Tanner Greer of the blog Scholarstage joins the show in a wide-ranging discussion touching on Xi's ideology, incentives in western China-watching, Mormons in China, why it's worth studying classical Chinese history, and AI-assisted writing.
ChinaTalk has hit its 100th episode! That's two and a half full workweeks of informed, respectful, and hopefully entertaining conversation on everything China. As the media industry has cratered, spaces for intelligent and open discussion on China that live outside of paywalls basically don't exist anymore. Since COVID has locked me out of China and forced me to move to the US, my living expenses have gone up, and spending dozens of hours on this podcast is looking increasingly unsustainable. Right now, I make less than $5 an hour producing this show. If you'd like to see ChinaTalk continue to come out weekly,
Please consider supporting me at glow.fm/chinatalk
I'm also thinking about launching some member rewards, like live zoom, tapings of episodes where audience members can ask questions as well as a book club. Thanks so much!
Jordan
How Corruption Works in China
The H1B Ban and National Security
China-India Clashes: What Happens Next?
Hong Kong's Protests One Year On
Evan Osnos on Tiananmen, Protests in America and Political Leadership
GM Corn Smuggled in Popcorn Bags: An Industrial Espionage Parable
AI Basic Research in China and the US
Health QR Codes and the rise of a 'Digital Leviathan'
Coronastories 3: Nanjing, Nepal, and Singapore
Forging an Innovation Base Alliance
Coronastories 2: Philippines, Russia, Taiwan
Coronastories: Dispatches from Shanghai, Beijing and Hong Kong
Domestic Coronavirus Propaganda and China-Australia Relations
How the Party Takes its Propaganda Global
Sinocism's Bill Bishop on the Politics of Coronavirus
How Chinese Governance Fundamentals Impact Health Care and National Security
Outraged by the outbreak: Citizen journalism and coronavirus censorship
Tesla’s future in China, technology tensions, and the trade war on ‘pause’
Out of the Gobi: Weijian Shan on the Cultural Revolution, economic reform, and U.S.-China ties
The changing nature of U.S.-China tech competition
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