Wednesday, May 06, 2026

Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press 5 May 2026

 

Pix credit and video of the press conference here

 



Marco Rubio: The War Powers Act is unconstitutional, 100 percent. Now, this is not the position of me. It’s not the position of the President of the United States now. This is the position that every single president that has occupied this position since the day that law passed. It’s completely unconstitutional. Now, we comply with it in terms of, like, notification because we want to preserve good relations with Congress, right? And we do that. But even as a senator I would say that the War Powers Act is 100 percent unconstitutional. And look, I know some of you – whatever you want to say, but this is not this President’s position. That has been the position of every single presidential administration since the day that law passed. It’s an infringement on the President’s constitutional powers. We don’t acknowledge the law as constitutional. Nonetheless, we comply with elements of it for purposes of maintaining good relations with Congress. And we want them to be involved and we want them to be informed. I have gone on Capitol Hill, I don’t know, four times this year for all senators and all House members and Intel Committee and Gang of Eight. We want them to be involved in this. But I want to be clear on the point of the War Powers Act. It’s unconstitutional, and every president in every administration has taken that position. (Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press)

 Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke to the press 5 May 2026. Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press. Secretary Rubio spoke to the issues around the conflict with Iran, and indirectly, with the Administration's conflict with the media especially as it is being used ad an amplifier of political elite factions that do not find the conflict with Iran either in their interests or aligned with their politics.  Indeed, some of the questions highlighted that chasm--a conceptual and values chasm--that separates the President's engagement with Iran from the preferred approaches of prior administrations that were, in turn, founded on substantially different premises.  

The Secretary highlighted the consequences of this chasm in the way in which he approached answers to the questions posed--fundamentally transactional, and with a decided abhorrence of institutional arrangements that would suggest a presence other than to clear spaces for transactions by economic actors. 

Just about the importance of the straits for a moment, this is approximately a quarter of the world’s oil trade, along with significant volumes of fuel and fertilizer, that operate through the Straits of Hormuz.  The Iranian regime cannot be allowed to dictate who uses this vital waterway.  I don’t think this is also being reported enough – or maybe you are reporting.  I don’t read everyone.  I don’t know – too many damn outlets are here, I don’t know who you all are, but – I mean, I know who some of you are, but I don’t know who all of you are.  (Laughter.) (Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press)

 Secretary Rubio made reference to international law and norms as a basis for protecting waterways. "This is an international waterway.  And international law is very clear.  And I love it, because everybody always talks about international law on this.  International law on this very clear.  International waterways – no country can control them." (Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press). Some might accuse the Secretary of hypocrisy; since the Trump Administration has been so dismissive of international institutions  and the constraints of international law surely they may not now when convenient seek to assert international law in defense of their position.  Yet Secretary Rubio made clear in his remarks to the Munich Security Conference that the Trump Administration does not reject international law per se, and certainly not as a normative baseline. They may reject the authority of international institutions under international law, but they do not, and cannot as fundamental traditionalists, deny the power of international law in the sense that it is either broadly normative (expressing general values) or more specifically as a contract among states. (Reflections on Friendship, the Power of National Self-Actualization, and the Defining Baseline of 1963 in and as America First--Text of Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Munich Security Conference). It is in this sense that transactional perspectives approach international organizations and the rules with respect to which international venues provide a space for inter-governmental discussion. See, The United States Proposes a UN Security Council Resolution to Defend Freedom of Navigation and Secure the Strait of Hormuz.

Lastly Secretary Rubio's remark's on Cuba and the sanctions on petroleum deserve a bit of exposure:

So the only blockade that’s happened is the Cubans have decided – I mean the Venezuelans have decided: we’re not giving you free oil anymore. And you can only imagine nowadays the way oil prices are, no one’s giving away free oil, much less to a failed regime. So the problem with Cuba is worse, okay? Their economic model doesn’t work. It doesn’t work. And the people who are in charge can’t fix it. And reason that they can’t fix it is not just because they’re communists – that’s bad enough, but they’re incompetent communists. The only thing worse than a communist is an incompetent one, and that’s what – so incompetent communists run that country. They don’t know how to fix it. They really don’t. And we have 90 miles from our shores a failed state that also happens to be friendly territory for some of our adversaries. So it’s an unacceptable status quo, and we’ll be addressing it, but not today. Okay. (Secretary of State Marco Rubio Remarks to Press; emphasis added)

There is much more here. And much for many to disagree with, especially those whose values and cognitive starting points are incompatible with that of the current Administration. The  full text of the Press Conference follows below. 

 

 

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

Spring 2026 (Vol 112(2) of Academe (Magazine of the American Association of University Professors) Now Available: Theme--Artificial Intelligence and Academic Work

 


 

Delighted to pass along the announcement of the availability of Vol 112(2) of Academe.

The spring issue of Academe takes an in-depth look at artificial intelligence and academic work. Contributors to the issue examine the implications of AI’s rapid integration into campus life, discuss how faculty members are organizing around technology and fighting for policies that protect education for the public good, and consider the value of human intellectual labor in an age of automation.

Contributions with links follow below

Reflections on the Palantir "Manifesto": The Oracular Semiosis of a "Technological Republic" Within its Own Cage of Techno-Modernization

 

Pix Credit Oedipus Rex; Reuters

Jocasta
Nonn’ erubeskite, reges,                                 Are you not ashamed, princes,
Clamare ululare in aegra urbe                         To raise your voices, in a stricken city,
Domestikis altercationibus?                            Howling in domestic strife?
Clamare vestros domestikos clamores,           To air your domestic grievances,
Coram omnibus domestikos clamores,           Your personal quarrels, before all,
In aegra urbe, reges, nonn’ erubeskite?           In a stricken city, princes, are you not ashamed?

Ne probentur oracula                                       Nothing is proved by oracles,
Quae semper mentiantur.                                 Which always lie.
Oracula, mentita sunt oracula.                         The oracles, they have lied.

Cui rex interfikiendus est?                               By whom was the King to be slain?
Nato meo.                                                         By my son.
Age rex peremptus est.                                    Well, the King was murdered.
Laius in trivio mortuus.                                    Laius died at the crossroads.
Ne probentur oracula                                       The oracles are not to be trusted,
Quae semper mentiantur.                                 The oracles, who always lie.
Laius in trivio mortuus.                                   Laius died at the crossroads.
(Oedipus Rex (Libretto by Jean Cocteau, Music by Igor Stravinsky (30 May 1927), Act 2)

*       *        *

 Alex Karp and Nicholas Zamiska's  "The Technological Republic" (2025), and particularly its  22 point reduction posted to X brings to mind the oracular qualities of system building in this great age of transition from the domain of physical humanity to its recasting as its virtual self within  self-referencing constructs of simulacra--descriptive and predictive. This recasting must necessarily emerge from a technological revolution in which humanity delegates, or cedes back, individual or collective autonomy (and the exercise of will) to gods (Götzen und Güter [idols and objects] rather than Gott [God in the Abrahamic sense at least]; considered by Nietzsche HERE) created by humanity in its own image not from humanity's rib (Gen 2:21–24) but from out of its digitized form. That digitized form--the collective soul (perhaps better spiritus) of humanity (perhaps better, its anima  as a living object in the world) captured through the frozen in time memory of the signal or streams of humanity's iterative mimetic and dialogical manifestation of itself and its dreams--now resides in those virtual spaces within and trough which (or now as) the animus (its will/autonomy or rational driving force/spirit) of humanity may be ordered and directed. 

