Recently, a courageous young Chinese man posted a video online listing ten crimes of the Chinese Communist Party and declaring that he would file a lawsuit against the CCP government at the Supreme Court. (Video screenshot)
[People News] Recently, a brave young man in China posted a video online, enumerating ten major crimes of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), announcing his intent to file a lawsuit against the CCP government at China’s Supreme Court. He said he had pre-recorded the video, that he was now in Beijing, and that the day after posting the video, he would “storm” the Supreme Court to submit his complaint.
The young man began by stating: if the contents of his accusations were not factual, but instead malicious slander or defamation, then he was willing to take his own life in atonement. Below is his indictment:
1. Suing the CCP government for the foolish notion of “ruling the country by law.” The CCP uses an incomplete and defective legal system to govern the nation and punish criminals.
For example, since ancient times, adultery was considered a serious crime, but today it is no longer illegal, leading to more extramarital affairs and mistresses. Society now “laughs at the poor, not the prostitute”—a tragic state.
Another example: the Law on the Protection of Minors. Rather than protecting children, it often protects underage criminals.
He cited the case in Handan, Hebei, where three minors murdered another minor and buried the body. None of the perpetrators received the death penalty. “Are you going to raise these demons in prison, then release them to harm the people again?”
In July this year, in Sichuan, several underage girls bullied another girl for over four hours. The video went viral, but police declared it only a “minor injury.” Under Chinese law, they would receive at most a few months’ sentence before release—sparking public outrage and days-long confrontation between citizens and police. “Can you punish such vicious crimes merely by relying on China’s laws?”
By contrast, in the U.S., in March 2015, in the Liu Yiran bullying case at a California high school, most perpetrators were minors, yet the main offenders received sentences of life, 13 years, 10 years, and 6 years. “Are China’s laws really more complete and authoritative than America’s?”
“Law should serve people, put people first, and rule by people, not by rigid statutes. At best, laws should serve as a reference. To govern a country solely with defective and unreasonable laws is sheer folly.”
2. Suing the CCP government’s flagship program—CCTV’s Xinwen Lianbo (News Broadcast). Almost every day, it reports how much China’s GDP has grown, as though GDP is the ultimate key to national strength and people’s happiness.
He pointed out that under the Qing dynasty, China’s GDP was the world’s largest, yet the country was still crushed by the Eight-Nation Alliance and forced to cede land and pay reparations. “Does GDP equal national strength? Does it equal people’s happiness?”
The faster GDP grows, the more overworked and exhausted the people become. “Since GDP has no fundamental relation to strength or happiness, what is the point of the government obsessively reporting it and chasing it?”
3. Suing the CCP government’s lending policy.
Banks print vast amounts of money—the blood and sweat of labouring people. Without workers producing food, housing, clothing, and goods, money is nothing but wastepaper.
Instead of directly distributing money to the people, the government lends it to fraudulent enterprises like Evergrande, Country Garden, HNA Group, and to various levels of government. They enrich themselves, transfer assets overseas, then use a tiny portion to buy materials and pay wages. Many projects are left unfinished, leaving a mess for the people. Even if completed, they are vanity projects that ordinary people cannot benefit from. “All this is the result of the government’s foolish lending policies. If you have so much money, why not give it directly to the people? The U.S. gives money directly to its people, and its society hasn’t collapsed.”
4. Suing the CCP government for massive waste of resources and manpower.
China already suffers severe overcapacity, yet continues to overproduce. The houses already built could accommodate 6 billion people, yet construction continues, creating one ghost city after another. Housing vacancy rates exceed 70%, yet the empty homes are not given to people in need.
City roads are constantly being dug up and repaired: one day water pipes, next day power lines, then bridges and roads. “Is the quality really that poor, or is this waste by design?”
Car inventories pile up like mountains, as if resources were unlimited. “Battery graveyards” are being exposed—if heavy metals leak into soil and groundwater, the consequences will be dire. Instead of just subsidising EV companies, why not figure out how to properly dispose of waste batteries?
5. Suing the CCP government’s pension system—opaque and unfair.
No one knows how much money is in the pension fund or how it is distributed. What is known: some retirees receive tens of thousands per month, while others receive just over a hundred yuan, or none at all. “Why is it distributed this way? Was it ever approved by the people?” Officials argue that high pensions go to those who contributed more. But these officials already earned far more than ordinary people while in power. Now retired, why should they still get so much more—especially when most are bureaucrats and cadres, not value-creating workers? Farmers and workers, who created real value, often get meagre pensions or none.
Meanwhile, ordinary people with monthly salaries of 3,000–5,000 yuan struggle to live, yet are forced to contribute to pensions. “State-owned enterprises monopolise industries, the government seizes corrupt officials’ assets, corporations pay massive taxes—yet none of this money is used for people’s pensions or healthcare. Where does it all go? Are concrete buildings and wide asphalt roads more important than people’s survival?”
6. Suing the CCP government for inaction, siding with corporations against the people.
Ride-hailing platforms are chaotic. Drivers’ pay has dropped to barely 1 yuan per kilometre—less than the costs. Drivers work 15–16 hours daily. Complaints to authorities are dismissed: “low-price competition is normal market behaviour,” “fatigue driving is voluntary.” No relevant laws exist to restrict platforms.
