american universities under the guise of students. meanwhile, joe biden travels to poland next week to mark the one-year anniversary of the russian invasion of ukraine. he's going to promise more support for kyivw, it's a reasonable question to ask even as we seek to defend ukraine, is it possible that our military resources are being depleted and our priorities being skewed away from what seems to be the growing and larger threat from our strategic adversary, china? here to take all this up, washington times opinion editor charles hurt and strive asset manager and cochair vivek ramaswamy. charles, do you detect a sense of complacency by the biden administration? >> well, i think without a doubt. and, you know, there are kind of two things here. the first thing, of course, is the threat of the balloon itself and the information that it collected as it traveled across the country. but the far larger problem, i think, is what you're talking about which is this whole idea that the biden administration doesn't seem to have any strategy whatsoever. it is the a, as you point out, a worrying complacency about china. but then the other side ofs the, my goodness, china has to be laughing at us right no