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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
2 hrs

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spectator.org

Australia Does the Social Media Thing Every Country Should Be Doing

As a general rule, Australia’s government isn’t very good at getting things right. You’ll remember, of course, that it went a bit overboard on the whole COVID-19 response (even the ex-deputy health chief, Nick Coatsworth, admitted as much last year). Then, earlier this year, the nation elected Anthony Albanese — the man who tried to introduce a referendum (defeated in 2023) to Australia’s constitution recognizing indigenous Australians — as its prime minister. But, as the saying goes, even a broken clock is right twice a day. Wednesday morning, teenagers in Australia under the age of 16 woke up to discover that they’d been transported back to the ’90s — or at least something closely approximating that golden age before the advent of chronic social media use. Suddenly, they couldn’t check in with their friends on Instagram and TikTok or binge on YouTube Shorts for hours on end. (READ MORE: Parents Have Everything They Need to Keep Their Children Safe Online) If you’ve ever tried to take a drink away from an alcoholic or a phone away from the orneriest member of your household (probably your teenager), you’ll know exactly how it went. Within hours, the affected teenagers were posting triumphant videos to TikTok, bragging about their ability to circumvent the new system. One imagines that those who haven’t yet figured the system out are currently bemoaning their boredom while their brains desperately try to figure out where to get their next hit of dopamine. The whole point of passing the Online Safety Amendment a year ago was to attempt to address the mental health crisis teenagers are experiencing as a result of their online interactions. As Pari Esfandiari noted in the Hill a year ago (when the act passed), the Australian government was especially concerned about “cyberbullying, addiction, and exposure to harmful content.” Those are rather vague terms, so, to put adolescent social media habits into perspective, here’s how that actually breaks down for kids: According to a recent Pew Research study, among teenagers between 13 and 17, some 15 percent confessed to using YouTube “almost constantly,” while another 39 percent reported using it “several times a day.” TikTok was no better: 16 percent of the same age group used it almost constantly, while 34 percent used it “several times a day.” All that translates to an average 4.8 hours of social media use (primarily on YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram) for U.S. teenagers, according to the American Psychological Association. What, you ask, are these kids looking at all day? Sure, there’s probably a bit of Dude Perfect in there, but they certainly aren’t stopping there. A recent study conducted in the United Kingdom found that the average teenager is first exposed to internet porn at the age of 13 and that some 70 percent of kids between 16 and 21 said they’d viewed that kind of content via the internet. A study in 2022 found a similar trend in the U.S., where 71 percent of teenagers admitted to intentionally watching porn within the span of the last seven days. (READ MORE: Gen Z in the Age of Digital Polyculture) So Australia is taking the initiative and kicking the kids off social media. Of course, the law isn’t perfect. As one teenager told the Wall Street Journal, teens who don’t pass new facial scan technology designed to detect users’ ages “are just going to scan their older brothers’ faces … That’s all you gotta do.” Then, because this is Australia and its government is, in fact, run by leftists, there are some pretty clear ideological biases evident in the apps that are banned versus those that are not. For instance, a 15-year-old can still access Bluesky, but not X (although, to be fair, X does have a bad habit of accidentally exposing minors to pornography at the highest rate of any social media site). So, yes, there are issues with implementation, but it’s the principle that matters. We all know social media is bad for us. The younger, less mature, less mentally developed the user, the more susceptible he is to the dopamine drip being offered via the screen in his pocket. Parents know that. The teenagers in question know that. Political commentators know that. Nevertheless, kids are still on social media. Maybe having the government regulate social media use is less than ideal, but it’s better than having no one do the regulating. READ MORE by Aubrey Harris: What to Do When Our Bots Talk Our Kids Into Suicide
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

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Can Trump’s New National Security Strategy Effectively Counter China?

