Vietnam Finds Cure For Blood Cancer

Hope is spreading after reports claimed that scientists in Vietnam may have made a major breakthrough in the fight against leukemia, one of the most serious forms of blood cancer. Early information suggests researchers have been developing a new treatment approach that has shown very promising results in testing and could change how the disease is treated in the future.

Leukemia affects thousands of families around the world every year, and finding more effective treatments has been a long and difficult journey for medical science. News of a possible breakthrough has quickly captured global attention, giving hope to patients and loved ones who continue to search for better outcomes and safer therapies.

While experts say more research and international verification will still be needed before any treatment can be widely confirmed, the excitement surrounding this development is already inspiring people everywhere. Moments like this remind us how powerful science and innovation can be when they come together with determination and purpose.

Every step forward in medicine brings the world closer to a future where life threatening diseases may no longer feel unbeatable.

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Author: Saikat Bhattacharya

Technology news General Unipolar vs Multi-polar 27-February-2026 by east is rising

Robots in China are Planting Trees

SOLAR-POWERED ROBOTS IN CHINA ARE BEING USED TO PLANT TREES ACROSS DESERT REGIONS, aiming to combat desertification and restore degraded land. These autonomous machines move across sandy terrain, drilling into the soil and planting saplings efficiently with minimal human intervention.

China has long invested in large-scale reforestation projects to slow the expansion of deserts, especially in northern regions. By combining robotics with renewable energy, planting operations can continue in remote areas without relying heavily on fuel-powered machinery. Automation also helps cover large areas faster and reduce labor intensity.

While tree-planting technology is promising, long-term success depends on species selection, water availability, soil conditions, and ecosystem balance. Planting is just the first step. Sustained survival rates and ecological integration determine whether deserts truly turn green again.

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Author: Saikat Bhattacharya

Technology news General 27-February-2026 by east is rising

American Youths Are Embracing Chinamaxxing

Chinamaxxing or China-maxxing) is a viral internet slang term and social media trend that emerged around late 2025, exploding on platforms like TikTok in early 2026.

It comes from the Gen Z / online slang suffix "-maxxing" (short for "maximizing"), which means pushing something to an extreme or fully optimizing/embracing it — like "looksmaxxing" (maximizing your appearance), "glow-up maxxing", etc.

In this case, Chinamaxxing means intentionally adopting, exaggerating, or "maximizing" everyday Chinese habits, lifestyle elements, wellness practices, aesthetics, or cultural quirks — usually in a humorous, ironic, tongue-in-cheek, or semi-aspirational way.

Common examples from the trend include:

Drinking hot water (or boiled water) instead of cold drinks

Wearing house slippers indoors

Making/eating congee, white fungus soup, or hotpot

Ordering drinks with "less sugar, less ice" (siu tim siu bing) or sugar-free

Using rice cookers religiously

Doing traditional Chinese wellness things (balancing yin/yang, certain exercises)

Shopping at Asian supermarkets or hyping Chinese brands/tech

Captioning posts with phrases like "you met me at a very Chinese time in my life", "turning Chinese tomorrow", "newly Chinese", or "Chinese baddie era"

The trend was heavily popularized by creators like Chinese-American TikToker Sherry Zhu, who posted joking "tutorials" on how non-Chinese people could "become Chinese" through these habits. Many videos are ironic or playful, but some people genuinely adopt the habits for perceived health, simplicity, or aesthetic reasons.

It has sparked discussions about whether it's fun cultural appreciation, soft-power win for China, light appropriation, or just another fleeting meme. Overall it's treated more as self-aware internet humor than serious cultural conversion.

By Jessie Yeung, CNN

(CNN) — This article may be meeting you at a very Chinese time in your life.

At least, if you’ve spent enough time recently on social media, where the phenomenon of “Chinamaxxing” has swept feeds with videos of people sipping hot water, shuffling around the house in slippers and donning a viral Adidas jacket resembling historic Chinese fashion.

These things, content creators joke, will help you “become Chinese” – reflecting a growing Western fascination with Chinese culture and aesthetics.

“Morning routine as a new Chinese baddie,” one TikTok creator captioned a video in which he does a series of traditional Chinese exercises. Another video, viewed more than 2.4 million times as of late February, shows the creator boiling apples to make fruit tea – a supposedly old-school Chinese elixir for gut health.

