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January 1, INFILTRATION: The Chinese Spy Device That Will Live in Your Kitchen

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Wyatt’s Take

  • China is flooding the market with humanoid robots designed to enter American homes, workplaces, and hospitals — devices that see, hear, and record everything while sending data straight back to Beijing.
  • While these robots promise to help with household chores and medical care, they’re actually surveillance machines connected to China’s military fusion program, ready to be weaponized with a single software update.
  • America ceded the drone market to China a decade ago and we’re still playing catch-up — we cannot let the same thing happen with robots that will literally live in our homes and know our most intimate secrets.

Within the next ten years, humanoid robots could be in virtually every American home and workplace. They will hear and see everything. The critical question isn’t whether this will happen — it’s whether these all-seeing machines will be American-made or controlled by the Chinese Communist Party.

This isn’t science fiction anymore. It’s happening right now, and ensuring the United States wins the robotics race is both a national security and economic imperative that demands immediate action from Washington.

Robots increasingly represent where artificial intelligence meets the physical world. Large, stationary single-purpose machines are being replaced by general purpose humanoids that can learn and complete virtually any task. The potential benefits to productivity, efficiency, and safety are staggering.

Imagine a humanoid robot that can care for an aging parent, serve as a personal chef, or assist a surgeon during a complex procedure. These machines will enter burning buildings, clean up nuclear waste, work deep-sea pipelines, and staff dangerous and repetitive roles in American manufacturing that often cost workers their health and their lives. Goldman Sachs projects that the humanoid robot market could reach $38 billion by 2035.

The companies and countries that lead in this technology will enjoy a generational economic advantage and the geopolitical leverage that comes with it.

Which brings us to the threat.

This past Lunar New Year, Chinese robots went viral with a choreographed parade of humanoid robots dancing and performing martial arts in perfect unison — a spectacle equal parts impressive and unsettling. It was not an accident.

It was a message. A warning.

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has identified humanoids as a strategic emerging industry and the country has been pouring billions of dollars of state resources into ensuring Chinese supremacy in this emerging technology. The plan is working. Some market reports indicate that 90% of all humanoid robots are built in China.

This is not simply a commercial problem for America. It is a national security crisis in slow motion.

Consider what a networked fleet of Chinese-manufactured robots, embedded in American homes, hospitals, factories, and government facilities, would mean in practice. These machines see, hear, and map their environments. They connect to the cloud.

They receive software updates from their manufacturers that could alter their behavior or extract sensitive data on command.

We are not naïve to the risks posed by modern technology. But humanoid robots are a far more intimate and consequential instrument for surveillance and sabotage. A smartphone knows your location.

A humanoid robot knows your home, your family, your routines, and your secrets.

China’s civil-military fusion doctrine and the dual-use potential of humanoids make this even more alarming. The same robot that folds laundry in a suburban home can, with a software update, perform logistics, reconnaissance, or other physical tasks in a military context.

An army of commercially deployed Chinese robots is inherently a latent instrument of the Chinese state.

America has faced this kind of strategic technological competition before, and we have won. But this wasn’t luck. We won through deliberate national strategy, coordinated public and private investment, and clear-eyed policy frameworks.

We need the same approach here.

Commercial drones provide the cautionary tale. A decade ago, the United States ceded that market to China without an industrial policy response. Today, Chinese manufacturers control the overwhelming majority of the global drone market.

American companies, law enforcement agencies, and even elements of the military found themselves dependent on Chinese hardware before policymakers recognized the scope of the problem.

We now struggle to unwind a dependency that should never have been allowed to form in the first instance. To its credit, this administration has tried to address the issue — including by placing foreign-made drones on the FCC’s covered list — but we are playing catch-up and we are still far behind.

We cannot afford to repeat these mistakes with humanoids.

The Trump administration has shown it understands the stakes in artificial intelligence and cybersecurity, issuing ambitious strategies that marshal federal resources and align both the public and private sector around national priorities. The administration is now actively developing a national robotics strategy.

It is critical that this initiative be both bold and broad.

Among other things, a National Robotics Strategy should: establish clear global leadership goals; aggressively fund federal procurement, investment, and research; secure the supply chain for key robotic components; cement America as the global leader in robotics standards; and establish a framework that implements stringent data security requirements and prevents infiltration by hostile actors.

Congress should act in parallel. Senators Schumer and Cotton recently introduced the American Security Robotics Act, which effectively bans the U.S. government from purchasing and operating most humanoid robots manufactured by Chinese firms.

This rare show of bipartisanship underscores the seriousness of the situation.

The pending bill is a meaningful first step, and Congress should be encouraged to build on it with a thoughtful and nuanced approach to this burgeoning industry. Congress needs to install guardrails that protect the country from the risks posed by fully integrated Chinese robotic systems.

But simultaneously, the government must carefully navigate the reality that key robotics components — including motors and magnets — are not yet manufactured competitively at home.

We need to wean ourselves off our reliance on Chinese components and begin making these parts in the U.S. Blunt-instrument bans will hinder American industry from flourishing.

The window to act is open, but not for long. The Lunar New Year video was merely a preview. The country that fields the best humanoid robots will shape the physical world the way that the country that fielded the best semiconductors shaped the digital one.

That country should be the United States.

Wyatt Matters

For too long, Washington sat on its hands while China ate our lunch in manufacturing, technology, and innovation. The result? American workers lost their jobs, our military became dependent on foreign parts, and our families now invite Chinese surveillance devices into their homes without even knowing it. This fight over robots isn’t about some distant future — it’s about whether your grandkids will grow up in an America that builds things or one that just buys them from our biggest adversary. The Trump administration gets it. Now Congress needs to finish the job before it’s too late.

2 Comments

  1. Brian

    June 10, 2026 at 10:11 am

    Reading this article about the dangers of Chinese robotics in our public and private sectors and there are advertisements for Temu products in the article, wow.

  2. George

    June 10, 2026 at 6:31 pm

    The conflict with Chinese tech will be won or lost in the school room. As long as you we produce illiterate children we will face defeat and domination and the illiterates will cheer. It is so obvious that it’s a scandal not to be concerned.

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Wyatt Porter is a seasoned writer and constitutional scholar who brings a rugged authenticity and deep-seated patriotism to his work. Born and raised in small-town America, Wyatt grew up on a farm, where he learned the value of hard work and the pride that comes from it. As a conservative voice, he writes with the insight of a historian and the grit of a lifelong laborer, blending logic with a sharp wit. Wyatt’s work captures the struggles and triumphs of everyday Americans, offering readers a fresh perspective grounded in traditional values, individual freedom, and an unwavering love for his country.




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