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America holds the advantage as Trump meets Xi in high-stakes summit
President Donald Trump arrives in Beijing with a strong hand to play in talks with China’s President Xi Jinping. It’s all due to his military and trade moves over the past 16 months.
Of course, to read the press, you’d think doom awaits. “Xi is confident in his country’s power; Trump is weakened with U.S. mired in war,” fretted The Washington Post on Monday, May 11. From New York, the Council on Foreign Relations asserted on Sunday that at the Trump-Xi summit, China will have the upper hand. The general take is that Trump is reeling from the Iran war, while Xi is some sort of mastermind, ready to hop into global leadership. “Xi wants to project China as a more reliable and responsible counterweight to U.S. volatility,” as the Post put it.
You’ve got to be kidding me. The reality is that Trump has put America in a much stronger geopolitical position versus China. Last spring, China was yanking export licenses for critical minerals and jeopardizing factory production around the globe. Now, the U.S. Navy sits athwart China’s No. 1 oil route in the Strait of Hormuz. That’s a new poker hand.
Xi has spent the past year purging military officers, dealing with a slowing economy, and coping with China’s lag in the AI race by turning inward.
TRUMP HEADS TO CHINA WITH THE UPPER HAND — AND XI KNOWS IT
In contrast, Trump has cut trade deals around the world attracting trillions of dollars in foreign investment. He’s clobbered Iran’s military and ended the rule of Chinese chum Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela. The U.S. Pacific Fleet has intercepted illicit shadow tankers bound for China’s teapot refineries that sneak in oil from Iran and Russia. The sophisticated display of military power in Operation Epic Fury made eyeballs pop in China’s People’s Liberation Army.
China experts caution Trump is forfeiting prestige by meeting on Xi’s home turf. But for Trump, it’s irresistible. Accompanying Trump to Beijing is an American dream team of CEOs who dominate everything from low Earth orbit (that’s Elon Musk of Tesla and SpaceX) to top-grade aircraft engines (that’s Larry Culp of GE Aerospace.)
He wants to look Xi Jinping in the eye, and there is no substitute for sitting down at a negotiating table.
MARTIN GURRI: LET’S LOOK AT ALL THE GLOBAL BENEFITS TRUMP REAPED BY GRABBING MADURO
Watch for four major moves in Beijing.
This is a business trip. Team Trump hates what China’s rise did to the USA. Here’s the good news. “Our trade deficit in goods with China fell to $202 billion in 2025—the lowest it has been since 2004. And China’s share of total U.S. imports fell to about 9 percent, the lowest it has been since China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001,” U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer testified Apr. 28.
LIZ PEEK: TRUMP’S MAJOR TRADE WINS COULD BE ROCKET FUEL TO US ECONOMY
What Trump wants now is a stable, balanced and civil relationship with China. His plan is managed trade: a new policy where the U.S. and China negotiate tariffs sector by sector and expand trade on non-sensitive goods.
Agriculture is at the top of the list, including exports of soybeans, dairy, and corn. Farmers are hoping for a long-term deal with China – although China has failed to live up to similar promises in the past. Aviation watchers predict Boeing could sell China up to 500 airliners and CEO Kelly Ortberg will be on the trip. This is all part of Trump’s plan to narrow the trade deficit. Trump wants America positioned for maximum sales.
TAIWAN WATCHES TRUMP-XI MEETING FOR SIGNS CHINA WILL TEST US RESOLVE
Trump will come down hard on China for selling Iran sodium perchlorate and other chemicals for ballistic missile fuels. Beijing is already anxious. Secretary of State Marco Rubio just slapped sanctions on Chinese satellite imagery companies and on Qingdao Haiye Oil Terminal Co., which receives Iranian oil. Dwindling oil could hit plastics and chemicals industries and stunt Chinese economic growth.
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Trump and Xi may chit-chat about AI safety, but the U.S. should steer clear of so-called agreements. The U.S. must win the AI race. As of May 1, 2026, the U.S. government’s National Institute of Standards reports the best U.S. model, Open AI GPT 5.5, is approximately eight months ahead of China’s DeepSeek V4 Pro.
Whatever you think about AI, you don’t want a world where Xi Jinping sets AI standards. America’s best chance here is the unfettered success of our tech titans and start-ups. They are winning this race with model innovation, and by deploying the whole AI tech stack across global markets ahead of China. Only our U.S. tech sector has the money to compete with China.
