Sec. 2. Sense of Congress
339 words·~2 min read·
/bill/116/hr/704/ih/section-2A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
It is the sense of Congress that— since joining the World Trade Organization in 2001, the People’s Republic of China has offered the United States a contradictory bargain, which promised openness in the global trade order, but through state mercantilism delivered a severely imbalanced trading relationship; it was erroneous for the United States Government to have ignored the contradictions and risks of free trade with the People’s Republic of China on the assumption that the People’s Republic of China would liberalize economically and politically; benefitting enormously from a more open global economy to drive its own industries, the Government of the People’s Republic of China and the Communist Party of the People’s Republic of China have only tightened their grip on power, brutally suppressing dissent at home and pursuing policies abroad that are a far cry from being a responsible global stakeholder; malevolent economic behavior by persons in the People’s Republic of China is made clear by the theft of intellectual property from the United States, as Chinese theft of United States intellectual property alone costs the United States nearly $600,000,000,000 annually, according to the United States Trade Representative; stealing United States intellectual property advances the Made in China 2025 initiative of the Government of the People’s Republic of China to eventually dominate global exports in 10 critical sectors, namely artificial intelligence and next-generation information technology, robotics, new-energy vehicles, biotechnology, energy and power generation, aerospace, high-tech shipping, advanced railway, new materials, and agricultural machinery, among others; the targets of the Made in China 2025 initiative reveal the goal of the People’s Republic of China for the near-total displacement of advanced manufacturing in the United States; and the United States Government should act to strengthen the position of the United States in its policy toward the People’s Republic of China in order to create a more balanced economic relationship by safeguarding strategic assets from Chinese influence, reducing Chinese involvement in the United States economy, and encouraging United States companies to produce domestically, instead of in the People’s Republic of China.