China expert talks dark side of Chinese auto industry: Spying, slave labor, killing the U.S. car market
'We should not be enriching a hostile state that has declared the United States to be its enemy,' Chang declared in a new interview
China expert Gordon Chang is lifting the veil on the dark side of the Chinese electric vehicle industry, claiming that it threatens to choke out the U.S automotive industry, will bring with it a whole new data collection apparatus to potentially spy on Americans, and will grow on the back of slave labor.
Chang, the Gatestone Institute senior fellow and author of "The Coming Collapse of China," spoke to Fox News Digital about what he believes are a whole host of dangers that will come from China’s major splash into the EV market.
The expert’s message comes as Chinese electric vehicle company BYD recently surpassed EV giant Tesla’s production for the second straight year, manufacturing over 3 million vehicles in 2023 compared to Tesla’s 1.84 million.
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It’s not just Chinese electric vehicles that could be compromising your data, automotive expert says
Automotive expert Mike Caudill discussed the potential concerns around EVs and how consumer data is handled.
Other auto industry experts have raised similar alarms about Chinese EVs.
Auto guru Mike Caudill previously told Fox News Digital, "Chinese EVs could be equipped with even more powerful spying equipment. They could go anywhere, including military bases, power plants and cellphone towers. EVs would be far more effective than spy balloons at collecting important data, and at far lower cost – because Americans would be purchasing these vehicles."
Chang also mentioned that the parts used in manufacturing Chinese EVs, and other Chinese products, come from slave labor.
"The one concern we have with Chinese-made parts is forced and slave labor. So, for instance, we know, from studies that virtually all of the solar panels made in China are made with such labor. And that is completely unacceptable," he declared.
Chang asserted that Americans shouldn’t want to contribute to the economic growth of a nation hostile to it in general.
"The point is, we should be focusing on American manufacturing right now," he declared.
The argument against handing China a global monopoly on trade is about 30 years too late. The fact that virtually all countries' leaders are complicit in making this happen will continue to be ignored. This coming from someone who worked for several US manufacturers of electronics driven out of business by Chinese corruption and illegal product dumping.
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