes people think twice,” he said. “We need that.”
De Blasio made the comments in light of yet another contrived moral panic, this time over an alleged rise in “hate crime” towards Asians.
The narrative was bolstered after a gunman slaughtered eight people — including six Asian women — at massage parlors across Atlanta, Georgia.
The media has either glossed over or outright ignored the fact that two white victims also lost their lives and that the attack was motivated by the killer’s sex obsession and had nothing whatsoever to do with race.
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Government Stimulus Is Blowing Up a Massive Economic Bubble
How can millions of Americans be out of work while simultaneously on a spending binge?
We’re told we’re on the road to economic recovery. The $1.9 trillion stimulus is all we need to get us over the hump. But the truth is, Americans started spending like they were over the hump months ago. In fact, American consumers high on stimulus have been on a spending spree since last summer. The Federal Reserve printed money. Uncle Sam handed it out. American consumers spent it on imported goods.
This isn’t the formula for a genuine economy. It’s the formula for a giant bubble.
During the Great Recession, consumers cut spending. This is what you generally expect during an economic downturn. The economy contracts, people lose jobs, money gets tight and consumers spend less. You can see this in the numbers. Spending on durable goods plunged by 19% from the peak in October 2007 to the trough in April 2009. Meanwhile, spending on nondurable goods (food and gasoline) dropped by 10% during the Financial Crisis, from the peak in July 2008 to the trough in March 2009.
This spending cutback during an economic downturn creates what economists call “pent-up demand.” This helps drive spending upward during an economic recovery. You can see how the pent-up demand drove spending on durable goods post-recession in this graph produced by WolfStreet.

You can also see that consumer spending during the pandemic downturn took an entirely different trajectory. After a sharp but brief drop in the first months of the pandemic, spending surged.
In January alone, spending on durable goods spiked by 18.6% from a year ago, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. You might think this was the result of the mythical economic recovery as states loosen lockdown restrictions, but this spending spree has been going on since last June.
How can this be? How can millions of Americans be out of work while simultaneously on a spending binge?
The government has been handing out money, that’s how.
And Americans have dutifully spent it. WolfStreet sums it up this way:
Give Americans some free money, and tell them it’s their duty to buy some stuff with it, preferable stuff imported from other countries, and they’ll buy some stuff with it, big and expensive stuff too, and they did buy a lot of stuff with it, more than they’d ever bought before, and their homes are full of stuff they bought in this eight-month-long record rollicking free-money spending spree.”
Even with millions out of work, incomes in the US have risen during the pandemic – and a lot of that income came from Uncle Sam’s handouts. Income from wages and salaries in January came in at $9.7 trillion, a modest 1.1% year-on-year increase. But income from unemployment benefits, stimulus checks, and other government support payments exploded to $2.9 trillion. According to WolfStreet, “along with income from interest, dividends, rental properties, farm income, income from Social Security and other transfer payments, total income in January, all together, jumped by 13% from a year ago to a record $21.5 trillion (seasonally adjusted annual rate).”
On top of that, a lot of Americans had money freed up because they didn’t have to pay rent or mortgages, or make student loan payments. According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, 4.3 million mortgages were in forbearance at the height of the pandemic. Currently, 2.6 million mortgages remain in forbearance.
Give people lots of free money and they’ll spend it. As WolfStreet put it, demand wasn’t pent up during the pandemic, it was let out.
This time around, households didn’t go through two years of cutting back on goods purchases, as they’d done during the Financial Crisis.
This time around, there is a shortage of supply, including the now infamous semiconductor shortage, due to the surge in spending on goods, and inventories are tight, amid production snags and supply-chain problems. And given this demand, and the supply issues, prices of goods are rising.
Consumers have been awash with this money they didn’t need to work for. And they paid down credit card debts with it. And they spent part of it on goods.
Now another stimulus package with more free money is being prepared in Congress. If it passes, more free money will rain on consumers over the next two or three months.
This raises another question: if millions of Americans were not working but kept spending, who made all of the stuff that they bought?
That’s pretty clear from the numbers too. And it doesn’t exactly scream “booming US economy.”
The merchandise trade deficit is at a record level. In a nutshell, Americans are spending their printed money on imported goods. Peter Schiff summed up the US economy in a recent podcast.
We’re making so little that we’re importing a record amount of stuff. The world is basically, single-handedly supporting our economy by providing us with all of this stuff. How is it that we’re getting all this stuff? Are we making a lot of stuff and trading it for that stuff? No! We’re not making any stuff. The merchandise trade deficit is skyrocketing. We’re printing all this money and the Federal Reserve gives it out to Americans who aren’t productive, many of them who don’t even have jobs, but many Americans who do have jobs are in the service sector, so they’re not producing anything that they can trade, but they’re still using that money to buy the stuff other people that are living in actual viable economies, stronger economies that are saving and producing, and we’re buying all of that stuff with all the money that we’re printing. Meanwhile, we’re deluding ourselves into thinking that what we have here is a genuine economy. What we actually have is a genuine bubble.”
The problem with bubbles is they always pop.
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Xi Alerts Military “Be Prepared To Respond” In Current “Unstable & Uncertain” Situation
“We are facing mounting tasks in national defense… and we must comprehensively improve military training and preparedness …”
During the major annual legislative session in Beijing on Tuesday President Xi Jinping addressed top leaders of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), telling the military it must be “prepared to respond” in increasingly difficult and complex security challenges facing the nation.
“The current security situation of our country is largely unstable and uncertain,” Xi said in the address which comes two days after Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi gave his own fiery warning to the same assembly saying the US is “crossing lines” and “playing with fire” on Chinese sovereignty over Taiwan.
President Xi continued: “The entire military must coordinate the relationship between capacity building and combat readiness, be prepared to respond to a variety of complex and difficult situations at any time, resolutely safeguard national sovereignty, security and development interests, and provide strong support for the comprehensive construction of a modern socialist state,” according to the South China Morning Post.
Xi, who also serves as head of the Central Military Commission further affirmed the need for “high-level strategic deterrence and a joint combat system” and rapid defense tech innovation
His words were in agreement with the assessment of Defense Minister General Wei Fenghe who on Saturday once again urged a boost in combat readiness across the armed forces, saying that national security had “entered a high-risk phase”.
“We are facing mounting tasks in national defense… and we must comprehensively improve military training and preparedness for battle so as to increase our strategic capabilities to prevail over our strong enemies,” the nation’s top general said.
A particular example that’s been front and center at the ongoing meetings are recent US and Western allied naval maneuvers in an near China-claimed waters. In the China FM’s comments, Wang pointed out, “The US and other Western countries frequently stir up troubles in the region, trying to drive a wedge using the South China Sea issue. They have only one purpose: to sabotage peace and disturb regional stability,” Wang said.
His remarks in particular emphasized a warlike tone of battling “hegemony, high-handedness and bullying” from the United Sates and its allies, and “outright interference in China’s domestic affairs” in places like Hong Kong and Taiwan.


