American Thought Leaders - Inside China’s Largest Civil Disobedience Movement, and Why You Haven’t Heard of It: Larry Liu
Episode Date: July 25, 2024In China, a grassroots, underground movement of Chinese has been cutting through the communist regime’s censorship and propaganda machines—one pamphlet at a time.Since the Chinese communist regime... launched a nationwide persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual discipline 25 years ago, Falun Gong’s millions of adherents in China started creating secret underground print shops to expose the regime’s human rights atrocities.All across China, they secretly distribute flyers, DVDs, and brochures en masse, hang posters in public areas in the dead of night, and circulate software to their fellow Chinese so they can circumvent China’s internet blockade. Those arrested face years in prison—as long as 15 years.So who are these people? And why is their story critical to understanding China today?In this episode, I sit down with Larry Liu, deputy director of the Falun Dafa Information Center.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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This is the largest civil disobedience movement.
We can also call it information freedom movement in modern Chinese history.
But a lot of times people never heard of it.
Like Orwell's big brother, China's communist regime has an iron grip on all forms of information in China.
But a grassroots group of Chinese have been putting their lives on the line
to cut through the regime's censorship and indoctrination machine.
We estimate about 200,000 underground print shops run by Falun Gong practitioners,
family-run, and they print DVDs, brochures, booklets.
So who are these people? And why is their story critical to understanding China today?
Larry Liu is deputy director of the Falun Dafa Information Center.
Today marks 25 years since the Chinese regime launched a nationwide persecution of the Falun Gong spiritual discipline,
turning tens of millions of Falun Gong adherents into de facto enemies of the state.
Some of the narrative out there saying, OK, Falun Gong has been crushed in China,
but the internal document from CCP tells a very different story.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Jan-Yi Keller.
Larry Liu, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Thank you for having me, Jan.
Larry, recently the Falun Gong Protection Act
was passed by a unanimous voice vote in the House of Representatives
in the U.S.
So for starters, why is it important to pass legislation like this?
You know, the persecution started in 1999.
The House passed several resolutions in the past 25 years on Falun Gong.
But this is the first legally binding bill on Falun Gong issues.
And it was passed right before the 25th anniversary.
So it's very significant for Falun Gong communities around the world.
And it certainly gave a lot of hopes to Falun Gong practitioners still suffering in China
so that they can feel that they're not alone.
You know, the leader of the free world is caring about them, is trying to protect
them. And it also set up a good example for the rest of the free world to have similar
legislations in their countries. And certainly this bill also alert Americans about forced
organ harvesting issues. It will alert the medical community in US
not to collaborate or cooperate
with the Chinese transplantation industry.
It certainly will also help raise awareness
among American patient so that they will not unknowingly
go to China for organ transplant
and become accomplice of this heinous crime.
And also I will say that many people
probably never heard
about Falun Gong, but this is the,
I mean, this persecution of Falun Gong
is one of the largest, the longest running,
and also the most brutal persecution,
human rights atrocities in modern Chinese history.
And Falun Gong practitioners in the past 25 years,
when in response to this persecution, also launched, I would say, this is the largest civil disobedience movement.
We can also call it information freedom movement in modern Chinese history.
But a lot of times people never heard of it.
So this is making it more interesting, more important to talk about it today.
Tell me a little bit more about, let's just go to the basics.
The largest civil disobedience movement in Chinese history.
I mean, what exactly is happening?
You know, I think I probably will start
from the very beginning.
What is Falun Gong?
You know, the history in China, how the persecution started.
Maybe I'll just give a little history
so that people understand why there
is such a resistance or civil disobedience movement.
So Falun Gong is a spiritual practice rooted in the Buddhist tradition. It combines meditation
and Qigong exercises, very similar to Tai Chi or yoga, and also moral teachings. And the core
principle of Falun Gong is truth, compassion, and tolerance.
And that's a principle we consider as a universal principle we try to live up to in our daily lives.
And so it was first introduced to the public in China in 1992,
and became the most popular Qigong just within a few years because of its health benefit.
