US Formula Shortage Illustrates Monopolization Crisis
It’s not President Biden’s fault the pandemic made it more difficult to get products into ports. But it is his fault that American tariffs made it much, much harder.
It’s not President Biden’s fault the pandemic made it more difficult to get products into ports. But it is his fault that American tariffs made it much, much harder.
The United States believes it can dictate the future of a region while exempting itself from making serious economic commitments in the name of self-interest. That’s not how things work.
Time and time again, racist narratives have led to murderous plots. What is the U.S. doing to stop it?
Although America is once again mourning its latest gun tragedy, there are few expectations or hopes for change, and it is only a matter of time before history inevitably repeats itself.
More cans of worms may also be opened through the ‘precedents’ such a ruling may set, especially in relation to the rights of others.
When the Supreme Court ignores the law, tramples individual human rights, and makes arbitrary judgments based on its justices’ political and religious beliefs, it has no such grounds to complain about anyone undermining its authority.
In the years to come, China’s vocational education is expected to play a more critical role in meeting people’s needs for a more diversified education and better support the country’s development.
The spiral of inflation, a slip in GDP, and rising costs of living are challenges that the Biden administration needs to deal with urgently. As such, some decisive measures need to be taken which should put America’s true interests first.
Despite the unprecedented disruption posed by the war in Ukraine on European politics, Macron retains an important influence over the bigger picture.
If the U.S. is looking for a result-orientated policy, then it should seek to negotiate a win-win trade arrangement with China that can better attain access to its domestic market while removing the politically toxic Trump tariffs.
Macron’s domestic task in the next five years will be tough and challenging. Economic problems for ordinary citizens and the pandemic ought to be his focus.
America’s contemporary attitude to the world is driven by insecurity ignited by a perceived loss of status to others, which in turn has undermined its ability to reason and, therefore, is at risk of turning the world back towards a divided Cold War environment.