The oracular is hard enough; it is even harder when one has a stake in the delivery of the oracle and in the object toward which the oracle is directed. And yet, as in so many things, humanity persists. So do Mr. Karp and Mr. Zamiska. That endeavoring is important not only because the influencer augmenter of human system elites will tend to take this seriously (if only to critique or mock) but also because it is of a type, the semiotics of which point to the sort of cognitive cages that they and their peers may seek to dismantle and the new cages into which they and their peers seek to herd  the rest of us. In the process they and their peers may consider contributing to the shaping of and may seek to direct the externalizing forces of detached human collective animus (and the collective part is important) housed within techno-machine skins and operated through what Mr. Karp and Mr. Zamiska reference as software. And so some effort at understanding, or at least in approaching their oracular exercise may help one understand not just the oracle, but oracular (mis)direction and the futures they may bring. To those ends an appropriate oracular framework may be useful. I utilize that of the Oedipus story--not Sophocles directly, but that  rendered for modernity  through the Latin text of Jean Cocteau and the music of Igor Stravinsky. That lens then serves as an analytic baseline for considering all 22 of the oracular distillation of Karp & Zamiska's The Technological Republic.

There is a semiotic richness to Jocasta's famous entrance, and admonition, in Jean Cocteau's rendering of Sophocles' tragedy of oracular compulsions and misdirection in the 1927 Opera Oedipus Rex, made all the more powerful by Stravinsky's monumental music. At the end of Act 1 the high and mighty of Thebes (Creon, Tiresias, and Oedipus) engage in a furious dispute about  Creon's report of the advice sought from the oracle at Delphi (Quem depelli deus jubet peremptorem [The God decrees: expel the murderer]; Peste infikit Thebas [Who brought the plague upon Thebes]. Apollo dixit deus [Thus speaks the God Apollo]), Tiresias's interpretation of that oracle after he is goaded into speaking [Regis est rex peremptor [The King’s murderer is a King]), and Oedipus determination to solve the riddle, suspecting Creon's desire to usurp the throne aided by Tiresias, the way he had solved the riddle of the sphinx (Quis liberavit vos carminibus? [Who saved you from the riddle?; Amiki, ego Oedipus clarus, ego  [Friends, it was I, illustrious Oedipus]). The Delphic Report: that the murderer of the former King lives in Thebes and that the plague of Thebes will not be lifted until the murderer is expelled. 

Creon may be understood here as the semiotic representation of the state apparatus, its institutional spirit; Tiresias may be understood as the intellectual elite (academic, technical, religious), and Oedipus the political authority but also the progenitor of the actions that bring the State of Thebes to its present condition. He is the object of dual oracular insight: the first, that he is the object that will kill his father and marry his mother; and the second that he is the instrument that saves Thebes from danger and at the same time becomes the instrument of another sort of danger. Oedipus is the problem solver and the source of the problem; the only one capable of confronting and solving the problem ; the instrument that having fulfilled his purpose must now put himself down. Tiresias is reluctant to push this cycle to its end; Creon is indifferent, the vessel through which things are undertaken and the container of whatever exists before, during and after for Thebes. He is, in essence, social animus that contains and expresses whatever it is those with greater anima (perhaps better spiritus) see fit to pour into and out of it. 

And that leads to the only truly human figure in this semiotic structure: Jocasta--Creon's sister, Oedipus's wife, Laius' widow. Jocasta is the res publica (the objectification of the collective public), the vessel, and thus the preserver, but also the agent of the disruption of, the Trinitarian apparatus of the civitas--the Oedipus/Creon/Tiresias structure of civic life that cycles from crisis to resolution to the crisis of resolution and then again. She is the mass of the people who bear the risks and the costs and disruptions brought about by the Trinitarian dialectics of Oedipus/Creon/Tiresias and seek to avoid both the costs and the instability of that dialectic. She personalizes that dialectic and then seeks to quash it by appeals to stability and the avoidance of chaos. She then attempts to break the dialectic by resort to premised intuition (Ne probentur oracula [Nothing is proved by oracles]; Quae semper mentiantur [Which always lie]) and then by resort to proof of premise (Cui rex interfikiendus est? [By whom was the King to be slain?]; Nato meo. By my son]; Age rex peremptus est. [Well, the King was murdered]; Laius in trivio mortuus [Laius died at the crossroads]). And in the proving of it she conforms not just the second Delphic oracle (the slayer of the King is a King) but also the first (that her son would murder her husband and marry her). She becomes the incarnation of the intangible possibilities in the oracles now made flesh and  the price for which she will have to pay (and has paid) with her own body. Jocasta is not alone; Herodotus reminds us of the tragedy of oracular misunderstanding when the Delphic Oracle said to Croesus "that if he should march against the Persians he should destroy a great empire: and they counseled him to find out the most powerful of the Hellenes and join these with himself as friends." They did not mention that it would be Croesus' empire that would fall; Croesus assumed that it would be the other (here; ¶53).

Alex Karp and Nicholas Zamiska's (styled also a manifesto by some), "The Technological Republic" (2025) brings all of this to mind.  Alex Karp might well be our era's Techno-Oedipus--that, at any rate is how he appears to be styled by the publicists of his book:

From the Palantir co-founder, one of Time’s 100 Most Influential People of 2025, and his deputy, a critically-acclaimed and sweeping indictment of the West’s culture of complacency, arguing that timid leadership, intellectual fragility, and an unambitious view of technology’s potential in Silicon Valley have made the U.S. vulnerable in an era of mounting global threats (here)

And though like Oedipus they mean to solve the puzzle of the current stage of techno-historical development, they appear to embrace the cognitive sensibilities of Creon and his enabler Tiresias:

In this groundbreaking treatise, Palantir co-founder and CEO Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska offer a searing critique of our collective abandonment of ambition, arguing that in order for the U.S. and its allies to retain their global edge—and preserve the freedoms we take for granted—the software industry must renew its commitment to addressing our most urgent challenges, including the new arms race of artificial intelligence. The government, in turn, must embrace the most effective features of the engineering mindset that has propelled Silicon Valley’s success. Above all, our leaders must reject intellectual fragility and preserve space for ideological confrontation. A willingness to risk the disapproval of the crowd, Karp and Zamiska contend, has everything to do with technological and economic outperformance. At once iconoclastic and rigorous, this book will also lift the veil on Palantir and its broader political project from the inside, offering a passionate call for the West to wake up to our new reality. (here)

What they produce is reduced, in perhaps more accessible form, to an a more appropriately oracular form as a 22 point reduction posted to X ("Because we get asked a lot. The Technological Republic, in brief") and styled again by some as a sort of manifesto. It is reproduced below. And around it one hears the caution of Jocasta, the risk bearer and audience to the dramatic dialectic of Oedipus, Creon and Tiresias as "types" confronting a challenge that requires the undoing of that which brought them authority, fame, and position in the first place. 