Many people with a severe disease or chronic disease just disappeared after
they practiced Falun Gong. And also the moral teaching really helped give people
some hope. You know, see, okay this is something, you know, returning to our
traditional values. You know, especially after the Cultural Revolution, a lot of
traditional values in China were destroyed. Traditional culture is
destroyed. And people say, oh this is the traditional good things in China is coming back.
And so at that time, even many communist government officials,
you know, Chinese government officials supported Falun Gong.
Many of them practiced themselves.
Their family members practiced it.
And by early 1999, Chinese government's own estimate
was over 70 million to 100 million people in China
practiced Falun Gong.
That all numbered the Communist Party membership,
which was 60 million at that time.
So that raised some alarm to some hotliners
inside the party members.
And also the independence of Falun Gong,
because it is independent from the state control.
It was the largest independent civil society
in China at that time.
And also some of the CCP leaders consider it's also ideological competition to them.
And so the former Communist Party chief Jiang Zemin started this crackdown to eradicate
Falun Gong in July 1999, exactly 25 years ago this month.
And so it's continued to this very day.
And so after the persecution started, many Falun Gong practitioners went to Beijing,
went to their city, provincial governments to appeal.
Hundreds of thousands, maybe even millions of Falun Gong practitioners went to Beijing,
went to Tiananmen Square to unhurt a banner or something like that.
With time goes by, you know, we realize that that doesn't work.
You know, the Chinese government won't listen to us.
So we felt that the best way to counter this persecution
is to help Chinese people to learn to choose.
Because one component of this persecution is propaganda,
to demonize, dehumanize Falun Gong.
All the media, 24-7 TV network, thousands of newspapers,
and they're all demonizing Falun Gong.
Just a propaganda marathon.
And so that really polluted a lot of Chinese people's minds.
And so we felt that the best way to counter this persecution is to help people to learn the truth
about Falun Gong, about the persecution.
And gradually, when nobody would like to cooperate with the CCP in this persecution,
the persecution will naturally end.
And so that's why practitioners launched, practitioners in China launched,
you know, the largest information freedom movement in Chinese history.
And we estimated about 200,000 underground print shops run by Falun Gong practitioners,
family run, and they print DVDs, brochures, booklets,
and they pass out to their neighborhood, to their coworkers.
And so just to educate the fellow Chinese about not only just the truth about the Falun Gong persecution,
but also in general, what is the Communist Party, their history, their origin, how they
lied, how they exerted tyranny to Chinese people over the past 70 plus years.
So it's really changed the hearts and minds of millions of Chinese people.
I just want to give you one example. I have a close friend of mine actually in China,
and we talk from time to time over the phone. And he's a little bit older than me, and he
pretty much believed most of the things the Chinese government said. You know, because when I
talked to him about Tiananmen massacre, you know, June 4th, 1989, and he things the Chinese government said. You know, because when I talked to him about Tiananmen Massacre,
you know, June 4th, 1989,
and he said the Chinese government did the right thing
because the state-run TV is painting a very different story,
saying that how this is the right,
and they killed some of the soldiers,
you know, they burned their bodies,
all those gruesome images.
They basically made it sound like the students
were the ones responsible for the atrocity.
Yeah, they made the students look like a villain,
not a victim.
And they also kind of
sold a social contract
to Chinese people, basically, after
Tiananmen Square Massacre. Basically,
if you, we can make you rich,
we can make, you know, give you
economic growth, and don't
touch politics.
So that's kind of the social contract a lot of the Chinese people bought at that time,
including this friend of mine.
And he basically was saying, if the government didn't really maintain the stability at that time,
how can we have such economic growth?
That was the narrative from the Chinese government.
But then I emailed him a software,
which was developed by some computer scientists here
in America who practice Falun Gong.
And there are two of them, basically.
One is FreeGate, the other is UltraSurf.
So I emailed an encrypted copy of that to him
so that he can use that to get around the firewall
and to access free information.
And after he saw the photos, the documents, the videos of Tiananmen Massacre, he completely
changed, 180 degree change.
And he says, I was shocked.
I couldn't believe that they did this kind of thing.