The recently released 2025 National Security Strategy (NSS) from the Trump administration frames China as America’s primary strategic competitor, stressing the need to rebalance economic and military relations to prevent China’s state-dominated model from undermining U.S. and allied leadership. The NSS criticizes past U.S. policies for fueling China’s rise without compelling it to adhere to international rules. Today, America aims to promote reciprocal trade, reduce dependence on key industries, and rally allies — such as Europe, Japan, and South Korea — to pressure China toward domestic consumption while bolstering military deterrence in the Indo-Pacific to avert conflicts over Taiwan or the South China Sea.  Unlike previous U.S. national security strategies, Trump eschews ideological contrasts between China’s authoritarian system and democracy, focusing instead on the economic arena. He is deeply concerned with whether America can sustain its lead in economics and technology amid this competition. So, can the United States — or the broader democratic alliance — maintain economic superiority over China’s authoritarian economy? Analyzing the Strengths of a State-Dominated China From an Industrial Perspective China’s economy can be broadly divided into three categories of industries, each with varying degrees of state involvement. First are the priority sectors, those subsidized and guided by the government, such as high-speed rail, energy, high-tech, banking, and biotechnology. China places great emphasis on industrial policy, and because the government directly intervenes in the economy, these policies are not merely advisory; they function like corporate strategic decisions that the entire nation must execute. The process involves the state designating an industry as a priority, shielding it from foreign competition, selecting domestic champions, and mobilizing national resources to develop it. By leveraging China’s massive market for large-scale production, costs are driven down, enabling exports that conquer global markets and outcompete rivals abroad. Second are supply chains. In priority industries, the state spares no expense to build comprehensive chains, such as the mining stage for electric vehicle batteries. Since minerals are often located in war-torn, corruption-riddled African nations, free-market capitalist firms shy away due to high risks and low profits; China, however, uses state intervention to secure advantages and form mature supply chains. The third category comprises fully competitive, decentralized industries like apparel and toys manufacturing. The state offers no subsidies, allowing brutal competition and survival of the fittest, with winners flooding the world with cheap goods. While all three categories hold competitive edges, the most threatening to the world are the advantages seized in the first two. The NSS targets precisely this, advocating reduced reliance on China’s critical industries and supply chains by promoting reshoring or diversification. Differences in Scientific and Technological Innovation From the perspectives of science, technology, and economic development, innovation falls into two types. One is original, even foundational scientific breakthroughs — from nothing to something, or zero to one. The other builds on existing innovations, improving them—from one to N. In zero-to-one innovation, China lags behind democratic nations, especially the United States, due to a lack of freedom and excessive government control over thought. However, in the one-to-N expansion phase, China’s strengths shine: Once a leading technology matures, China acquires it by any means necessary, then leverages state-driven investment for rapid scaling. The Advantages of Wartime Economic Mobilization At the heart of the China model is the “whole-nation system,” where the state can marshal the entire country’s resources to advance a single industry — a feat democratic nations struggle to match. Democracies only enact similar mobilization during wartime emergencies, as when the U.S. entered World War II, unleashing unprecedented energy and drive. When their survival is at stake, democracies’ latent mobilization power can rival or surpass authoritarian advantages, but at a steep cost: convincing the populace to support the war effort, with no guarantee of compliance. In contrast, authoritarian states operate in a perpetual “quasi-mobilized” state, ready to direct national efforts toward specific industries based on circumstances, such as today’s artificial intelligence sector. China boasts vast data reserves and can deploy state power to resolve bottlenecks like power generation. The NSS views the Trump administration’s policies as akin to “wartime economic mobilization” — for instance, strengthening tariffs, investment scrutiny, and support for key industries — but acknowledges the domestic resistance and slow progress. This highlights democracies’ lack of flexibility, yet it also serves as a reminder: If the democratic camp perceives China as an existential threat, it could unlock even greater potential. The Learning Capacity and Weaknesses of Authoritarian Systems In democracies, officials prioritize electoral victories. Governments cannot implement economic strategies like businesses, as they lack strong incentives to learn from other nations’ experiences. Moreover, electoral cycles disrupt policy continuity. Authoritarian governments adopt a paternalistic mindset, always guiding the economy. They favor planned economies and industrial policies, with the state directing development without fear of turnover. But their greatest weakness is proneness to major errors: Misjudging an industry leads to massive economic losses. History is replete with industrial policy failures. Japan’s early efforts poured resources into high-definition televisions and liquid crystal displays, only to miss the internet boom, turning its companies into a “lost generation.” Taiwan’s government once promoted pig farming and sugarcane, ending in failure. China’s planned economy era saw even graver setbacks, like the Great Leap Forward’s backyard steel furnaces and the “grain as the key link” campaign. Yet, after these failures, China’s government exhibited a sudden surge in learning capacity. It eagerly absorbs global best practices, such as Singapore’s state-owned asset management model, the U.S. Bayh-Dole Act (allowing private researchers to own patents from government-funded research), science and technology parks, and government-as-mother-fund with private firms as sub-funds investment schemes. Through this learning, it boosts efficiency and effectively drives and guides enterprises. Chinese local governments, motivated to grow their economies, quickly imitate successful models from elsewhere. The China Model’s Impact on the World and Its Challenges Relying on these strengths, China is closing the gap with global high-tech leaders. This means reduced dependence on international markets in many fields, while low human rights standards, economies of scale, and government support enable leadership in new products and technologies, drawing foreign buyers and fostering reliance on Chinese goods. This is exactly the scenario the U.S.-led democratic camp dreads — the NSS explicitly calls for decoupling in critical industries and supply chains, at least minimizing dependence, to prevent China from weaponizing trade. In the long term, competition between the China model and the democratic camp could unfold in three ways. First, maintaining the status quo: Democracies remain dependent on China for key supply chains like rare earths and pharmaceuticals, importing cheap manufactured goods; China politicizes its economy, using trade to punish critics or suppress opponents, while dominating narratives through state-orchestrated “exchanges” that bribe democratic elites. This is no equilibrium — it’s a situation the democratic camp must change, and the NSS is driving that shift. Second, full or partial decoupling: China develops its own tech standards and economic sphere, aligning with like-minded nations (e.g., Russia, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela); democracies form their own system, avoiding Chinese infiltration and trade weaponization. But complete decoupling is extremely difficult, as European nations often prioritize short-term gains in deals with the CCP — the NSS recognizes this challenge and urges allies to unite in pressure. Third, intermediate paths: These lack fixed forms but could involve collective democratic pressure for Chinese reform or internal Chinese demands for political change and improved human rights. Their interaction might steer China toward gradual democratization, ending trade weaponization. If China becomes a rule-abiding nation, this could be the world’s best outcome — the NSS’s deterrence and economic strategies aim to guide it there. In this unprecedented great competition between the U.S. and China, the China model’s weaknesses lie in insufficient innovation, decision-making risks, and low individual freedoms. Yet its whole-nation system offers resilience and advantages; given time, it may catch up technologically with democracies. Democratic tech blockades on China could even spur its independent development and creation of parallel systems. The core issue isn’t who wins the U.S.-China economic and tech race, but protecting democratic political, economic, and social institutions from erosion and destruction by authoritarian states like China. America’s new National Security Strategy highlights this point, but its countermeasures remain immature and require further development. Shaomin Li is a professor of international business at Old Dominion University.
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2 hrs