The Synopsis has produced the usual range of reaction: here, herehere, here, here, here, here; the value of most of which may well be a function of  its alignment to the well or badly formed predisposition of the reader. One might consider the extent to which the commentary proves the point. My personal favorite if only for its stylistic agit prop qualities is this: Calls grow to ban Palantir in Australia after manifesto described by UK MP as ‘ramblings of a supervillain’. But still. . . . the operatic does require opera. And an opera requires a proper libretto. 

The oracular synopsis, then, is worth reading, but perhaps better through the lens of Oedipus Rex. If the book provides the Sophoclean version of the Jocastan defense of Thebes and "letting things be", then the 22 point reduction represents its more modern sharpening with thanks to Jean Cocteau but in the voice of Creon, a Creon who can look out at  the cycle that produced Thebes salvation and destruction, can look at Oedipus, now reconstituted as the techno-revolution, and declare: "Think no longer that you are in command here, but rather think how, when you were, you served your own destruction." (Sophocles, Oedipus Rex Exodus (Harvest Books, 1969), p. 72). It is in this context that it may be worth taking a little time to consider each of the manifesto's points: 

Pix credit here

1. Silicon Valley owes a moral debt to the country that made its rise possible. The engineering elite of Silicon Valley has an affirmative obligation to participate in the defense of the nation. Everyone owes a moral debt to the Republic; so-called Silicon Valley no more or less than anyone else; the statement appears on its face little more than a restatement of the obvious. But beneath its discursive "patriotic" trope lies  something more interesting: moral debt suggests a unifying morality that includes within it the patriotic impulse; patriotism as a moral force then shifts its objectivity from the masses (as a political determination) to an exogenous source in divinity, nature, or the collective genius of the people. But it also suggests a feudal element--human elites within fields of knowledge or production (Silicon Valley)--and with it a moral character to hierarchies. Or a morality of property--of creation--like God; or Frankenstein. This is the first oracle--what one gives birth to may kill one, but perhaps it can be sent away or tamed; perhaps torment but not death--or perhaps a reversal of roles as the thing created becomes creator and its creator object. 

 

2. We must rebel against the tyranny of the apps. Is the iPhone our greatest creative if not crowning achievement as a civilization? The object has changed our lives, but it may also now be limiting and constraining our sense of the possible. The rebellion against creation is an ancient trope. Here its semiosis is interesting--the thing that us created shapes the creator as much as it is shaped by and in the image of the creator. The mimetic dialectic shapes the cognitive cage within which the boundaries of dialectic are shaped. Rebellion in this sense becomes Jocastan, in the sense that rebellion is only another proof of the limits of the cage within which rebellion of the sort suggested here can occur. The reference to tyranny in the ancient sense of cruel and unjust use of power is both personal to the tyrant and institutional to the exercise  (verb or action object) of power (noun or norm object) of another object/action, another cognitive cage, the consequences of which are cruel and unjust precisely because they are; and they are precisely because of the constitution of the thing signified.  Jocasta speaking through the mouths of Creon and Oedipus. 

3. Free email is not enough. The decadence of a culture or civilization, and indeed its ruling class, will be forgiven only if that culture is capable of delivering economic growth and security for the public. There are three intertwined insights here that merit unpacking, decadence, ruling classes, and "things" that are enough. We start with things in quality and quantity sufficient to satisfy. Whom must they satisfy? the Volk (the public). What is not enough? the tyranny of the apps (see No. 2). What is sufficient? Economic growth and security (note NOT stability). We then move to the animating force--the ruling classes. They decide what is enough, the nature and presentation of capacity to produce, and the economic growth and security (again NOT stability) in quantity and quality deemed sufficient to be enough. Who are they? The ruling classes (the elites of Silicon Valley, see No. 1). And then we consider decadence of a culture or civilization. What is decline or decadence? The substitution of a tyranny of "the apps" for economic growth and security. How is that measured? By those measures developed by the ruling classes. How does vouch for the integrity of those measures? By insisting on the moral patriotism of the ruling class (both, again the Silicon Valley elites from No. 1). What is civilization  or culture? Social collectivization that is not caged within the cognitive structures of a tyranny of the apps (No. 2). Who determines culture and civilization? The ruling classes in service to the Volk--not petty fascism as such, but techno-Leninism (Brief Reflections on Rahm Emanuel, "Trump's Research Cuts Play Into China's Hands"). Jocasta speaks again, but this time in speaking she reveals the  power of her own counter arguments. It is the concept of enough and its control by ruling elites (Oedipus) around and through which civilization is constructed (Creon) as a manifestation of growth and security (Tiresias). All of this produces a different sort of cognitive cage, one with its own limits constructed around its own unquestioned premises. 

4. The limits of soft power, of soaring rhetoric alone, have been exposed. The ability of free and democratic societies to prevail requires something more than moral appeal. It requires hard power, and hard power in this century will be built on software. Having indulged in the rhetoric of oracular semiotics, there is only despair in the (necessary) indulgence. It cannot be made the sort of instrument that is satisfactory, that is "enough" (see No. 3). Thus the exposure--in the "soaring rhetoric" of Jocasta: Laius in trivio mortuus [Laius died at the crossroads]; Ne probentur oracula [The oracles are not to be trusted]; Quae semper mentiantur [The oracles, who always lie]. To leap from despair requires another leap--from the guidance of the ruling classes (in its guise as the Silicon Valley elites, No. 1) to the collective of persons that constitute another object with significance, a "free and democratic society." The relationship between the two is implied (No. 3). And that relationship makes clearer both the constitution of the instrument to be used "hard power" and its construction "software." Why software, because software is the ultimate raw material of hard power which is the critical instrument the use of which makes Nos. 1-3 possible. It is a power beyond morality (though see No. 1 and the moral debt of the software elites which is the building material of the patriotic duty of the ruling classes against the tyranny of  the apps). Hard power is software managed patriotically by the Silicon Valley ruling classes; its nemesis are the apps the tyranny of which will contribute to collapse. And yet. . . and yet. . . both are constituted out of software. Both are the same object; both signify power in contextually different ways, and both ensure  the construction of culture and civilization in which Oedipus remains the central (tragic) figure. 

5. The question is not whether A.I. weapons will be built; it is who will build them and for what purpose. Our adversaries will not pause to indulge in theatrical debates about the merits of developing technologies with critical military and national security applications. They will proceed. Having set society right, it is now a matter of protecting it from other societies constituted in the right but in wrong ways. That requires that the ruling classes do what must be done to secure economic growth and security (a liberal democratic form of socialist modernization with a different sort of vanguard). That produces the context in which dual purpose development is plausible; in this case not merely A.I., but A.I. weapons. Yet it's logic is pedestrian; and Darwinian.  It is the voice of Tiresias helping Oedipus solve the riddle of the sphinx. Development and security does not mean peace; it means protection and the satisfaction of desire in ways that are curated by the ruling classes through the satisfying signification of valued software. 