China remains a formidable military competitor. China is once again landfilling for new bases in the South China Sea. China has doubled its nuclear missile arsenal from about 250 to over 600 weapons and massive expansion continues unabated. However, Trump’s blend of trade deals and military deterrence is proof positive of America’s unrivaled global leadership.
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‘Dutton Ranch’ star Cole Hauser says Rip Wheeler is a ‘throwback to the old school American man’
In a television landscape often defined by antiheroes and moral gray areas, Cole Hauser says Rip Wheeler stands apart.
The longtime actor, who reprises his fan-favorite “Yellowstone” role in Paramount+’s new series “Dutton Ranch,” told Fox News Digital that Rip was always designed to embody an older kind of masculinity rooted in loyalty, honesty and grit.
“I mean, there’s pieces,” Hauser said when asked how much of Rip reflects who he is in real life. “You know, obviously I don’t kill people, which is a good thing.”
“But, you know, I think what Taylor and I originally wanted to create is kind of a throwback to the old-school American man,” he continued. “And I think Rip is that. He’s extremely loyal. He’s honest. He has great honor. He loves, he fights. I mean, he is the epitome of a Montana man.”
WATCH: COLE HAUSER SAYS RIP WHEELER IS A ‘THROWBACK TO THE OLD-SCHOOL AMERICAN MAN’
“Dutton Ranch” marks the next chapter for Beth Dutton and Rip Wheeler after the massive success of “Yellowstone,” with Kelly Reilly and Hauser leading the Paramount+ spinoff alongside newcomers including Academy Award nominees Ed Harris and Annette Bening.
The new series follows Beth and Rip as they attempt to build a future together in Texas while facing new threats, rivalries and challenges far from Montana.
For Hauser, the role has always felt personal.
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The actor, who has long split time between Montana and Florida, said his connection to the West runs far deeper than the screen.
“Well, Florida is, I feel like I’m on vacation when I go home, which is what we wanted to create, my wife and I,” Hauser said. “Montana, my family has been there since 1886. So the Hauser legacy there is huge.”
“I mean, Samuel T. Hauser was the seventh governor of Montana, helped start that state,” he continued. “So going back there felt like a homecoming for me.”
Hauser previously told Havok Journal that he discovered more about his family history while visiting Montana with his son and had always felt deeply connected to the state before fully understanding why.
That personal connection helped shape the authenticity audiences came to associate with Rip Wheeler over the years.
WATCH: COLE HAUSER SAYS MONTANA ROOTS HELPED SHAPE HIS CONNECTION TO RIP WHEELER
KEVIN COSTNER REVEALS ‘TRAGIC’ TRUTHS UNCOVERED IN NEW DOCU-SERIES ‘THE WEST’
That authenticity, Hauser believes, is part of the reason audiences around the world connected so deeply with “Yellowstone” and Rip Wheeler.
Hauser believes the emotional attachment audiences have to “Yellowstone” and now “Dutton Ranch” goes beyond just cowboys and ranch life.
“You know, it’s interesting, you know, 10 years ago when we started this, it was really kind of a grassroots show in Montana and then, you know, we grew out to the edges, Los Angeles, now New York, and now the world,” Hauser said.
‘YELLOWSTONE’ STAR LUKE GRIMES TARGETED BY MONTANA LOCALS AS MOVE FROM LA SPARKS SMALL-TOWN FURY
“I mean, we were just in Europe and it’s amazing to watch, you know, the Germans dress up as cowboys, the English,” he continued. “I’ve been to Australia and New Zealand. I mean just how many people have been touched by it.”
Hauser credited creator Taylor Sheridan’s storytelling and the larger mythology of the American West for the franchise’s worldwide appeal.
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“I honestly don’t know other than the tremendous writing and storytelling of Taylor Sheridan,” he said. “I mean, he created unbelievable characters and Montana is a character in its own.”
“And I think people forget how beautiful the Old West is.”
MONTANA RANCH TIED TO ‘YELLOWSTONE’ UNIVERSE HITS MARKET FOR $16.3M
“Dutton Ranch” follows Beth and Rip as they leave Montana behind after the Dutton family sells the Yellowstone ranch, setting out to start over in Texas and trade everything they fought to protect for a far more unpredictable and unforgiving new frontier.
“God, this next iteration, I mean, it has such new challenges,” Hauser said. “Obviously the landscape of Texas, the heat, that was totally different, the new environment, the new characters that come in, the story.”
Still, Hauser said one thing remained essential while stepping back into Rip’s boots.
