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Cranberry-Orange Sauce With Port

LIVE: Chinese Communist Party’s Crimes Against US and the World

Notorious for its oppression at home and threats abroad, the Chinese Communist Party has come to be widely perceived as a bully. But what the CCP really has become is a transnational criminal organization (TCO). Worse yet, unwitting Americans are funding the CCP’s myriad crimes – to the tune of trillions of dollars – via pension plans and other stock market investments in Beijing’s state-controlled and Party-tied companies. The Pentagon has actually designated scores of these companies as “Chinese Communist military companies.” Such companies build the weapons and technology designed to dominate and enslave liberty-minded people in China, America and the rest of the free world. Join us Tuesday, 10 November as China experts, internationally renowned attorneys and dissidents lay out the criminal case against the Chinese Communist Party and…

Cranberry-Orange Sauce With Port

Cranberry-Orange Sauce With Port

A touch of port enhances a classic cranberry-orange sauce. It’ll last for a couple of weeks in the fridge, and leftovers can double as jam the next day—so make a big batch!

Makes 2 cups

  • 1 pound fresh cranberries
  • Juice and zest of one orange
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup port wine

Combine all ingredients in a saucepan over low heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the cranberries are soft and the sauce thickens. Serve at room temperature or chilled. This sauce can be kept in the fridge for up to one week.

Cranberry-Orange Sauce With Port

Focus News: Cranberry-Orange Sauce With Port

Chinese State Media Touts a Biden Win, Indicates Hope for Pro-Beijing US Administration: Analyst

Though Democratic Party presidential candidate Joe Biden has not been declared a winner by the U.S. statutory electoral authority, Chinese state media have touted his declared victory and expressed hopes for a cozier U.S.–China relationship under a Biden administration. According to a Nov. 6 report by Radio Free Asia, Chinese authorities gave an order to domestic news outlets, forbidding them from forwarding U.S. election reports or updates from foreign sources. Instead, they should quote the coverage from state-run Xinhua News Agency, make comments based on “the remarks of our country’s spokesperson,” and warn against anti-U.S. hateful rhetoric. At a daily press briefing in Beijing on Nov. 9, Western journalists asked Wang Wenbin, spokesperson for China’s foreign affairs ministry, whether he has congratulated Biden. He replied: “We have noticed that Mr. Biden…

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