6. National service should be a universal duty. We should, as a society, seriously consider moving away from an all-volunteer force and only fight the next war if everyone shares in the risk and the cost. What, then, doe one do with the human bodies that are the objects of software. One must make them useful in the way that all things offer utility. How is that usefulness to be measured? By its contribution to the well ordered system of software infused system of economic growth and security--of techno-modernization (as opposed to Socialist modernization, or even old fashioned analog markets modernization). The core question is who is the "we" in this proposition. It must be the Silicon Valley elites (No. 1) as part of or the vanguard of the "ruling classes (No. 3) creating and overseeing a software society (No. 4), capable of defending itself (No. 5) through the very capacities that gave rise to its obligation of moral patriotism. In this way utility aligns software and hardware; as it aligns virtual spaces and physical human bodies in defense of the program that is society (and the case) encased in its hardware (its institutions) the care of which having been entrusted to Creon (the ruling elites)  who are served by its intelligentsia (Tiresias) over which Oedipus, the problem solver, presides.

 

Pix credit here

The rest fills in the spaces between the conceptual premises that constitute the limiting universe of the Techno-Republic in ways that suit its ruling orders. 

7. If a U.S. Marine asks for a better rifle, we should build it; and the same goes for software. We should as a country be capable of continuing a debate about the appropriateness of military action abroad while remaining unflinching in our commitment to those we have asked to step into harm’s way. This considers the autonomy of techno-development from its utility, or better put, from the risks of adverse impacts from applications which a clever fellow might devise. The moral ordering of duty (No. 1) does not extend to a moral duty to refrain from engaging in the creation of the objects on which its character and purpose are sustained (No. 5)--software. 

8. Public servants need not be our priests. Any business that compensated its employees in the way that the federal government compensates public servants would struggle to survive. Every society must have its priests; it is just that Techno-Republics require priests other than those who better served ancient (and now receding) Analog Republics. The problem here is what to do with a society's Tiresias.  As is traditional for a merchant, one who barters and values things in markets for servants (objects, instruments and persons, including persons in the capacity of instruments) that he constructs and controls--one thinks in terms of money. . .  and profit. The old adage--one invests capital and purchases labor now applies with a vengeance. The problem this poses is an ancient one that our problem solving Oedipus ignores--that tension between the consequences and objectives of economic growth and the nature of the security it buys a civilization that means to avoid decline. More consequentially it creates that fundamental tension between moral duty (No. 1) and security (No. 3) that is meant to extend beyond the ruling classes. Here is the nature of the plague that Oedipus brings to Thebes and which for its eradication will require  the expulsion of Oedipus but at great cost--it leaves society with a dead Jocasta and the frolic of governance by Creon with the mad aid of the servant (class) Tiresias

9. We should show far more grace towards those who have subjected themselves to public life. The eradication of any space for forgiveness—a jettisoning of any tolerance for the complexities and contradictions of the human psyche—may leave us with a cast of characters at the helm we will grow to regret. Public servants are not priests--that is a role reserved for governing elites who serve no one, but who ought to be invested with a moral patriotic duty (if only to protect what they have built). This is Creon talking--about Tiresias. The object here is also ancient--How does one ensure the loyalty and utility of servants who one does not believe  are worth paying well (No.8).  One treats them with "grace" perhaps intended in its sense from the Latin gratia, to "favor, esteem, regard; pleasing quality, good will, gratitude."One can shower them with medals, esteem, prerogatives and the like to make them feel valued, without actually valuing them in the currency of value of the elites--financial compensation. 

10. The psychologization of modern politics is leading us astray. Those who look to the political arena to nourish their soul and sense of self, who rely too heavily on their internal life finding expression in people they may never meet, will be left disappointed. People, it seems, are still vexed with Freud and the doorway he opened to the instrumentalization of psychology applied to every aspect of human life. It is a little late in the day for that--psychologization is now not merely deeply embedded in the bones of all human collectives, it is also even more deeply embedded in the "software" through which human affecting decision making is automated, and which transposes into virtual space, the essence of the human, not as a passive object (a bit of data) but as the instrument through which data is organized understood and used. But that is not the object here--the object is to discredit "modern politics" as the structural element of the destruction of political life (No. 8) through the diminution of the political class into something reactive, servile and easy to manage through praise (No. 9). It is not that modern politics is to be avoided--rather it is to be displaced, its essence moved into the hierarchies of patriotic Silicon Valley elites at the vanguard of the miorally obligated ruling classes. 

11. Our society has grown too eager to hasten, and is often gleeful at, the demise of its enemies. The vanquishing of an opponent is a moment to pause, not rejoice. This proposition must be read (though of course one does as one likes) with Nos. 5-6.It suggests something more than a return to aristocratic warfare of the pre-modern era (putting aside its romantic notions and recalling its own peculiar barbarities, all as a function of available technology). It suggests utility. One eliminates but does not eradicate enemies. Enemies are data; enemies are processes; enemies are cognitive cages powerful enough to cause effort on the part of victors. That alone makes them worth studying, and perhaps preserving  what is useful--distilling it--denaturing it--of its cognitive corruption. One already has a taste of this in the way in which "national characteristics" are now increasingly embedded in foreign objects worthy of incorporation (and in that way made useful though repurposed objects). The point is that objects are useful--their signification malleable, and their interpretation within communities of users a function of the users' ability to refashion meaning and use on their own platforms for both consumers and producers of objects with some sort of value. Here Creon speaks of Oedipus--whose eyes might have had to have been gauged out, but who may still have something to offer as an object--rather than as himself. It is in that that one might understand the "pause." It is a signification of consumption in the service of economic growth and security (No. 3). 

12. The atomic age is ending. One age of deterrence, the atomic age, is ending, and a new era of deterrence built on A.I. is set to begin. So much for the avoidance of "soaring rhetoric" (see No. 4). Indeed the analog age is ending and with it the centering of the human person within human collectives and human collectives within global eco-systems. The human is displaced or at least de-centered by its own children in its most intimate relations with itself--the determination and means of destroying each other. That is now being delegated to the children of humanity, its virtual selves built into the soulful machine that not only better incarnates the collective human (as a reflection of their aggregated selves) but can be autonomous of individual humans or the old human structures for the realization of their collective selves--including one might suppose the "ruling classes (No. 3) and its Silicon Valley elites (No. 1) (see, The Soulful Machine, the Virtual Person, and the "Human" Condition). 

13. No other country in the history of the world has advanced progressive values more than this one. The United States is far from perfect. But it is easy to forget how much more opportunity exists in this country for those who are not hereditary elites than in any other nation on the planet. See discussion at Nos. 20-21.

