I think if we look outside of our borders, we're seeing a rise of authoritarian countries and a decline of democracy. There are several powerful authoritarian states. Russia is one, but China is predominantly the most powerful right now. It has deep pockets. It's buying off other countries, and it's actually gaining a lot of influence with the United Nations. We see how it's held up any investigation of the COVID outbreak at the WHO, or how it took a year for the WHO team to arrive in China. We've seen some things going on at the Human Rights Council.
I'm saying that when an authoritarian state clearly doesn't believe in human rights—what's going on with the Uighurs, what's going on in Hong Kong and with other minorities—and is exporting those values with other authoritarian states, that's a big problem.
That's why President Biden recently said that we're going to see that democracies versus autocracies is going to be the fight of the century, and we're seeing more and more countries waking up and realizing that the power of China is so immense that it picks individual countries and just targets them. In the case of Australia, it's banning Australian wine imports and beef. Now they're going after iron ore, Australia's biggest export. It's using targeted economic measures, as well as arresting citizens, to get its way.