What they're not telling you: # "Chicom Among Us": Maryland GOP Lawmakers Sound Alarm Over Chinese-Born Delegate's AI Disclosure Bill Declassified intelligence and recent federal indictments reveal that Chinese operatives have successfully penetrated multiple levels of American government, raising urgent questions about whether foreign agents are actively shaping U.S. policy from within state legislatures. The alarm was sounded on a recent podcast by Mark Fisher and Brian Chisholm, Republican members of the Maryland House of Delegates, who directly challenged their Democratic colleague Delegate Chao Wu over legislation that would require AI companies to disclose their training models and data.
What the Documents Show
Wu, born in China, introduced House Bill 823 in 2025—a measure that Fisher characterized as potentially designed to extract American trade secrets. "If you're going to engage in AI training, you have to disclose your training models and your training data every time you change it," Fisher explained. "Well, that would of course be a trade secret, wouldn't it?" The implication was stark: a bill that appears to serve regulatory transparency could actually serve as a mechanism for foreign acquisition of proprietary American technology. Chisholm expanded the analysis with geopolitical context. "China knows they can't take us down with tanks and bullets," he said.
Follow the Money
"They have to backdoor it. So they send in spies—people like [Wu]." This assessment aligns with the Justice Department's escalating focus under Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, who recently indicted Arcadia, California Mayor Eileen Wang for working with the Chinese government. The Wang case is instructive: she donated to Democratic Senate campaigns, creating a financial trail that suggests Chinese operatives are strategically funding Democratic political infrastructure. If this pattern extends beyond one California mayor, it indicates a coordinated penetration campaign targeting American political parties at multiple levels. The mainstream media's virtual silence on the Maryland delegation's concerns stands in stark contrast to how identical allegations against Republican officials would be covered. A Republican legislator born in a U.S.
What Else We Know
adversary nation pushing for forced disclosure of American corporate secrets would dominate cable news for weeks. Yet Wu's bill and the questions it raised barely registered in major outlets, suggesting either institutional blindness or deliberate underreporting. The intelligence community has long acknowledged that "if there's one" foreign operative in government, there are likely many more—a principle that should alarm citizens across the political spectrum. What ordinary Americans should understand is this: the infrastructure for espionage through legislative action is already in place. Foreign agents don't need to steal documents anymore; they can sponsor bills that force companies to voluntarily surrender trade secrets under the guise of regulatory compliance. As AI technology becomes America's next economic and military frontier, ensuring that those writing the rules governing its development aren't working for competing powers becomes a fundamental national security issue.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Unexplained
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