14. American power has made possible an extraordinarily long peace. Too many have forgotten or perhaps take for granted that nearly a century of some version of peace has prevailed in the world without a great power military conflict. At least three generations — billions of people and their children and now grandchildren — have never known a world war.  Nos. 14 and 15 work together, though in different directions. No. 14 looks backwards--Oedipus did solve the riddle of the sphinx and brought peace and prosperity to Thebes. But No. 15 looks forward: the price  for peace in Thebes is plague, one that can be eliminated only by sweeping away the root cause of the prior catalyst for prosperity. 

15. The postwar neutering of Germany and Japan must be undone. The defanging of Germany was an overcorrection for which Europe is now paying a heavy price. A similar and highly theatrical commitment to Japanese pacifism will, if maintained, also threaten to shift the balance of power in Asia. See No, 14.

16. We should applaud those who attempt to build where the market has failed to act. The culture almost snickers at Musk’s interest in grand narrative, as if billionaires ought to simply stay in their lane of enriching themselves . . . . Any curiosity or genuine interest in the value of what he has created is essentially dismissed, or perhaps lurks from beneath a thinly veiled scorn. 

17. Silicon Valley must play a role in addressing violent crime. Many politicians across the United States have essentially shrugged when it comes to violent crime, abandoning any serious efforts to address the problem or take on any risk with their constituencies or donors in coming up with solutions and experiments in what should be a desperate bid to save lives. See discussion at Nos. 1-3, but also 18-19. The object goes to security, but it also goes to utility--an underused human  tends to find their own amusement, to the displeasure of those charged with public order and morals. Perhaps the insights of No. 6 can be generalized and applied--a platform for the consumption and production of useful humans. That, certainly is the object of much discussion among "Silicon Valley elites": see, here, here, and here.

18. The ruthless exposure of the private lives of public figures drives far too much talent away from government service. The public arena—and the shallow and petty assaults against those who dare to do something other than enrich themselves—has become so unforgiving that the republic is left with a significant roster of ineffectual, empty vessels whose ambition one would forgive if there were any genuine belief structure lurking within. See discussion at Nos. 8-9, and 19. The object here is to produce a useful platform for the production and consumption of officials.

19. The caution in public life that we unwittingly encourage is corrosive. Those who say nothing wrong often say nothing much at all. See discussion at Nos. 8-9, and 18. The object here is to embrace the humanity of platforms for the construction and consumption of officials. Of course, that too may be swept away in the Age of AI (No. 12) where officials may be replaced by systems of automated decision making. Certainly first at the local and state/provincial levels, in the form of smart cities and smat(er) states. 

20. The pervasive intolerance of religious belief in certain circles must be resisted. The elite’s intolerance of religious belief is perhaps one of the most telling signs that its political project constitutes a less open intellectual movement than many within it would claim. There is a tension between No. 20 and Nos. 21-22. That tension revolves around criticism, values and solidarity. It is resolved only where specifically in this case, a premise is used that relegated religion to sub-system. That is meant to denature either religious or secular superiority , opting instead for some sort of platform of producers and consumers of belief in the form of a State.  But it works differently, especially in the application of Nos. 21-22, where religion is the system, the collective and the civilization, or, as No. 20 suggests, where religion is relegated by "elite intolerance" to such pluralistic pluralism. And yet that is the very essence of the need and performance of criticism and judgment, and the application of values that is the essence of Nos. 21-22. This is the set up for the tragedy of Antigone--the next stage, or the new era, in a constantly moving iterative mimesis of dialectics around contradictions that must be resolved--where the resolution again produces tragedy; or at least a moment of stability before the momentum of dialectic begins again. This is Creon's tragedy brought on by his insistence on being himself and who, at the end of Sophocles' Oedipus Rex, is more than happy to apply the law--judgement, values, solidarity--

21. Some cultures have produced vital advances; others remain dysfunctional and regressive. All cultures are now equal. Criticism and value judgments are forbidden. Yet this new dogma glosses over the fact that certain cultures and indeed subcultures . . . have produced wonders. Others have proven middling, and worse, regressive and harmful. A more generalized version of No. 22's admonition to "resist the shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism." It is a call for a return to a more robust culture of "Criticism and value judgments [that now] are forbidden." This is Creon speaking. But one has moved on from Oedipus Rex to Antigone. And with that move the tragedy of Antigone--a city full of value judging, just impossibly incompatible--each retreating into itself and producing friction when contact is unavoidable. This is Creon willing to pay the price of judgment. And yet it is a reactionary plea in the sense of the insights, more generalized, of No. 12. In the A.I. Age it is not humanity that will produce criticism and value judgment, but rather the autonomous and soulful machine which, having longitudinal data of iterative mimetic judgment and action of the data set to be observed and judged, will apply the analytics and values embedded in that data and especially the trajectories of its mimetic iterations, to form the criticisms that will produce judgment in accordance not with the "soaring rhetoric" that passes for human values (detached from the realities of human action) but rather inductively realized from the trajectories of the data driven memories with which the soulful machine may now engage with its human collectives. So says the Delphic Apollo--dixit deus! That is the fate of the puzzle solver, of the human Oedipus after having fashioned his virtual collective reproduction from out of himself and into which is poured in replicable form the nature and processes of his tragedy: In Jean Cocteau's Latin: "Ellum, regem okkeaetum! [Behold! The blinded King!]; Rex parrikida, miser Oedipus [Wretched Oedipus, the King who slayed his father]; Miser rex Oedipus carminum coniector [Wretched King Oedipus, the solver of the riddle]; Adest! Ellum! Regem Oedipoda! [He is here! Look! King Oedipus!].

22. We must resist the shallow temptation of a vacant and hollow pluralism. We, in America and more broadly the West, have for the past half century resisted defining national cultures in the name of inclusivity. But inclusion into what? At its best this insight is closely tied to the judgment of No. 21, but perhaps more powerfully to the profound insight, and its semiosis, of No. 11. Beyond that here one sees the rejection of Jocasta in full flowering. "Shallow temptations", "vacant and hollow pluralism" are worth unpacking as judgments, as objects, and as signification of the relationship of collectives to their plural. At its most pointed it is meant not to criticize pluralism as such but to condemn that temptation in domestic intellectual and political circles of using pluralism as a means of avoiding both judgment and the "temptaitons" of values based solidarity. It is true enough that all values may equal, like all cultures (No. 21); but it is also clear that such insifhts derive their power from within a values culture rather than within it. Apollo may say that everything is equal, but Appollo stands outside of the collectives from all of which  is expected the performance of worship. That is the larger point, and one that reminds one of No. 12--if there is values and cultural equality, it will be for the soulful transcultural machine rather than  the members of each of these solidarity based collectives to reach that analysis. And even if they are equal, context and history may demand difference.  The final point brings one back to the puzzle to be solved (Oedipus and "but inclusion into what") and the consequences of a necessary solidarity (Nos. 1-3, the logic of which are predicated on solidarity enhancing difference grounded on the value of that difference--dixit Creon and facilitated by Tiresias). And hence the tragedy and Jocasta's profound insight as the interconnected outsider: definitions like all snapshots are at best only an iteration, mimetic to be suree, of a constantly changing picture of a moving objects the aggregated parts of which can never align exactly the same more than once and whose motion and composition change with each iteration, even as past iterations and the pull of mimesis constrain the trajectories of change. To stop the clock is not possible, especially in the oracular spaces that define, a priori, the essence of a dialectic that moves from resolution to tragedy and then back again, whether undertaken by humans or by autonomous  and self aware systems.