So you know, but the younger generation of Chinese have never heard about that. They never heard
about that. And so this is the way that Falun Gong practitioners from both inside China
and outside China have been doing it over the past 25 years. And to help Chinese people
to see their own history, which is something many Chinese people don't know their own history so that they can see through the CCP's lies and I want to give you another example
before the national security law was passed in Hong Kong 2019 right there was
a big movement in Hong Kong at that time I remember many practitioners following
a practitioner in Hong Kong told me or others that
many Hong Kongers apologized to them and they said that in the
past we didn't believe you, we didn't care about you, we didn't care about your
plight and we didn't believe what you said about Oregon harvesting. Now I
believe it. All of you said it's true. And so this is when things happening to yourself,
you will begin to realize, OK, this is the true nature of CCP.
And similar thing happened during the lockdown.
A lot of Chinese people were just really harmed by the pandemic.
And they were hit very hard by the iron fist of the CCP.
At that moment, they started to reflect what they have believed for so many years,
propagated by the CCP, whether it's true or not. That really helped to change a lot of
Chinese people's minds. This is a very unusual and I guess kind of an unexpected long-term
movement. I remember reading a few years ago in a report specifically about human rights in China
and religious persecution in China, there was a section on Falun Gong and there was just a very,
very interesting development in that, which was basically this persecution
continued to be extremely serious.
People were dying over the years, millions and millions of people incarcerated.
But in certain regions, they noted where the Falun Gong activity, this exact activity that
you were just talking about was larger. It's like
those regions, the persecution kind of lessened a little bit. The authorities would just sort of
leave Falun Gong practitioners alone as a testament to this, just, I guess, this kind of relentless,
as it's called, right, truth clarification, clarification of reality. So I found that
was fascinating. It's just, it's also a very difficult thing to kind of fathom.
Freedom House published, maybe that's what you refer to, Freedom House published a
report, very comprehensive report in 2017.
The title is The Battle for China's Spirit and there's one chapter for Falun Gong.
And I think that's probably one of the most comprehensive report on Falun Gong by major human rights organizations.
So what happens is, and we call it truth clarification.
And so overseas Falun Gong practitioners,
especially those in Taiwan, because they speak Chinese,
but also many of them here, make phone calls to China,
especially to those detention facilities, prison camps,
and call those police and tell them that, clarify truths to them,
tell them that Falun Gong is not what they learned from the Chinese TV, state-run TV.
And these are good people, and you shouldn't torture them.
And you shouldn't follow the party rule because when the party collapsed one day, which could come sooner than you imagine,
then you'll have to take responsibility for what you did.
Just like what happened in many political campaigns in communist history after the Cultural Revolution or many other political campaigns before that, after the campaign, those perpetrators, they were also punished because they became the scapegoats of what
they did actually.
So the practitioners make a phone call to these police and tell them that you will become
the scapegoat in one day, so don't do these things.
And so many of them, at least some of them listened. And so they
decided not to torture Falun Gong practitioners. And also one other tactic that Falun Gong
practitioners in China use, which can be also quite effective, is they post, because they're
all local, right, in the same town and same village and so they document what say the police or prison
guard what they did in the prison like say they torture abuse formal practitioner they got
documented that and they posted publicly you know on a tree on some public square certainly at a
great personal risk and there is sometimes even sent to their family members you know their spouse
workplace mail a letter.
Because these people, they're also human beings, right?
They did horrible things in prison, behind the scenes, but they also have family.
They have their kids, and they don't want their kids to know what they did.
So if their family members know what they did, they just also feel kind of ashamed,
and they become more restrained.
The other factor, I would just say the sanctions by US government.
Both Trump administration and Biden administration's State
Department sanctioned a few Chinese officials involved
in persecution of Falun Gong.
And so these sanctions also help,
because these CCP officials, they
don't know whether one day they will
become the target of
sanction. They also want to have their kids go to America to go to
college. It's very corrupted in China so they have maybe a lot of
money they want to store them overseas. They have some assets here so that made
them worried too. I think these things could contribute to what you described.
The persecution lessened a little bit in some local areas,
but the policy remains the same.
It's unabated 25 years onward, unabated at all.
So I've got a bit of a picture here.
Now let's go back to that legislation.
There were two bills passed.
