Publications
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April 21, 2026|Blogs
China’s Military Is Cashing in on America’s Open Economy
Chinese firms with ties to Beijing—and in some cases China’s military—are quietly exploiting America’s open economy, taxpayer support, and weak post-acquisition oversight, and Congress should close those loopholes before more U.S. innovation and industrial capacity are used to advance China’s strategic aims.
April 21, 2026|Blogs
Congress Flags Korea’s Discriminatory Digital Policies
54 members of Congress just told Korea: stop targeting American tech companies — or risk the alliance itself.
April 20, 2026|Blogs
Fact of the Week: Researchers on the International Space Station Have Produced 4,000 Research Papers Since 2000
Over the past 26 years, researchers on the International Space Station have produced roughly 4,000 research papers and have helped to develop treatments for several diseases, including cancer, Alzheimer’s, and heart disease.
April 20, 2026|Reports & Briefings
Explaining the Relative Competitive Decline of America’s Automotive Industry
The competitiveness of the auto industry of the United States has waxed and waned over the past 60 years and is clearly not the globally dominant behemoth it once was. To bolster the industry’s competitiveness, policymakers first must understand why it has faltered and the challenges it faces moving forward.
April 20, 2026|Blogs
Congress Should Support Innovation in Freight Rail, Not Stand in Its Way
The U.S. government needs to do what many nations around the world are already doing by leaning into rail technologies such as positive track control and automated track inspection, not resisting them on behalf of special interests.
April 17, 2026|Commentary
Federal Government Should Partner With Frontier AI Labs on Cybersecurity Defense
While the U.S. has focused on securing AI systems themselves, it must urgently shift toward using AI defensively—through coordinated government, industry, and infrastructure efforts—to counter the growing threat of AI-powered cyberattacks on existing systems.
April 16, 2026|Blogs
No, AI Will Not Skyrocket Income Inequality
AI is supposedly going to make America’s current level of income inequality explode. That will not happen. The idea rests on far-fetched assumptions about monopolies, mass job loss, and winner-take-all dynamics that AI won’t change.
April 16, 2026|Testimonies & Filings
Comments to the House Oversight Committee Regarding Artificial Intelligence and American Power
AI is a general-purpose technology with tremendous promise. But U.S. AI leadership and adoption is by no means assured, because there is intense international competition.
April 15, 2026|Testimonies & Filings
Comments to USTR Regarding Section 301 Investigations of Certain Economies’ Structural Excess Capacity and Production in Manufacturing Sectors
This Section 301 investigation rightly focuses on structural excess capacity. But its scope encompasses 16 economies rather than narrowly addressing the core cause of global trade upheaval—China’s mercantilism—thereby risking dilution of the blame for the country responsible for causing the need to recalibrate the global system.
April 15, 2026|Reports & Briefings
The Promise of Wearable AI: Opportunities Across Emergency Response
Wearable AI improves safety and outcomes for both first responders and the public they serve. Broader adoption of wearable AI for the emergency services industry will protect the health of first responders, improve emergency response, and create safer communities.