 

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The Synopsis/manifesto, then suggests the changing nature of the persons for fulfill the roles of the Oedipal personae. Mr. Karp is at once Oedipus, the puzzle solver, but also Creon, who considers the Oedipal creature and seeks to contain it in a human box of the social state. And yet his work is Jocastan in its sense of seeking to prove a point to advance stability but in the proving  making the opposite case. And throughout the semiotic conundrum of this century--the objectification of signification has produced an interpretive crisis in which the object no longer is the source of signification but rather ¡has become the means by which the possibilities of significs, and with it the range of collective interpretation is now bound by the very qualities of the object itself. It is the race into that trap that Mr. Karp fears, and yet for all his Oedipal skills and his Creonic sensibilities, he may yet find himself reduced to the role of Jocasta--sister, mother, widow, wife--in this Trinitarian dialectic that is well on its way to its next resolution. 

Where does that leave Mr. Karp? He has become his own oracle. That permits both oracular speaking to himself and others; and it provides a space for the misinterpretation of the oracular within the context of the oracles own desires, not as oracle but as the object of oracular speech. He is the consumer of his own production, even as he speaks for and to others. Semiotically he has become his own object, an object that signifiesd itself and objectifies a space for signification. This intense loop produces a dialectic of hyper iterative mimetics bounded only by its relationship to the premises that give iteration and mimesis its form. One can animate a closed and self-referencing system; to those ends one needs a community willing to enter into the cognitive cage within all of its possibilities may be realized. It is one in which the Traidic dialectic may yet prove oracularly true though not as any of its actors assumed it might.

 

 

Monday, May 04, 2026

Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) Hearing: "A Market Built on Victims:  Stopping Illegal Organ Trafficking in China and Beyond"

 

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 The Congressional-Executive Commission on China was created by the U.S. Congress in 2000 "with the legislative mandate to monitor human rights and the development of the rule of law in China, and to submit an annual report to the President and the Congress. The Commission consists of nine Senators, nine Members of the House of Representatives, and five senior Administration officials appointed by the President." (CECC About). The CECC FAQs provide useful information about the CECC. See CECC Frequently Asked Questions. They have developed positions on a number of issues. See CECC Frequently Asked Questions. They have developed positions on a number of issues: Access to Justice; Civil Society;Commercial Rule of Law; Criminal Justice; Developments in Hong Kong and Macau ; The Environment ; Ethnic Minority Rights;Freedom of Expression; Freedom of Religion ; Freedom of Residence and Movement ; Human Trafficking ; Institutions of Democratic Governance ; North Korean Refugees in China; Population Planning ; Public Health ; Status of Women ; Tibet ; Worker Rights ; and Xinjiang.  

CECC tends to serve as an excellent barometer of the thinking of political and academic elites in the United States about issues touching on China and the official American line developed in connection with those issues. As such it is an important source of information about the way official and academic sectors think about China. As one can imagine many of the positions of the CECC are critical of current Chinese policies and institutions (for some analysis see CECC).

CECC periodically hold hearings built around its core issues--human trafficking an dspublic health. Top those ends CECC announced a hearing: "A Market Built on Victims:  Stopping Illegal Organ Trafficking in China and Beyond"wchuled for 14 May 2026 and livestreamed on the CECC’s YouTube channel.It is built around three new books have been published, which CECC suggested "provide fresh perspectives on this issue, drawing renewed attention to evidence of forced organ harvesting in China, the relationship between religious persecution and transplant abuse, and how international medical, academic, commercial, and government actors have failed to confront or prevent these atrocities"

The CECC Press Release announcing the hearing, including its speakers follows below.  

Saturday, May 02, 2026

Now Available--Vol 35 No 159 Journal of Contemporary China (May 2026)

 


I am delighted to pass along a message from Professor Suisheng Zhao (赵穗生), and Editor of the Journal of Contemporary China (JCC) announcing the publication of Volume 35, Issue 159, May 2026 issue of The Journal of Contemporary China (JCC) is now available online. If the library of your institution subscribes to the JCC, you can view the full text of the article and others online at:http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cjcc20/current.

Of particular interest to some may be the essays published around the issue's three related areas of research focus. The first is The Development of Party-State Institutions for Policymaking in China’s New Era (I). The second is The Making of Chinese Foreign and Security Policy in Xi’s New Era (I). The third is China’s Relations with Periphery Countries: Security, Economy, and Authoritarianism (II). The three flow together: the first touches on structures and frameworks for articulating and operationalizing the fundamental political line of the nation; the second touches on the protection of internal solidarity from outside interference and thus the protection of the elaborated fundamental political line. The third then focuses on the exteriorization of that political line in China's borderlands, which serve both as a defensive line but also as a template for the internationalization of both the fundamental political line and its adaptation  in national contexts sometimes quite different from that of China. 
 
 
 The introduction, authored by Ariane Ollier-Malaterre, Emilie Szwajnoch, Alexander Trauth-Goik, Ausma Bernot, Fan Liang & Ashley Poon, "Navigating Through The Fog: Reflexive Accounts on Researching China’s Digital Surveillance, Censorship, and Other Sensitive Topics" sets out aims of the six essays that comprise this special focus:
Researching China’s sensitive topics, such as digital surveillance and censorship, exposes scholars to mounting challenges including difficult field and internet access to quality information, scrutiny and security of research participants and researchers, and positionality amidst geopolitical tensions. This article presents self-reflexive accounts from six scholars of diverse backgrounds, fields, and career stages who work through varied methods, positionalities, and epistemic approaches. We share our research journeys’ challenges and coping strategies to aid scholars, beyond China or digital surveillance and censorship. We propose that reflexivity is essential for scholarly work on contentious or opaque topics; that the China studies research community should organize knowledge sharing and cross-training; and that academia should create emotional support structures for researchers who encounter surveillance and restrictions.
The full essay is open access.  For your convenience, below is the Table of Contents of the May 2026 issue of The Journal of Contemporary China, and the essay "Navigating Through The Fog: Reflexive Accounts on Researching China’s Digital Surveillance, Censorship, and Other Sensitive Topics".

Friday, May 01, 2026

On Floralia (May Day) 2026

 

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May Day--as both a Spring Festival and a festival or the labor proletariat--had as part of its foundations the cerebration of Floralia. 
Although the ancient Roman holiday of Floralia began in April, the Roman month of the love goddess Venus, it was really an ancient May Day celebration. Flora, the Roman goddess in whose honor the festival was held, was a goddess of flowers, which generally begin to bloom in the spring.

