How HarmonyOS Next Forces Developers to Adapt or Lose Users

Huawei’s HarmonyOS, particularly HarmonyOS Next, is reshaping how overseas developers engage with its ecosystem—not through persuasion, but by making non-participation economically unviable in select regions. Rather than seeking Western approval, Huawei is focused on establishing a parallel ecosystem in which Chinese and regional apps become the default, especially across the Global South. Developers are compelled … Read more

China-West Tensions: Fear, History, and Cognitive Bias

At its core, the tension between China and the West is not primarily ideological, military, or economic—it is psychological. The underlying driver is fear, shaped by the West’s historical experience of rising to power through conquest, colonization, and external domination. Accustomed to interpreting global influence through this lens, Western powers often assume that any ascending … Read more

Why China and the West Think Differently: Roots of the Divide

The vast, commanding landscape of the Guanzhong Plain, nestled between the Qinling Mountains, offers a striking contrast to the intimate, enclosed regions of southern China, shaped by rivers, hills, and coastlines. This geographic divide not only defines the diverse internal landscapes of China but also lays the foundation for fundamentally different ways of living and … Read more

Can China Still Build Another Huawei in Today’s World?

China will still generate major, highly successful companies, but they are more likely to arise from capital-driven growth and platform expansion—such as ByteDance or Tencent—rather than from the kind of organically built industrial powerhouse represented by Huawei. The specific historical, political, and economic conditions that enabled Huawei’s rise are unlikely to occur again, meaning future … Read more

The Big Idea Famine: How the U.S. Undermined Its Own Power

Over the past several decades, the West—especially the United States—has drifted into what anthropologist David Graeber termed a “big idea famine,” marked by a decline in transformative innovation despite abundant capital and talent. Military and strategic technological progress has slowed as ethical hesitation, bureaucratic inertia, and weak prioritization constrain experimentation, while the civilian tech sector … Read more

Can the U.S. Revive Its Cold War–Era Tech Republic?

In The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West (2025), Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska argue that the United States, particularly Silicon Valley, has the potential to revive a mission-driven technological culture, but only by breaking free from the ideological constraints that have dominated since the 1980s. These … Read more

Why “The Technological Republic” Sparks Anxiety Over China

In The Technological Republic (2025), Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska explore Western, particularly U.S., anxiety over China, framing it as a strategic concern rather than a mere cultural or economic rivalry. The authors argue that this anxiety stems from a fear of losing technological, military, and geopolitical dominance at a time when the … Read more

Why China Builds Hard Tech While Silicon Valley Builds Apps

In The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West (2025), Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska argue that Western technology ecosystems—most notably Silicon Valley—drifted away from strategically consequential “hard tech,” becoming instead preoccupied with convenience, lifestyle innovation, and short-term shareholder value. This shift, they contend, left critical domains of … Read more

China’s Role in The Technological Republic: A Wake-Up Call

In The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West (2025), Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska present China not only as a technological and commercial rival, but as the central catalyst for a profound moment of reckoning for the West. While the prevailing discourse in Silicon Valley often vacillates … Read more

Why Karp & Zamiska Highlight Singapore, Not China

In The Technological Republic (2025), Alexander C. Karp and Nicholas W. Zamiska’s decision to elevate Lee Kuan Yew and Singapore—rather than China—as a model is neither accidental nor superficial. It reflects the book’s core strategic and ideological purpose: to critique Western decline while arguing for renewal from within the Western civilizational tradition. By highlighting Singapore, … Read more