Against the Odds, Climate Realism Is Winning
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Against the Odds, Climate Realism Is Winning

Against the Odds, Climate Realism Is Winning
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

Can a Trusted AI System Be Developed?
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Can a Trusted AI System Be Developed?

Can a Trusted AI System Be Developed?
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

There’s Nothing Funnier Than Fussy, Furious Euroweenies
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There’s Nothing Funnier Than Fussy, Furious Euroweenies

There’s Nothing Funnier Than Fussy, Furious Euroweenies
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

No, Notre Dame Doesn't Owe College Football a Bowl Game
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No, Notre Dame Doesn't Owe College Football a Bowl Game

No, Notre Dame Doesn't Owe College Football a Bowl Game
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

'Chemicals' Shouldn’t Scare Us
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'Chemicals' Shouldn’t Scare Us

'Chemicals' Shouldn’t Scare Us
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

Walz, Omar and the Billion-Dollar Minnesota Fraud Scandal
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Walz, Omar and the Billion-Dollar Minnesota Fraud Scandal

Walz, Omar and the Billion-Dollar Minnesota Fraud Scandal
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

Flashback to 2009: Obamacare Creates a Mess for Others to Clean Up
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Flashback to 2009: Obamacare Creates a Mess for Others to Clean Up

Flashback to 2009: Obamacare Creates a Mess for Others to Clean Up
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Conservative Voices
2 hrs

Democrats Hit New Lows in Attempts to Attack Trump
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Democrats Hit New Lows in Attempts to Attack Trump

Democrats Hit New Lows in Attempts to Attack Trump
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