Where I Love is Becoming Where I Left | Lily Tang Williams
Lily Tang Williams, born in China to working-class parents who endured the hardships of Mao’s Cultural Revolution and Communist rule, found her long-sought freedom in America.
Lily Tang Williams, born in China to working-class parents who endured the hardships of Mao’s Cultural Revolution and Communist rule, found her long-sought freedom in America.
Countries such as Japan, the United Kingdom, and China are exploring how to use a CBDC, but NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden warned that the creation of CBDCs could annihilate the “savings of every wage-worker in the country.”
Keep learning the truth, and keep sharing the truth, and the Truth will keep us all free!
Xi Van Fleet’s presentation at the ‘With Liberty & Justice for All’ conference aims to provide a brief history of the Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) launched by China’s then dictator Mao Zedong.
On the Sunday Special episode of Human Events Daily, host Jack Posobiec spoke with Japanese YouTuber and International Journalist Masako Ganaha to discuss the ever-growing influence the CCP has in Japan and how some of that influence manifests through the World Economic Forum.
In this session from the “With Liberty and Justice for All” conference, host Michael O’Fallon, alongside a panel featuring James Lindsay, Xi Van Fleet, Lily Tang Williams, Cathy Kiang, Sau O’Fallon, and Mike Zho, engages in a stimulating discourse focused on the contemporary American cultural revolution.
“Algorithmic discrimination,”…defined as “instances when automated systems contribute to unjustified different treatments or impacts disfavoring people based on their actual or perceived race, color, ethnicity…”
Moving to America was the dream for liberty that Sau Fong O’Fallon’s family cherished, and was the happiest time of her parents’ life as they departed Hong Kong after leaving Communist China.
I’m excited to share my family’s journey from living in communist China to achieving the American Dream. One side of my family came from wealth, and the other from poverty.