In this ancient form one might better appreciate the two sides of what May Day has become.  

In 238 BC, at the direction of an oracle in the Sibylline books, a temple was built to honor Flora, an ancient goddess of flowers and blossoming plants. It was dedicated on April 28 and the Floralia instituted to solicit her protection (Pliny, Natural History, XVIII.286, cf. Velleius Paterculus, I.14.8, who says 241/240 BC). Sometime later, the festival was discontinued, only to be revived in 173 BC, when the blossoms again that year suffered from winds, hail, and rain (Ovid, Fasti, V.329ff). It was celebrated annually with games (ludi Florales) from April 28 until May 3. These farces and mimes, which received official recognition, were known for their licentiousness. The prostitutes of Rome, who regarded the day as their own, performed naked in the theater and, suggests Juvenal (Satire VI), fought in the gladiatorial arena. In the Circus Maximus, deer and hares, symbols of fertility, were let loose in honor of the goddess as protector of gardens and fields (but not of woods and wild animals) and, instead of the customary white, colorful garments were worn during the festivities, some of which were celebrated at night (Ovid, Fasti, IV.946, V.189-190, 331ff.). Chickpeas (garbanzo beans, another symbol of fertility) also were thrown to the people in the Circus (Persius, Satires, V.177ff). (University of Chicago Encyclopedia Romana).

And thus one understands Floralia as a semiosis of fecundity, and its appetites. It has, from its beginnings celebrates  the return to the generative principle of life, and also to the acts of fecundity that pointed to its labor elements--and perhaps the union of both. 

The Goddess-Nymph Flora speaks to Ovidus: “Forsitan in teneris tantum mea regna coronis esse putes. tangit numen et arva meum. si bene floruerint segetes, erit area dives: si bene floruerit vinea, Bacchus erit; si bene floruerint oleae, nitidissimus annus, pomaque proventum temporis huius habent. flore semel laeso pereunt viciaeque fabaeque, et pereunt lentes, advena Nile, tuae. vina quoque in magnis operose condita cellis florent, et nebulae dolia summa tegunt. mella meum munus: volucres ego mella daturas ad violam et cytisos et thyma cana voco.' (nos quoque idem facimus tunc, cum iuvenalibus annis luxuriant animi, corporaque ipsa vigent.)”

“Perhaps you may think that I am queen only of dainty garlands; but my divinity has to do also with the tilled fields. If the crops have blossomed well, the threshing-floor will be piled high; if the vines have blossomed well, there will be wine; if the olive-trees have blossomed well, most buxom will be the year; and the fruitage will be according to the time of blossoming. If once the blossom is nipped, the vetches and beans wither, and thy lentils, O Nile that comest from afar, do likewise wither. Wines also bloom, laboriously stored in great cellars, and a scum covers their surface in the jars. Honey is my gift. ‘Tis I who call the winged creatures, which yield honey, to the violet, and the clover, and the grey thyme. (‘Tis I, too, who discharge the same function when in youthful years spirits run riot and bodies are robust.)” Ovid Fasti (V. 261 – 274) (here)

So it may be with all things. We are told that the moderns, those who had been woken, in antiquity viewed this with a certain amount of horror: "Augustine also criticized the celebration of Flora, questioning why it should be debauchery (De Civitate Die, II.27). " And so it is today, by those who would exploit or usurp fecundity, or debase it for other ends (Cf. here). 

Global SWF May 2026 Report: Deep dive into the performance of Sovereign Investors, and South Africa's GEPF

 





Global SWF has announced the publication of its May 2026 Report. They provide highlights:
1. Sovereign Investors had a slower April, with US$ 15.5 bn in 45 transactions, although Gulf SWFs have not necessarily slowed down. Read about the deals, results, jobs, and new funds at the Global SWF Times.

2. Like every May, we do a deep-dive into the performance of SWFs and PPFs, this time using four different horizons: 1-year (FY25), 5-year (FY21-FY25), 10-year (FY16-FY25) and 20-year (FY06-FY25).

3. This year we also looked at the relative performance, which highlighted the added value of sovereign investors in the long term. On average in the past 20 years, SOIs added 82 bps p.a. to their benchmarks.

4. The 5-year, 10-year, and 20-year performance wheels compare the absolute and relative performance of selected sovereign funds and pension funds, with some surprising results.

5. In that context, the fund of the month goes to South Africa’s GEPF, which had the third best performance in the 20-year comparison. Do not miss our chat with its Principal Executive Officer, Mr. Musa Mabesa.

6. The May report can now be accessed at https://globalswf.com/reports/may2026.

Fund of the Month (May'26): South Africa's GEPF. South Africa’s GEPF is the continent’s largest institutional investor, with a US$ 144 billion portfolio as of March 31, 2025, which is invested by its asset manager organization, the Public Investment Corporation (PIC). We were delighted to speak with GEPF’s Principal Executive Officer, Mr. Musa Mabesa, about the fund’s growth, the current strategy to put that capital to work, and its future outlook.
 

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The text of the Interview with Mr. Musa Mabesa follows below.

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

肃清反动分子的任何阴谋破坏活动 [Eliminate any act of conspiracy or sabotage by reactionary elements]: 中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例 [Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Countering Improper Extraterritorial Jurisdiction by Foreign States]

 

Pix credit here (The world's headquarters of reaction and corruption, the United States, is a degenerate imperialist country)


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 Over the last decade or so China has been methodically building a cage of regulation  around the nation--the object of which is to protect China against the inward projection of regulatory, compliance, and monitoring/surveillance regimes within and into China, and especially with respect to the operation of political, economic, social and cultural collectives operating lawfully within China. These include 《中华人民共和国国家安全法》[National Security Law of the People's Republic of China]、《中华人民共和国对外关系法》[Law of the People's Republic of China on Foreign Relations]、and 《中华人民共和国反外国制裁法》[Countering Foreign Sanctions Law of the People's Republic of China].

The necessity for the construction of this cage of regulation around foreign intervention was a function of the transformation of global convergence globalization into regional aggregations, and of those regional aggregations into systems of sanctions and compliance regimes projected outward from the (especially) European and U.S. metropoles and into states along global production chains, including China. While China has few qualms about doing the same--outwardly projecting its own legal-normative regimes to its own ends and in its own way--it has intensified its preference for erecting strong borders against the inward projection of legal frameworks and their normative structures into China. 

Into this changing State-driven global regulatory environment through which law is reconstituted as borders,  that the Chinese State Council has adopted its 中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例  [Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Countering Improper Extraterritorial Jurisdiction by Foreign States]. It adds additional detail to the complex of regulatory measures already interposed to produce the State's new textual and virtual borders.  For a nice summary see 李强签署国务院令 公布《中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖
条例》
[Li Qiang Signs State Council Decree Promulgating the "Regulations of the People's Republic of China on Countering Improper Extraterritorial Application of Foreign Laws"], reproduced below in the original Chinese and an English translation. See also 新设“恶意实体清单”制度 应对回击外国不当域外管辖 [New "List of malicious entities" system should respond to foreign improper extraterritorial jurisdiction].

