Investigation Shows Birth Tourism Centers Operating on American Soil

A new investigation shows Chinese birth tourism centers are operating on U.S. soil — and the problem may be bigger than most Americans realize.

We have written repeatedly how commercial surrogacy laws in the U.S. make it possible for corporations and wealthy couples pay women thousands of dollars to carry children for them, and news outlets report Chinese nationals are exploiting America’s largely unregulated surrogacy industry to acquire children born in the U.S. with U.S. citizenship. But concerns over “birth tourism” are growing in other ways.

The Daily Wire recently visited several homes in Houston that the State of Texas says are helping Chinese nationals travel to the U.S. on tourist visas “for the sole purpose of giving birth.” The homes are tied to a birthing center that has allegedly facilitated the births of more than 1,000 American-born babies who are then taken back to China. Because the children are born on U.S. soil, they receive birthright citizenship — even though the parents intend to raise the children in China.

This is not a small or isolated problem. Peter Schweizer, President of the Government Accountability Institute, testified before the U.S. Senate in March that between 750,000 and 1.5 million Chinese babies have been born in the U.S. specifically to obtain American citizenship — with the intention of being raised in China. In his testimony, Schweizer said:

These individuals grow up in China, often educated in CCP-controlled schools with distorted views of U.S. history, values, and culture. They have no lived connection or demonstrated allegiance to our country, yet they possess full rights as U.S. citizens: the ability to vote in elections, relocate here at will, and—upon turning 21—sponsor their parents as permanent residents.

In his testimony, Schweizer also pointed out how some birth tourism is carried out by people traveling to the U.S. on tourist visas while other birth tourism is committed by hiring commercial surrogates to bear children in the U.S.

Birth tourism wrongly exploits birthright citizenship, which is a legal principle meant to protect people born in the U.S. When it’s done in conjunction with commercial surrogacy, it also demeans women and children.

Social commentators and policymakers worldwide have raised concerns about how commercial surrogacy financially pressures women into providing children for paying customers.

Commercial surrogacy deliberately deprives children of their biological mothers or fathers.

It treats pregnancy like a “service” that can be purchased.

It treats women like commodities, and it treats children like products that can be made to order and sold for profit.

Commercial surrogacy also relies heavily on in vitro fertilization and other reproductive technologies that have serious problems of their own.

That’s part of the reason Family Council has opposed commercial surrogacy in Arkansas.

Human beings are not products that can be made to order, bought, or sold. Our laws need to respect that fact. Policymakers should take steps to address commercial surrogacy and “birth tourism” in America.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

China Working to Infiltrate U.S., Rewrite the Bible

Different news outlets have reported recently about China’s efforts to infiltrate the United States and squelch religious liberty and free speech both in its own country and abroad.

The mayor of Arcadia, California, recently resigned after pleading guilty to working as a foreign agent for China.

Last week, a federal court in Brooklyn convicted Lu Jianwang, a U.S. citizen, of running a secret Chinese police station for the People’s Republic of China. Authorities say Jianwang used the secret police station in New York City to “target PRC dissidents in furtherance of the Chinese government’s political agenda.”

CBS New reports lawmakers are cracking down on China’s efforts to buy U.S. farmland and property near U.S. military installations. Chinese ownership of farmland threatens America’s food security as well as its national security.

While China works to spread its influence in America, the Chinese Communist Party is infringing religious liberty and free speech in its own country through its ongoing efforts to rewrite the Bible. In 2018, Xi Jinping announced a campaign to “sinicize” Christianity — meaning, to make Christianity align with China’s core values and beliefs.

The Chinese Communist Party is currently working on its own translation of what it calls the “Chinese Christian Bible,” which drastically twists scripture.

And last year, CBN reported the CCP is requiring churches to ensure their doctrine is consistent with Communist principles.

 Chinese organized crime is also dominating black market marijuana in states where marijuana is legal.

NPR has reported that illegal immigrants from China “are taking jobs at hundreds of cannabis farms springing up across the U.S.”

And CBS News has highlighted how Chinese investment is driving illegal marijuana production across the U.S.

For years, pundits and elected officials have expressed concerns about the Chinese Communist Party conducting espionage and stealing intellectual property in the U.S.

In July of 2020, FBI Director Christopher Wray gave a report on the threat China poses, saying, “If you are an American adult, it is more likely than not that China has stolen your personal data.”

In 2021 the U.S. Senate passed a measure intended to clamp down on Chinese propaganda on America’s college campuses.

In 2021 the Arkansas Legislature passed Act 1020 by Sen. Mark Johnson and Rep. Mary Bentley prohibiting schools in Arkansas from hosting any entity affiliated with the People’s Republic of China, the Chinese Communist Party, or China’s People’s Liberation Army. The law helps keep organizations associated with the Chinese Communist Party away from Arkansas’ college campuses.

Arkansas has also taken steps to prevent China from buying its farmland and to crack down on Chinese-owned tech companies that may share sensitive user data with the CCP.

It’s important for Arkansans to understand the threat that foreign entities like the Chinese Communist Party pose here at home — and how our policymakers may be able to take steps to protect citizens from those threats.

We appreciate Arkansas’ elected leaders and their willingness to safeguard Arkansans from foreign influences like the CCP.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Arkansas Attorney General Has New Legal Counsel Take Over Lawsuit Against Temu

Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin’s office has new legal counsel overseeing its court battle against Chinese company Temu for allegedly deceiving Arkansans and illegally accessing their personal data.

Temu is an online shopping platform similar to Amazon or Walmart.com. In 2023, Temu was reported to be the most widely downloaded app in the U.S., and its multibillion-dollar marketing campaign — which included a Super Bowl ad in 2024 — contributed to its success.

But as a Chinese-based tech company, security and privacy experts have raised concerns about Temu.

The A.G.’s lawsuit against Temu—first filed in 2024—argues Temu’s app secretly harvests Arkansans’ private information—including precise location, installed apps, online accounts, microphones, and cameras—and funnels it to servers subject to Chinese laws.

The A.G.’s team has also alleged that the Temu app is able to bypass phone security systems, potentially granting Temu access to a user’s private messages.

The A.G. maintains that all of this is unconscionable under the Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act, which carries a penalty of $10,000 per violation.

Senior Assistant Attorney General Matthew Ford was the A.G.’s legal counsel on the case, but Mr. Ford withdrew last year after leaving the A.G.’s office. Earlier this month, Senior Assistant Attorney General Brittany Edwards filed paperwork with the court indicating she would be the attorney of record in the future.

It’s worth pointing out the A.G.’s allegations against Temu are very similar to points the A.G.’s office has made in its lawsuits against TikTok — another widely popular internet platform owned by a Chinese company.

Family Council is not aware of any attorney general in America who is doing more to hold tech companies accountable than Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin.

Bad actors like the Chinese Communist Party must not be allowed to secretly harvest Americans’ private data.

We appreciate Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin’s office for continuing to pursue this case so seriously in court.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.