What We're Watching: Protests in Hong Kong and the World's Toughest Parrot

Hong Kong's Extradition Protests – In one of its largest protests in years, tens of thousands marched through Hong Kong's streets toward parliament over the weekend to oppose a plan they say would make it easier to extradite critics of the Chinese government to the mainland. Since 2014, pro-democracy advocates in Hong Kong have been calling for more autonomy from Beijing—with little to show for their efforts. They view the latest legislation as a thinly veiled ploy by the Chinese-backed government in Hong Kong to help Beijing curb dissent. More broadly, they fear that China is slowly stripping Hong Kong of freedoms guaranteed under the handover agreement signed by China and Britain, which controlled Hong Kong until 1997.

Freddy Krueger the Parrot – Brazil is a resilient country, and an Amazonian parrot named Freddy Krueger has now made his case to become Brazil's national bird. This week, Freddy somehow found his way back to the zoo in the southern city of Cascavel from which he was stolen following a difficult past in which he was bird-napped, bitten by a snake, and wounded during a drug-den shootout between traffickers and police. We're watching to see what Freddy gets into next and hoping for a biopic.

What We're Ignoring: Trump Meets Dems and Austrian Grannies Get Angry

The Don, Chuck, and Nancy Show – Can President Trump and congressional Democrats agree on anything? How about some big spending to upgrade shoddy US infrastructure? Trump has said at various times that he wants to splurge on major improvements to roads, rail, ports, airports and even communications infrastructure. Lead Democratic lawmakers Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer want these things too, though they want tax increases to pay for them along with labor and environmental protections as part of any deal. We're ignoring their meeting tomorrow, because Senate Republicans won't agree to any of this. Even where Trump, Pelosi, and Schumer agree, there's just no deal to be made.

Austria's Angry GranniesGrannies Against the Right is a movement created to protest Austria's rightward shift under the conservative-nationalist government of Chancellor Sebastian Kurz. It's organized by women old enough to remember the terrible aftermath of World War II. This is a fine organization engaged in a noble cause, but we decided to ignore them when we discovered that the group accepts non-grannies as members.

More from GZERO Media

FILE PHOTO: Children eat bread on a street near a flag adopted by the new Syrian rulers, after the ousting of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, in Damascus, Syria, December 24, 2024.
REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh/File Photo

Diplomats and foreign ministers from 17 Arab and EU states convened in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Sunday to discuss the lifting of economic sanctions on Syria, originally imposed during the rule of ousted president Bashar al-Assad.

Photos published by Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Jan 11, 2025 shows two North Korean military personnel captured by Ukraine forces soldiers in the Kursk region. Two soldiers, though wounded, survived and were transported to Kyiv, where they are now communicating with the Security Service of Ukraine, Zelenskyy said. This was not an easy task: Russian forces and other North Korean military personnel usually execute their wounded to erase any evidence of North Korea’s involvement in the war against Ukraine, he said. I am grateful to the soldiers of Tactical Group No. 84 of the Special Operations Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as well as our paratroopers, who captured these two individuals.
(Ukraine Military handout via EYEPRESS) via Reuters

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced Saturday that his troops had captured two North Korean soldiers in the Kursk region and released a video of them describing their experience fighting for Russia.

LOS ANGELES, CA - JANUARY 07: A wind-driven fire burns on January 7, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. Santa Ana wind is fueling wildfires in Los Angeles that have destroyed homes and forced the evacuation of thousands of people.
(Photo by Qian Weizhong/VCG ) via Reuters

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A person holds a placard on the day justices hear oral arguments in a bid by TikTok and its China-based parent company, ByteDance, to block a law intended to force the sale of the short-video app by Jan. 19 or face a ban on national security grounds, outside the U.S. Supreme Court, in Washington, U.S., January 10, 2025.
REUTERS/Marko Djurica

On Friday, the Supreme Court appeared poised to uphold the TikTok ban, largely dismissing the app’s argument that it should be able to exist in the US under the First Amendment’s free speech protections and favoring the government's concerns that it poses a national security threat.

Listen: On the GZERO World Podcast, we’re taking a look at some of the top geopolitical risks of 2025. This looks to be the year that the G-Zero wins. We’ve been living with this lack of international leadership for nearly a decade now. But in 2025, the problem will get a lot worse. We are heading back to the law of the jungle. A world where the strongest do what they can while the weakest are condemned to suffer what they must. Joining Ian Bremmer to peer into this cloudy crystal ball is renowned Stanford political scientist Francis Fukuyama.

President-elect Donald Trump appears remotely for a sentencing hearing in front of New York State Judge Juan Merchan in his hush money case at New York Criminal Court in New York City, on Jan. 10, 2025.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/Pool

President-elect Donald Trump was sentenced in his New York hush money case on Friday but received no punishment from Judge Juan M. Merchan, who issued an unconditional discharge with no jail time, probation, or fines

Paige Fusco

In a way, Donald Trump’s return means Putin has finally won. Not because of the silly notion that Trump is a “Russian agent” – but because it closes the door finally and fully on the era of post-Cold War triumphalist globalism that Putin encountered when he first came to power.

Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado greets supporters at a protest ahead of the Friday inauguration of President Nicolas Maduro for his third term, in Caracas, Venezuela January 9, 2025.
REUTERS/Leonardo Fernandez Viloria

Regime forces violently detained Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado as she left a rally in Caracas on Thursday, one day before strongman President Nicolás Maduro was set to begin his third term.