China and Hollywood

John Stonestreet, Radio Host and Director of the Colson Center

In 2020, Chinese box office revenue officially surpassed that of North America. Shirli Li writes in the Atlantic, “Filmmakers and actors have always been subject to bosses who decide which movies get to soar at the box office….Now, more than ever before, that boss is Beijing.” 

Fast and Furious star John Cena demonstrated this deference in May when he posted a back-bending apology to China, in Mandarin, for calling Taiwan a country. Another example is the potential ban facing Marvel’s The Eternals because its director, Chloé Zhao, criticized the Chinese Communist Party … eight years ago. 

Repeatedly, U.S. film companies posture as courageous defenders of human rights when they vocally oppose laws in states like GeorgiaNorth Carolina, and Texas. But then they’re deafeningly silent about doing business in China, a country actively imprisoning more than one million Uyghur Muslims, hiding the presence of massive slave labor camps and no freedom of any kind when it comes to journalism. Hollywood, it seems, mostly just listens to the money. 

The hope has always been that Western values would somehow infiltrate China and change it from the inside. But the opposite is happening. There’s nothing like the allure of massive profit to drown out our collective conscience.

Copyright 2021 by the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. Reprinted from BreakPoint.org with permission.

Legislature Passes Measures Addressing COVID-19 Vaccine Mandates

On Wednesday the Arkansas Senate passed H.B. 1977 by Rep. Joshua Bryant and Sen. Bob Ballinger, and the Arkansas House passed S.B. 739 by Sen. Kim Hammer and Rep. Joshua Bryant.

The two bills are virtually identical.

Both of them require employers to provide certain exemptions from COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

Under these measures, if an employer mandates COVID-19 vaccines, employees who decline to receive the vaccine could instead provide a negative COVID test to their employer on a regular basis or provide proof of natural immunity from a healthcare provider.

You can read H.B. 1977 here.

You can read S.B. 739 here.

Both bills have passed in the entire Arkansas Legislature. The next step is for one or both of them to go to the governor’s desk to be signed into law.

Arkansas Leads The Nation In New Abortion Restrictions: Guttmacher Institute

The pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute reports that states across America have passed a total of 106 new restrictions on abortion so far this year.

Leading the nation is Arkansas, which according to Guttmacher, has enacted 20 anti-abortion policies since January.

As Family Council previously reported, the Arkansas Legislature approved a record number of pro-life laws last spring.

These new laws could save thousands of women and unborn children from abortion for years to come. That’s something to celebrate.

According to the Guttmacher Institute, Oklahoma, Indiana, Montana and South Dakota have passed several pro-life measures this year — and other states have as well.

Some of Arkansas’ new pro-life laws are currently being litigated in federal court. Those lawsuits could lead to landmark, pro-life victories that may pave the way for Arkansas and other states to pass future legislation protecting women and children from abortion.

Pro-abortion groups rallied in Arkansas last weekend — but so did pro-lifers who are participating in 40 Days for Life and the annual Life Chain in Arkansas.

Planned Parenthood operates an abortion facility in Little Rock, and the group wants to perform abortions at its newest center in Rogers — but pro-lifers are opening pregnancy resource centers next door to both facilities.

And let’s not forget that abortion in Arkansas has been in decline since the 1990s.

As of 2020, Arkansas’ abortion numbers remain near historic lows, and public opinion polling shows most Arkansans believe abortion ought to be completely illegal or legal only under certain circumstances.

Slowly but surely, we’re winning the fight to protect innocent human life in Arkansas.

Photo Credit: American Life LeagueCC BY-NC 2.0, via Flickr.com. No changes were made to the image.