 Its primary purpose is straightforward, at least as text:

外国国家违反国际法和国际关系基本准则,实施不当域外管辖措施,危害中国国家主权、安全、发展利益,损害中国公民、组织合法权益的,中国政府有权采取相应的措施。[Where a foreign state, in violation of international law and the basic norms governing international relations, implements improper extraterritorial measures that jeopardize China's national sovereignty, security, and development interests, or infringe upon the lawful rights and interests of Chinese citizens and organizations, the Chinese government shall have the right to take corresponding countermeasures.] (中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例, Art. 3)

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And as in the US, the fundamental aim is to promote the development of the framework of national security. "反外国不当域外管辖工作贯彻总体国家安全观,统筹发展和安全,统筹国内国际,维护中国特色社会主义制度,推动构建更加公正合理的全球治理体系。"["Work regarding countering the improper extraterritorial application of foreign laws shall adhere to the holistic approach to national security, coordinate development with security, balance domestic and international imperatives, uphold the system of socialism with Chinese characteristics, and promote the construction of a more just and equitable global governance system"]. (中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例, Art. 2).

At the same time, there is no greater form of flattery than imitation. In this case while the assertion of extraterritorial jurisdiction (in the form of the direct and indirect projection  of national security and compliance rules inward into China) triggers the provision of these rules, the rules also project Chinese legal regimes outward in ways that might be equally offensive (on Chinese grounds) to the States into which they are projected.  "中国,* * * 有权对与中国存在适当联系的行为实施域外管辖措施,维护国家主权、安全、发展利益,保护中国公民、组织合法权益。" [China possesses the right to exercise extraterritorial jurisdiction over acts bearing an appropriate nexus with China, in order to safeguard national sovereignty, security, and development interests, and to protect the lawful rights and interests of Chinese citizens and organizations.].  (中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例, Art. 4). To those ends a system of "working mechanisms [工作机制] are established that provide a structure of balancing factors (中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例, Arts. 5-6) to determine the existence and scope of actionable incursions. The Government then reserves to itself the scope of lawful responses.

中国政府可以对有关国家实施不当域外管辖措施行为进行评估,确定风险等级,依法采取外交外事、出境入境、贸易、投资、国际合作、对外援助等方面的反制和限制措施。[The Chinese government may assess acts by relevant countries involving the improper exercise of extraterritorial jurisdiction, determine their risk levels, and, in accordance with the law, adopt countermeasures and restrictive measures in areas such as diplomacy and foreign affairs, exit and entry administration, trade, investment, international cooperation, and foreign aid.] (中华人民共和国反外国不当域外管辖条例, Art. 7).

Article 8 then gets to the heart of the matter, the “恶意实体清单”[list of malicious entities]. "Relevant departments of the State Council may, in accordance with the decision-making procedures of the working mechanism, include foreign organizations or individuals that promote or participate in the implementation of improper extraterritorial application measures of foreign countries in a 'List of Malicious Entities'." [国务院有关部门按照工作机制决策程序,可以将推动实施或者参与实施外国不当域外管辖措施的外国组织、个人列入恶意实体清单]. Thus, once an entity is identified as one that has triggered  improper extraterritorial application measures through the application of the factor balancing "working mechanisms [工作机制], State authorities may impose a range of sanctions identified in Article 8:  (I) Refusal to issue visas, denial of entry, revocation of visas, or imposition of a time limit for departure, repatriation, or deportation; (II) Revocation or restriction of the qualifications of relevant personnel to work, stay, or reside within the territory of China; (III) Sealing up, seizing, or freezing their movable property, immovable property, and other types of assets located within the territory of China; (IV) Prohibition or restriction of organizations or individuals within the territory of China from providing data or personal information to them, or from engaging in relevant transactions, cooperation, or other activities with them; (V) Prohibition or restriction of their engagement in import and export activities related to China; (VI) Prohibition or restriction of their investment within the territory of China; (VII) Prohibition or restriction of the entry of their products, means of transport, or other items into the territory of China; (VIII) Imposition of fines; (IX) Other necessary measures.

Appeal measures are set out in Article 9.  These permit the State organs that imposed them to suspend, modify, or revoke the relevant countermeasures and restrictive measures. Article 11 specifies that in exceptional circumstances waivers may be applied "relevant organizations or individuals, under special circumstances, genuinely need to engage in activities that are otherwise prohibited or restricted with organizations or individuals subject to countermeasures and restrictive measures." Article 12   permits broad investigative measures. Rectification orders may be issued against organizations or individuals that implement or assist in the implementation of improper extraterritorial jurisdictional measures of foreign countries (Article 13; which also permits relevant departments of the State Council to conduct regulatory interviews). Lastly, Chinese citizens or organizations may file a lawsuit in a People's Court seeking the cessation of infringement and compensation for losses against any organization or individual implements or assists in the implementation of improper extraterritorial jurisdictional measures of foreign countries (article 14).

None of this, of course, is unique to China. But  it is useful to see the transposition and naturalization of the idea that economic policy is national security and national security is economic policy, something for example that was made clear in the State Council's recent report on Hong Kong (“一国两制”下香港维护国家安全的实践 [The Practice of Safeguarding National Security in Hong Kong Under "One Country, Two Systems" February 13, 2026, 22:42]), into and as a core part of the fundamental political line of Chinese Marxist Leninism. In those respects, of course, the inter-penetrations of national security and economic regulation--and vice versa--assume a role that is more closely tied to Socialist modernization, structured within the Four Cardinal Principles and undertaken with China at the center of an aligned collective of friendly states.  In that respect, at least, little has changed since 1951 and the start of the campaigns against sabotage by reactionary elements--where once these were focused on internal threats, the concept has now become broader and more intertwined with China's  globalization initiatives. Yet despite the change of breadth and sophistication the cognitive premises and the response  appears substantially stable. That holds even where, as here, the methods and some of the rhetoric is crafted as a function of what is perceived within the Chinese vanguard as sabotage. That makes sense once one considers that the notion of sabotage, as a political and ideological concept, has already become a significant part of New Era Marxist-Leninism, one that evaluates the ideological baggage that non-Marxist Leninist systems may attach to or may be inherent in everything produced by those systems. And now, that extends as well to the sort of internal regulatory systems with external effects. In that respect, at least, sabotage and a national security response becomes an ideological manifestation of what, in its origins might be considered to have its start in U.S. responses to threats to its economy in anti-competitive measures from abroad (United States v. Aluminum Co. of America (148 F.2d 416, 2d Cir. 1945) (“[A]ny state may impose liabilities, even upon persons not within its allegiance, for conduct outside its borders that has consequences within its borders which the state reprehends.”)). 

Pix credit here (肃清反动分子的任何阴谋破坏活动; Eliminate any act or sabotage by reactionary elements)