“What stayed consistent is Beth and Rip,” he said. “Kelly and I were very cognizant of making sure that those two characters continue to be the same polarizing, strong, loyal characters that they’ve always been.”
WATCH: ‘DUTTON RANCH’ DIRECTOR EXPLAINS HOW TEXAS TRANSFORMS THE WORLD OF THE SERIES
Director and executive producer Christina Alexandra Voros said the new setting helped reshape the visual identity of the franchise while preserving its emotional core.
“You weren’t in these soft, green, blue, cloud-topped mountains of Montana,” Voros told Fox News Digital. “You were in this sort of searing heat and dangerous dryness of Texas.”
Voros said the series ultimately becomes “a very classically Western trope of finding your new frontier or building a new legacy.”
WATCH: ‘DUTTON RANCH’ STARS CALL TEXAS MOVE ‘LIKE TAKING MATCHES TO A GASOLINE PARTY’
That evolution is also what actors Marc Menchaca and Juan Pablo Raba said makes the new series feel fresh despite remaining tied to the “Yellowstone” universe.
“It’s exciting watching two of their favorite characters, Beth and Rip, stepping into another world,” Raba told Fox News Digital. “Stepping into Texas. It’s got to be exciting, right? It’s like taking matches to a gasoline party.”
“Dutton Ranch” premieres May 15 on Paramount+ and the Paramount Network.
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Illegal immigrant who killed American woman outside her home walks free decades later – then into ICE custody
Immigrations and Customs Enforcement arrested a Vietnamese illegal immigrant after he was released from prison for murdering a Texas woman 30 years ago.
Nahn Tu Hoang killed then-32-year-old Sarah “Kathy” Arceneaux at her home in Port Arthur, Texas, on Feb. 29, 1996 when he shot her five times, according to ICE.
She was killed when Hoang and a group of friends went out drinking and decided to rob homes in the Port Arthur area, the agency said.
Hoang got access to a .22-caliber rifle, and the group went on a shooting spree firing shots at dogs and homes.
According to court documents, “Hoang testified that as he was walking to the front of the house, he was startled by a woman leaning over her dog. Hoang testified he was scared and started shooting. Hoang shot the woman five times, killing her.”
ICE called it a “horrific, tragic story” in a post on X announcing the arrest.
He was taken into custody by ICE on May 5 after being released from prison and is being held pending deportation.
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Scottie Scheffler’s shoes at PGA Championship pay tribute to one of the wildest stories in golf history
Scottie Scheffler will be wearing a pair of golf shoes with a two-word message printed on the bottom of them during the PGA Championship at Aronimink Golf Club this week, and it’s a tip of the cap to one of the wildest stories in golf history.
For years now, Nike has released special-edition golf shoes for each of the four major championships, and this week is no different. The Swoosh brand released three different models for the PGA Championship, all in the same colorway, and all with the word “lost” on the bottom of one shoe and “found” on the other.
The two words are a tribute to Walter Hagen, who won five PGA Championships in his historic career, but it’s specifically his third victory in 1925 and what quickly followed that this week’s shoes pay homage to.
After his victory in the then-match-play tournament at Olympia Fields, Hagen handed the Wanamaker Trophy to a cab driver and instructed him to take it to his hotel. The Wanamaker is among the largest trophies in sports, and toting it around for a night of celebration would turn into a challenge.
As it turns out, the trophy never made it to Hagen’s hotel. A major championship trophy was officially lost.
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Equal parts impressive and hilarious, Hagen went on to win the tournament in 1926 and 1927, meaning he was able to avoid having to tell anyone that he had no idea where the Wanamaker was.
According to the PGA, when Hagen arrived at the 1928 PGA, he told officials who asked where the Wanamaker was, “I will win it anyway, so I didn’t bring it.”
Hagen’s luck ran out that year when he lost to Leo Diegel in the quarterfinals at Baltimore Country Club, forcing him to admit that he had lost the trophy a full three years after it had gone missing.
Without a trophy to hand to Diegel, officials were forced to present him with the Maryland Cup Trophy sitting in the country club’s lobby.
All was not lost, at least not forever.
In October 1930, Hagen just so happened to stumble upon the Wanamaker Trophy he and everyone else thought would never be seen again.
“In Detroit last week. Hagen, while going through some old trunks, unearthed a bulky package. Lo, and behold! It was the P.G.A. trophy which had been lost and was found again,” a headline in the New York Evening Journal on Oct. 6, 1930, read.
There you have it, the story of the “lost and found” shoes that Scheffler and other Nike-sponsored players are wearing around Aronimink this week.
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