Xinjiang Camp Whistleblower Freed After US Asylum Win
A massive sinkhole has suddenly opened on a busy road in Shanghai, China’s largest financial hub. What caused it?
Two Chinese-American female athletes are in the spotlight—not for the medals they won, but for the paths they took. Alysa Liu won figure skating gold for the United States, while Eileen Gu took freestyle skiing silver for China. A former NBA player calls Gu a traitor—but she says it’s more about opportunity, not loyalty.
Forty-eight hours after his release by ICE, a Chinese whistleblower with evidence of Beijing’s alleged human rights abuses sat down to speak with NTD last week. He crossed the U.S. southern border in 2020–21, hoping to escape persecution by the Chinese regime.
After Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi wins big in Japan’s elections and President Donald Trump unveils his Board of Peace, retired Marine Colonel Grant Newsham joins us to break down what these moves could mean for global politics and China’s reaction.
- Subway Site Caves In, Causing Massive Sinkhole in Shanghai
- Is Eileen Gu a Traitor to the US?
- Eileen Gu Might Consider Living in China: Lily Tang Williams
- China Uses Soft Power to Infiltrate the US
- China Benefits From Pro-Beijing Celebrities Abroad
- Alysa Liu’s Family Has Been Spied on by CCP
- Xinjiang Camp Whistleblower Freed After US Asylum Win
- Japan’s Power Shift; China Reacts to Board of Peace | Analysis










