China is leveraging its influence to cow criticism of its avaricious projects in one of the world’s most fragile regions.
What we talk about when we talk about “sensitivity”
The sensitivity of political reform in China is undeniable but using it to justify inaction is indefensible: an essay from China Unofficial Archives.
Letter shows Biden administration privately warned B.C. on fentanyl threat
Years before FBI Director Kash Patel’s public bombshells, a 2023 diplomatic letter dispels the notion that concerns about Vancouver’s role as a fentanyl hub are partisan or exclusive to Trump-era rhetoric.
Dai Qing’s revised “Deng Xiaoping in 1989”
In honour of June Fourth, we release excerpts from the second revised edition of “Deng Xiaoping in 1989” by investigative journalist Dai Qing—a work that combats the historical erasure of the Tiananmen crisis.
How China’s state-linked drug networks engineered a ‘reverse opium war’
DEA veteran Don Im’s exposé uncovers a deadly fusion of crime, commerce, and state power industrializing addiction and corruption, echoing historical drug empires but amplified by globalization.
Bordered by denial
Ottawa’s inaction as Canada becomes a fentanyl source state. Garry Clement, a former senior RCMP officer, breaks down Canada’s security crisis.
China’s new COVID‑19 report exposes CCP’s biggest fear: analyst
A former U.S. Army microbiologist describes the report as a classic example of Beijing’s cognitive warfare waged against the United States.
Pursuing the truth about June 4
A seminar on the events of June 4, 1989, calls on the CCP to redress victims, repatriate exiles, and advance reforms for a peaceful, free future.
Ex-district councilor arrested under Article 23 says she is being ‘silenced’
A former Hong Kong district councilor arrested under Article 23 (but not charged), claims systemic repression after losing an acting role and teaching job within 24 hours.
Canada’s missing intelligence command
A 2024 review of the RCMP’s response to the pandemic-era “freedom convoy” takes on new relevance after FBI warnings.
The mandates of the managerial state
“If you want to see how the managerial state (dys)functions, Canada is the place to be.”
Shake-ups in China’s military—is Xi’s power weakening?
The replacement of executives could be corruption-related and used by CCP factions to pressure Chinese leader Xi Jinping, according to experts.
Carney meets Trump, Canada’s continued decline
Sam Cooper of The Bureau unpacks Prime Minister Carney’s recent meeting with President Trump and the alleged Liberal connections to CCP linked organized crime groups operating openly in Canada.
Uncovering Chinese academic espionage at Stanford
A student-run newspaper investigation reveals the CCP is orchestrating a widespread intelligence-gathering campaign at Stanford University. In short, there are Chinese spies at Stanford.
Green tyranny
Does Mark Carney’s climate agenda risk trading economic vitality for ideologically driven globalism?


