
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or

![The Missing Piece [International]](https://podcast-api-images.s3.amazonaws.com/corona/show/6163060/logo_300x300.jpeg)
As we continue to pay attention to the economic and political tension between China and the US, more nations are standing at the crossroads, when it comes to choosing better partners. Nation like Hungary is playing the card wisely, however, little progress has been made. Some say that America should continue to promote the far-right agenda in order to make better friends with China and Hungary, so that all the nations could prosper economically. In this episode, Will invite special guest to share more.
Meg Hansen just completed a one-year research and teaching fellowship in Budapest, Hungary where she was a Senior Fellow in the Budapest Fellowship Program and a Visiting Fellow at the Danube Institute.
Previously, she served as president of a think tank in Vermont, which was an affiliate of the State Policy Network. She has been involved in New England's political, public policy, and media spheres for the past decade. Her commentaries and analyses of U.S. and global current affairs have appeared in various online and print publications including The Wall Street Journal, National Review, and American Spectator.
By The Missing PieceAs we continue to pay attention to the economic and political tension between China and the US, more nations are standing at the crossroads, when it comes to choosing better partners. Nation like Hungary is playing the card wisely, however, little progress has been made. Some say that America should continue to promote the far-right agenda in order to make better friends with China and Hungary, so that all the nations could prosper economically. In this episode, Will invite special guest to share more.
Meg Hansen just completed a one-year research and teaching fellowship in Budapest, Hungary where she was a Senior Fellow in the Budapest Fellowship Program and a Visiting Fellow at the Danube Institute.
Previously, she served as president of a think tank in Vermont, which was an affiliate of the State Policy Network. She has been involved in New England's political, public policy, and media spheres for the past decade. Her commentaries and analyses of U.S. and global current affairs have appeared in various online and print publications including The Wall Street Journal, National Review, and American Spectator.