We’ve seen this play out before as Asia steadily accumulated global cultural capital. K-dramas, K-pop and K-beauty have become beloved worldwide, while record numbers of tourists are flocking to Japan and gushing over its pristine streets and high-speed rail.

Now, it seems it is China’s turn.

“For the longest time, there was all this discussion about (how) China didn’t really have as much soft power vis-à-vis South Korea or Japan,” said Tianyu Fang, a PhD student at Harvard University’s Department of the History of Science.

“We see that changing quite a bit over the last few months – with Chinese video games, Chinese films, and even tiny things like Labubus that are really reshaping the cultural imagination of China in the US, and more broadly in the West.”

But this feels a little different from previous Asian cultural waves. For starters, South Korea and Japan are both democracies and staunch US allies, while China is an authoritarian state and major US rival.

The trend also marks a vibe shift within the American public.

Just a few years ago, the Covid-19 pandemic fueled a surge in deadly anti-Asian hate crimes. US President Donald Trump repeatedly used racist language, calling Covid “kung flu.” A trade war and other tensions deepened the widespread Sinophobia.

Against this backdrop, it can seem like something of a 180 for many Gen Z Americans to now embrace “becoming Chinese.”

But experts say the trend reveals deeper undercurrents like dissatisfaction among many Americans with life at home – from political turmoil, gun violence, immigration crackdowns and persistent racial tensions. All this has dulled the veneer of the US, driving curiosity for American youths to see what life is like on the other side.

It’s also about simple exposure, Fang pointed out. While Chinese products have long been ubiquitous across the planet, more Americans are now noticing Beijing’s dominance in many fields – especially in the competitive world of tech.

And increasingly, what they’re seeing is redefining their image of cool.

Has the US lost its ‘cool’ factor?

This isn’t the first time China has drawn intrigue from the West. In the 2000s and early 2010s, as China began opening up to the world, more outsiders began learning Mandarin, and travel and immigration to and from China spiked.

Much of the enthusiasm to engage with the Asian giant was economically driven, said Fang.

In the past decade, however, “China became more self-sufficient, it is much more inward-looking than it used to be, especially during Covid.”

Relations with the US also soured drastically as China turned increasingly authoritarian under leader Xi Jinping, instead of more democratic and liberal as Western leaders had hoped.

But now, it appears people are drawn to China not purely because of money – but because of the cool factor.

That may be partly fueled by China’s reopening post-Covid, which included relaxing some visa policies and encouraging more tourism – as well as the great migration of social media users to China’s Xiaohongshu (also known as RedNote) platform after the US government threatened to ban TikTok.

The influx of Americans to Xiaohongshu saw two vastly different populations – who normally exist in entirely separate online spaces – directly connecting like never before.

And it’s no coincidence the trend comes amid a broader decline in the US’ global image. Though it’s still the dominant cultural force globally, recent geopolitics and domestic turmoil have reshaped how people around the world view the superpower.

Just look at how the immigration crackdown has prompted many international students to go elsewhere for their studies; how research budget cuts have pushed top scientists to work in China instead; how Canadians, angered by a trade war, are boycotting US goods; or how Americans themselves are choosing to leave the country.

You can see this growing sense of disillusionment in the kinds of Chinese content young Americans are gravitating towards.

For instance, videos showing vertiginous skylines from Chinese metropolises like Chongqing and Shanghai have gone viral for depicting a futuristic vision of urban life, replete with seemingly clean streets and low levels of violent crime.

Clips showing neon-lit skyscrapers, drone shows and jaw-dropping transport systems have been topping social media algorithms. Other popular videos highlight China’s electric vehicle advances and embrace of green energy.

In many ways, this romanticism of Chinese progress is oversimplified. For instance, while housing costs in China are lower than in the US, average wages are also far lower – one of many real-life challenges of life in China. Despite these problems, however, the viral videos present a seductive contrast to America’s aging infrastructure and high cost of living.

The current trend “tells us more about what Americans feel about America, than what Americans feel about China,” Fang said.

Is the future Chinese?

With a long history of Sinophobia in the US and geopolitical tensions, it’s hard to say how long “Chinamaxxing” will last – and whether it’s a sign of an increasingly Chinese future.

