Chinese military vehicles use structured identification markings that reveal far more than simple unit numbers—they expose the entire organizational hierarchy of the People’s Liberation Army. From ...
Even though relations between China and America remain tense, many young Americans’ perspectives seem to be shifting as they adopt Chinese cultural habits. The online trend, dubbed Chinamaxxing, has ...
In recent years, Chinese official discourse has increasingly used the term “social governance” (社會管治) to describe policies in the Uyghur region (Xinjiang) of China. This seemingly neutral ...
Celebrate the Lunar New Year with a touch of tradition as we welcome a special guest from the First Chinese Baptist Church of San Antonio to demonstrate Chinese calligraphy. Learn the art of ...
Put down your brooms, cancel that hair appointment and hold your horses because Lunar New Year is here, ushering in the Year of the Fire Horse. And at Lan Su Chinese Garden, holding your horses is ...
If you’ve been online at all in the past couple of months, you’ve probably seen videos of people claiming to be at a “very Chinese time” in their life. I, for one, have been inundated with hundreds of ...
Lunar New Year, often called the Spring Festival or Chinese New Year, is the most important holiday in China and many other Asian communities. More than a dozen countries celebrate new year at this ...
Chinese Army vehicles carry hidden codes that reveal the structure and positioning of the People’s Liberation Army, from theater commands down to individual units. These tactical markings expose the ...
Chinese cars could be at an American dealership sooner than you think, and that’s good news for US consumers. Chinese car companies make more vehicles than anyone else on Earth and export more as well ...
The Chinese Year of the Fire Horse has a new, unexpected mascot: Draco Malfoy. Associating the Harry Potter antagonist with China’s Year of the Fire Horse might seem odd or whimsical. But it has much ...
Chinese open models are spreading fast, from Hugging Face to Silicon Valley. Here’s why that matters. MIT Technology Review’s What’s Next series looks across industries, trends, and technologies to ...
Think of the meme from Chinese American influencers as an absurdist joke, a wellness goal or an ironic expression of protest — or all of the above. Your ethnicity is beside the point. By Yan Zhuang If ...