Charging fees rise at will, fares drop at will. The same with food delivery and courier services. Pricing power is entirely in the hands of corporate executives. Platforms endlessly recruit drivers and couriers to keep costs down and exploit workers.
“To these vampiric corporations, we are nothing but livestock. But worse than the companies are the governments that collect taxes yet ignore people’s lives. They not only fail to restrain the corporations, but they also actively help them. Such a government is the trash of all trash. The people once hoped it would stand with them, but it aids the wolves and oppresses us. Despicable, detestable.”
7. Suing the CCP government for ignoring labour laws.
He said that many companies in China now force employees to work more than 12 hours a day, giving them only one or two days off per month. The working conditions are harsh, no labour contracts are signed, and employees can be dismissed at will, while the government provides no oversight. Why don’t employees dare to sue their companies?
First, because it is very hard to win, some companies have more staff in their legal departments than they have regular employees—how could workers possibly win? Even if they do win, the process consumes enormous amounts of time, and the compensation awarded is very little. Worse still, they may lose their jobs or even face retaliation from the company, making it not worth the risk. Major corporations—and even government departments—outsource work. By outsourcing, they avoid paying taxes and social insurance for employees, which means the workers’ take-home pay is even lower.
The government has outsourced the work of sanitation workers as well. These workers only receive a little over one thousand yuan, sometimes just a few hundred yuan per month. A government that allows outsourcing in this way is truly despicable.
8. Suing the CCP government for lax supervision of food safety.
He said, “Nowadays, many of our foods are so bad that even dogs won’t eat them. What additives have been put in them? Doesn’t the government regulate this? The government even allows domestic construction of hydrogenated oil processing plants—you know perfectly well how harmful that stuff is, so why allow hydrogenated oil foods to be sold? Some takeout kitchens are so filthy you feel sick just looking at them, yet the government merely orders a temporary suspension and a small fine. Why not jail those who treat food safety like a joke?”
9. Suing the CCP government for absurd management of education.
He said schools do not cultivate students’ independent thinking or practical skills, but instead force them to study only for exams, making test scores their lifeblood. Most geniuses are unconventional talents, and even Confucius, over 2,000 years ago, advocated teaching according to individual ability. Yet the government imposes the disastrous “ten-thousand soldiers crossing a single-log bridge” college entrance exam system, which ruins students’ lives. “If the government really doesn’t know how to run education, then just copy Germany’s system completely—it would be far better than what we have now.”
10. Suing the CCP government for poor oversight of state-owned enterprises (SOEs), delegates of the National People’s Congress, and officials.
He said SOEs hold monopolies and pricing power, yet still suffer huge losses. Even while losing money, SOE executives still enjoy extravagant pay. “How are you regulating them?” At the NPC sessions, when proposals were raised to require officials to publicly disclose their assets, 99% of delegates voted against it. “Clearly a guilty conscience! Who are you protecting? These delegates don’t work on the front lines. How can they represent the people? If you’re not a driver, how can you represent drivers? If you’re not a delivery worker, how can you represent delivery workers? If you’re not a farmer, how can you represent farmers? If you’re not a labourer, how can you represent workers? These so-called representatives are completely detached from reality.”
“They fail to regulate what should be regulated, and interfere in what shouldn’t be. Many policies they issue are utterly unreasonable. Last year, tutoring was suddenly made illegal; this year, not paying social insurance is criminalised; and now they’ve enacted the strictest electric-vehicle regulations in history. Are you deliberately inciting conflict between ordinary people and law enforcement? Come down to the grassroots and see for yourselves—are these policies reasonable? Some officials embezzle billions, even tens of billions, yet why aren’t they sentenced to death? How can they steal so much? Because you run a one-man show, and in the end, it is these officials who make the final decisions.”
“If final decision-making power were in the hands of the people, officials wouldn’t even have the chance to be corrupt. In this world, even a fool, even a disabled person, even someone utterly alone without love or care, still deserves the right to a happy life. But today’s China has become a paradise for officials and capitalists, and a hell for ordinary people.”
“When you hear ordinary people saying they no longer want to live like beasts of burden, worse than pigs and dogs—what do you feel inside? If the so-called People’s Government has no thought for the people, only for GDP, money, and vanity projects, then why should the people support such a government? Someone like me—in ancient times, if I met a foolish ruler, I’d be executed by dismemberment; if I met an enlightened ruler, he would seriously accept my counsel.”
Finally, the young man showed the clothes he planned to wear the next day, front and back printed with the words “Pleading for the People.” He declared passionately, “If I fail, do not mock me or gloat. To die for the people’s interests, I would have no regrets.”
Recently, a courageous young Chinese man posted a video online listing ten crimes of the Chinese Communist Party, declaring that he would ‘plead for the people’ by filing a lawsuit against the CCP government at the Supreme Court. (Video screenshot)
He said: “If three days pass and I do not post another video, that means I can’t anymore—either I’ve been detained, or I’ve been physically disappeared.”
At present, no new videos from him have surfaced online. His safety and whereabouts remain unknown.
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