China Threatens America – Their Tech Infiltration Is Getting Dangerous

China’s technological infiltration poses an urgent national security risk to the United States, with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) weaponizing apps like TikTok and AI tools like DeepSeek to spy on Americans, per a Monday opinion piece by Rep. Mark Green (R-TN) in TheBlaze. Green, chairman of the House Committee on Homeland Security, warns the CCP uses these tools to collect data on military sites, critical infrastructure, and citizens, exploiting U.S. innovation for espionage. For conservatives, this is a clarion call to action, proving Trump’s America First agenda must counter Beijing’s digital warfare to protect national sovereignty.
Green’s column, “China’s Tech Infiltration Poses an Urgent National Security Risk,” details how TikTok, owned by CCP-linked ByteDance, functions as spyware, harvesting user data like contacts, photos, and keystrokes, per an Epoch Times investigation cited in the piece. He notes Beijing accesses metadata on military bases, population centers, and utilities, creating a “detailed map with targets marked,” per Green’s analysis. DeepSeek, an AI model, stores data on China-based servers and suffered a breach exposing chat histories, per a Wiz cybersecurity report, per TheBlaze.
“The Chinese Communist Party has weaponized TikTok, DeepSeek, and other tools to wage digital warfare,” Green wrote. “The U.S. must act now to stop Beijing from exploiting American innovation.”
He cites Huawei’s 5G risks, per a February 2025 Council on Foreign Relations report, where U.S. bans stem from espionage fears, and proposes the China Technology Transfer Control Act to block China’s military access to U.S. tech, per his Blaze piece. This threat follows Trump’s January border policies, slashing illegal crossings over 90%, per Border Patrol data, and DHS Secretary Kristi Noem’s Gitmo deportations, per her “Hannity” remarks.
“We have hundreds of thousands of criminals that were let illegally into this country,” Noem said. “That means they have criminal records. They’ve perpetuated crimes in this country.”
Posts on X cheered—one user wrote, “Green’s right—China’s spying via TikTok—Trump must ban it now.” Another added, “Biden let Beijing run wild—Trump’s fixing it with security.”
Republicans see this as a lifeline. Biden’s lax policies let 8.5 million illegal immigrants cross, per CBP, while deficits pushed the national debt past $35 trillion, per Treasury data. Trump’s January 20 “emergency price relief” memo, Title 42 revival, and DOGE’s $55 billion cuts signal the fix—secure borders, protect tech, and prioritize Americans. Green’s warning aligns with last week’s Keystone XL revival, boosting energy, per Breitbart, showing national focus.
The left’s crying foul, with Senate Democrats and tech advocates calling it “xenophobic” and vowing opposition, per a Monday AP report. Too bad—conservatives see this as a defense of liberty, not fear. Legal challenges loom, with over 70 suits targeting Trump’s moves—like a Tuesday block on Education records—but Republicans aren’t deterred. With Congress pushing reconciliation and FBI Director Kash Patel releasing Epstein files, the GOP’s ready to back Trump’s vision, ensuring America’s tech sovereignty thrives, as voters demanded in 2024.
Green’s piece cites a Rutgers study showing TikTok amplifying pro-CCP content while suppressing dissent, per CSIS’s March 2024 report, and notes Biden’s 2021 Executive Order 14034 failed to stop data flows, per Carnegie Endowment’s January 2025 analysis. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis’ February DOGE task force and USDA Secretary Brooke L. Rollins’ SNAP crackdown show the state-federal alignment. With DHS troops at the border and Noem’s raids, conservatives are ready to defend this push, ensuring America leads in tech security against China’s threats.
This defense is a vital triumph for America, safeguarding our innovation and security from Beijing’s predatory tactics.