<code id='5A806EF673'></code><style id='5A806EF673'></style>
    • <acronym id='5A806EF673'></acronym>
      <center id='5A806EF673'><center id='5A806EF673'><tfoot id='5A806EF673'></tfoot></center><abbr id='5A806EF673'><dir id='5A806EF673'><tfoot id='5A806EF673'></tfoot><noframes id='5A806EF673'>

    • <optgroup id='5A806EF673'><strike id='5A806EF673'><sup id='5A806EF673'></sup></strike><code id='5A806EF673'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='5A806EF673'><label id='5A806EF673'><select id='5A806EF673'><dt id='5A806EF673'><span id='5A806EF673'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='5A806EF673'></u>
          <i id='5A806EF673'><strike id='5A806EF673'><tt id='5A806EF673'><pre id='5A806EF673'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          knowledge

          knowledge

          author:comprehensive    Page View:417
          om DiLenge (CQ in grey suit ) Flagship Pioneering Cambridge with US Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois were talking together at the event. Biotech companies demonstrating their medicines and materials at a "tech fair" designed to showcase the need to compete with Chinese biotech held at Harvard Kennedy School in Cambridge. The growing US backlash against the perceived national security threat posed by China's rising biotech industry
          Tom DiLenge of Flagship Pioneering (left) with U.S. Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi of Illinois at a "tech fair" designed to showcase the need to compete with Chinese biotech held at Harvard Kennedy School in Cambridge, Mass. David L Ryan/The Boston Globe

          CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — The increasingly adversarial relationship between the United States and China has raised national security concerns about Chinese penetration into key sectors of the U.S. economy, such as technology, manufacturing, and clean energy.

          Now, some in Congress are raising alarms about China’s threat to another vital industry: biotechnology.

          advertisement

          A bipartisan group of lawmakers visited Massachusetts this week to call attention to that threat and call for strengthening U.S. life sciences companies, protecting their technologies, and safeguarding Americans’ genetic data from a Chinese biotech industry with close ties to the authoritarian state.

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          ChatGPT in medicine: STAT answers readers' burning questions
          ChatGPT in medicine: STAT answers readers' burning questions

          MikeReddyforSTATArtificialintelligenceisoftendescribedasablackbox:anunknowable,mysteriousforcethatop

          read more
          2 US Navy sailors arrested for allegedly spying for China
          2 US Navy sailors arrested for allegedly spying for China

          2:23TheWasp-classamphibiousassaultshipUSSEssex(LHD2)transitstheArabianGulfonOct.9,2015.U.S.NavyPhoto

          read more
          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap
          In age of alternative facts, a scholarly course on calling out crap

          Screenshotviacallingbullshit.orgTiredofalternativefacts,fakenews,andbreathlesshyperbole,twoprofessor

          read more

          Can food be medicine? And other questions about a new push

          MollyFergusonforSTATWASHINGTON—Afternearly40yearsofobscurity,the“foodismedicine”movementishavingamom