Beijing has spent years cultivating its soft and hard power in parts of Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands. In certain countries, it’s common to see Chinese EVs and Huawei or Xiaomi smartphones – products that are far less visible in the US in part due to policy restrictions and import controls.

“A lot of Americans (are) slowly realizing that these are the things China has been producing and they’re pretty good,” said Fang. “There is a lag precisely because these things weren’t allowed in the US.”

Even some of the US’ closest traditional allies are inching closer to China in the face of Trump’s volatile foreign policy. France’s Emmanuel Macron, Britain’s Keir Starmer, Finland’s Petteri Orpo and Canada’s Mark Carney all visited Beijing in recent months, and were hosted by Xi.

Internet culture moves fast, and viral memes fade quickly. For most users, “Chinamaxxing” was never that serious and meant to be used ironically or as a joke.

The trend has come under criticism too, with some members of the Chinese diaspora accusing it of being culturally appropriative and insensitive.

But for a brief moment, trends like these can offer an unlikely digital bridge between two cultures often divided by politics and the decisions of their leaders.

“I personally grew up or came of age in this decade when people in the US and people in China were interested in what each other had to say, and had to offer to the world,” Fang said.

“I’d like to see some of that revive in this day and age.”

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Author: Saikat Bhattacharya

mythical General USA vs China 27-February-2026 by east is rising

China needs to invest in Revolution not Just Development in Global South

Development money is no alternative for revolution. Panama port incident shows China must stop investment for development in third world countries. Instead China must start investing in anti white supremacist revolutions throughout the world.

THE PANAMA AUTHORITIES stormed the Hong Kong-run port terminals in its country and ordered staff to leave immediately, workers revealed yesterday.

The strong-armed takeover of the pair of terminals follows threats from US President Donald Trump that his country’s armed forces would invade Panama unless the area was rid of “Chinese soldiers”.

The forceful seizure of the terminals was clearly unlawful, said CK Hutchison, the company that has successfully managed the projects for almost three decades—and it was dangerous.

The storming of the terminals took place on Monday, but staff were ordered not to communicate with their employer, known as PPC (Hutchison Ports Panama Ports Co).

."TELL NO ONE'

The Trump administration has painted the company as part of the Chinese government in Beijing, but this is false. Hutchison is actually an international conglomerate with its roots in British Hong Kong. There are no “Chinese soldiers” present – only dockyard staff, many locally employed from Panama itself.

PPC staff were told on Monday “to vacate” with threats of “criminal prosecution if they refused,” CK Hutchison said in a statement. They could tell no one, including their employers.

The authorities’ actions aren’t just illegal, but “pose serious risks to operations, health and safety at the sites”, the company added.

.TALE OF BETRAYAL

The story is a dark tale of betrayal. The Panama authorities were so happy with the Hong Kongers’ contribution since 1997 that they renewed the concession for another 25 years in 2021.

But then came Trump’s threat, after which everything changed—with the Panama authorities attempting various legal somersaults to void the contract they themselves had renewed.

A US administration source had congratulated Panama for the action and said that it was “in line with President Donald Trump’s drive to curb Chinese influence” over the waterway, the South China Morning Post reported yesterday.

.COLLECTING CHOKEPOINTS

The US is on a mission to take full control of four key global “chokepoints” for international shipping – Panama, Suez, and two arctic routes: one that goes past Greenland, and the other that goes through Canada.

For this reason, Trump believes Panama, the Middle East, Greenland, and Canada must eventually all come under US control.

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Author: Saikat Bhattacharya

International geopolitics General USA vs China 27-February-2026 by east is rising

As India Stops Buying Russian Oil, China Comes To Russia's Rescue

China’s imports of Russian oil have surged to over 2 million barrels per day, according to recent trade data. This increase comes as shipments to India reportedly dropped by nearly 40%, allowing Russia to maintain overall export levels despite regional fluctuations. Analysts note that China’s growing role as a primary buyer highlights shifting global energy dynamics and reinforces Beijing’s strategic partnership with Moscow. The development also affects global oil pricing, supply chains, and geopolitical energy leverage in Europe and Asia.

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Author: Saikat Bhattacharya

International geopolitics General Unipolar vs Multi-polar 27-February-2026 by east is rising