In the brutal reality of CCP rule, an 18-year-old boy’s life was casually extinguished by heartless enforcement of the Yangtze fishing ban. Chased by fishery officials, he jumped into the river in panic and drowned while they stood on the bank filming instead of rescuing him. When grieving citizens and anglers protested this callous indifference by carrying his body to demand justice, the regime responded with the standard playbook: riot police, mass arrests, and the desecration of seizing the corpse.
This is not an isolated “incident.” It is the daily face of communist authoritarianism — a system that treats ordinary people as threats to be crushed, prioritizes power and control over human life, and turns basic grief into a crime. The CCP’s “people’s government” reveals its true nature once again: indifferent to death, terrified of accountability, and willing to brutalize its own citizens to maintain the illusion of harmony. Another young life sacrificed on the altar of totalitarian control.
Aric Chen | Insights