作者:卢超
编辑:周志刚 校对:程筱筱 翻译:吕峰
权贵在谈“长生不老”,百姓在丢“血肉至亲”
就在不久前,一段视频在网上疯传,让无数国人心惊肉跳。在克里姆林宫和中南海的密谈中,普京和习近平竟然聊起了“器官移植可以让人类永生”的话题。习近平甚至信心满满地预测,人类寿命将很快突破150岁。
这听起来像是科幻小说,但在当下的中国,这更像是一个恐怖预告。
如果权力者想要活到150岁,如果他们认为只要有源源不断的器官就能实现“永生”,那么这些“新鲜零件”从哪里来?总不可能是从天上掉下来的。当我们把这段对话,和国内校园里接二连三发生的失踪案连在一起看时,那种毛骨悚然的真相就浮现了:权贵们的“长生梦”,就是建立在普通人家孩子的“夺命符”之上的。
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校园里的“黑色陷阱”
就在今年1月,河南新蔡那个13岁男孩在学校宿舍离奇死亡。最让家属心碎和愤怒的是,家长还没赶到,救护车竟然就急着把尸体拉走。要不是孩子的姑父拼死拦在校门口,这具小小的身体恐怕早就进了焚尸炉,或者更可怕——被悄悄送上了手术台。
这绝不是孤例。从胡鑫宇到今天的朱同学,每一个在学校这个理应最安全的地方失踪、死亡的孩子,背后都有一双看不见的黑手。为什么现在的孩子进学校要采集血样?为什么失踪的孩子往往精准匹配了某位病重权贵的需求?当“器官捐献”被冠以“国有”的名义,当医疗系统变成了收割机,学校就不再是象牙塔,而成了权贵们的“供体养殖场”。
拒绝“国有器官”,就是拒绝被当成耗材
现在国内网络上发起了“拒绝器官移植”的活动,这是百姓走投无路后的集体自保。在正常国家,器官捐献是生命延续的赞歌;但在中共治下,这却成了一场官方组织的“人身收割”。
所谓的“国有器官”,本质上就是把人的身体资源化、公有化。如果你的肝脏、肾脏甚至是眼角膜,在官僚系统的档案里标好了价格,那么你在他们眼里就不再是一个有尊严的人,而是一个随时可以报废并提取零件的“耗材”。
中共近年来大力推广器官移植产业,甚至将其作为“一带一路”的医疗出口项目。这种带血的GDP,每一分钱都粘着普通家庭的泪水。他们宣称志愿者人数激增,但现实中,那些失踪人口的家属却连一个真相都求不到。这种极度的不透明和权力对生命的蔑视,正是“活摘器官”这一反人类罪行能够持续存在的土壤。
我们的呐喊,是为了不让悲剧继续
我也是一个孩子的父亲,深知如果中共得知我孩子的器官血型被匹配将会发生什么。我站在这呐喊的不仅仅是抨击那个邪恶的体制,更是为了告诉国内的父母们:你们并不孤单。
每一个失踪的孩子都是我们的孩子,每一个被强摘的器官都是对整个人类的暴行。我们要撕碎独裁者“150岁”的幻梦,因为那个梦是拿无数年轻生命铺就的。我们要求调查校园失踪的真相,我们要求废除剥削生命的器官政策。
只要我们还有一口气在,就绝不让他们的长生梦,在我们的血泪中实现!
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Reflections on Participating in the “Safeguard Children’s Lives, Demand the Truth About Campuses” Event
Author: Lu Chao
Editor: Zhou Zhigang Proofreader: Cheng Xiaoxiao Translator: Lyu Feng
Abstract:The Chinese Communist Party is depriving children of their right to life in order to realize an alleged “immortality” plan for those in power. We must firmly prevent such a plan from succeeding.
While those in power speak of “eternal life,” ordinary families are losing their flesh and blood.
Not long ago, a video circulated widely online, sending shockwaves through many viewers. In what was described as a private conversation between the Kremlin and Zhongnanhai, Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping were said to have discussed the idea that organ transplantation could enable human beings to achieve longevity or even “immortality.” Xi Jinping was even portrayed as confidently predicting that human life expectancy could soon surpass 150 years.
This may sound like the plot of a science fiction novel, but in today’s China, it is presented as something far more ominous.
If those in power truly aspire to live to 150 years old, and if they believe that a continuous supply of organs could make “immortality” possible, then where would these “fresh parts” come from? They would not simply fall from the sky. When this alleged conversation is viewed alongside the series of campus disappearances reported domestically, a chilling interpretation emerges: that the “dream of longevity” for the powerful is built upon the loss and suffering of ordinary families’ children.
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The “Dark Trap” on Campus
This January, in Xincai County, Henan Province, a 13-year-old boy died under mysterious circumstances in his school dormitory. What devastated and enraged his family most was that, before the parents had even arrived, an ambulance reportedly hurried to remove the body. Had the boy’s uncle not physically blocked the school gate, that small body might already have been sent to the crematorium—or, as some fear, even more disturbingly, quietly transferred to an operating table.
According to the author, this is not an isolated case. From Hu Xinyu to the recent case of a student surnamed Zhu, every child who has gone missing or died in a place that should be the safest—the school—raises grave suspicions. The article questions why blood samples are collected from students, and why some missing children are allegedly “matched” to critically ill individuals in positions of power. It argues that when “organ donation” is framed as a matter of state ownership, and when the medical system is portrayed as functioning like a harvesting machine, schools cease to be sanctuaries of learning and are instead depicted as “breeding grounds” for organ supply.
Rejecting “State-Owned Organs” Means Refusing to Be Treated as Disposable
The author notes that online campaigns calling for the rejection of organ transplantation have emerged domestically, describing them as acts of collective self-protection by ordinary people who feel they have no other recourse. In a normal society, organ donation is seen as a life-affirming act; however, the article claims that under the current political system it has become an officially organized system of bodily exploitation.
The concept of so-called “state-owned organs,” the author argues, amounts to turning the human body into a public resource. If one’s liver, kidneys, or even corneas are catalogued and priced within a bureaucratic system, then in that system’s eyes a person is no longer an individual with dignity, but a set of spare parts that can be extracted when needed.
The article further asserts that organ transplantation has in recent years been vigorously promoted as an industry, even described as a medical export component of the “Belt and Road” initiative. It characterizes this as a form of “blood-stained GDP,” alleging that behind official claims of rising volunteer donor numbers lie families of missing persons who are unable to obtain clear answers. According to the author, a lack of transparency and the concentration of power over life-and-death decisions create the conditions in which alleged forced organ harvesting could persist.
Our Outcry Is to Prevent Further Tragedy
Writing as a father, the author expresses fear over what might happen if a child’s blood type were allegedly matched within such a system. He states that his protest is not only an indictment of what he describes as an unjust political structure, but also a message to parents inside the country that they are not alone.
Every missing child, he argues, represents a shared loss; every allegedly forcibly taken organ, an assault on humanity. The article calls for dismantling what it describes as a dictator’s “150-year dream,” claiming it is built upon countless young lives. It demands investigation into campus disappearances and the abolition of policies that, in the author’s view, exploit human life.
As long as we still draw breath, we will never allow their dream of immortality to be realized through our blood and tears.
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