It's the Falun Gong Protection Act this year. Last year, the Stop Forced Organ Harvesting Act, also related.
Just tell me a little bit about what the substance of this legislation is.
Falun Gong Protection Act is a long overdue bill on Falun Gong.
And there are a few components.
One is the reporting component. And you ask the State Department, basically
the executive branch, to have a report every year
about a forage organ harvesting issues in China.
And also another component is to have a statement of policy,
basically just the stance of American government.
American medical industry will not
cooperate or collaborate with the
Chinese transplantation industry. Another component is the sanction part and so
for anybody involved in the persecution of Falun Gong, especially in the forced
organ harvesting, the US government will deny them the visa to enter the US
and their asset in the US will be freezed. The bill also asked the Secretary of State to determine whether the persecution of Falun
Gong is a crime against humanity or genocide.
And that's actually very interesting, right?
Because why would it be important to distinguish between crimes against humanity, which is
quite extreme, and genocide? I think there may be a little bit difference in the level of the severity and also the
intention.
The severity of this persecution certainly meets the criteria of genocide, but there
is also a factor of intention.
But several scholars have designated this persecution as genocide.
For example, Nina Xie of the Hudson Institute, I think she's the director of International
Religious Freedom, and she had an article in National Review saying that CCP committed
another genocide other than the Uighur genocide, which is the persecution of Falun Gong.
And also there is a very influential academia paper and published in the journals about genocide study and
it's the title is called genocide and so that paper you know laid out very
profound concept of cold genocide. It's more behind the scenes and it's more taking a longer time
so it's less noticeable but it's also not only just destroy you physically but
in many other ways destroy a group socially, mentally, all the other ways.
You know when this persecution first started the instruction by Jiang Zemin, who was Communist Party leadership, Communist
Party chief Jiang Zemin.
And he started this persecution single-handedly, actually.
And all the other six members of the Politburo Standing Committee were not for this persecution
at all.
So he started this persecution single-handedly.
So at that time, he claimed to eradicate Falun Gong within three months in China.
And I just want to highlight that.
He used—it was his words, right?
Eradicate.
Yeah, eradicate.
It's a very, very strong word.
Yeah, eradicate Falun Gong completely within three months.
And he thought he picked the easy target because we practice tolerance.
We don't retaliate.
We don't resort to violence.
He knows that and we talk about benevolence, compassion and so he thought
this is the easy group and he thought this is an easy target and he also want
to use this political campaign to consolidate his power and to see who is
with me, who is not with me, you know, within the party, you know party to see who is playing a legion to me.
And the strategy laid out by him is a three-pronged strategy.
Defamed their reputation, bankrupted them financially,
destroyed them physically.
The party destroyed them physically.
That's the part we're talking about.
And so I just give you a few numbers.
2009, State Department Human Rights reports,
annual reports, and they estimated about at least half
of labor camp inmates in China at that time
were following one practitioners,
at least half of, across China, labor camp inmates.
And Lao Gai Foundation, which specialize
in studying forced labor in China, they estimate
at that time about 3 to 5 million inmates in Chinese labor camps.
If you take half of that, that's 1.5 million.
That was just at that time a snapshot in that year.
But if you consider all the past 25 years, it's definitely millions have been detained
in labor camps, various detention facilities.
And documented death cases from the persecution
have surpassed 5,000.
And these are only the people we know their name,
we know how they died, we know the detail,
and their family member agreed to send that information
overseas.
But the real number could be many times higher.
And I want to jump in here a little bit,
because I know
like you're talking about 5,000 cases where there's incredibly detailed information about
exactly what happened to the person, who did it, how they died. I mean in these kinds of situations
in the human rights field, this is actually often very difficult information to get.
Can I give you one example? Please. Yeah, in December 2012,
2022, just a year and a half ago, a radio host from Sichuan Province,
Pang Xun, and his name is Pang Xun, only 30 years old, very handsome, sunny young man,
and he died in prison just because he handed out a Falun Gong
pamphlet to other people and other people reported him to the police. He was
sentenced to five years in prison and two years into his prison term he was
tortured to death in prison and there's a video of him you know his dead body
corpse with bruises on his face his his body. And in the background, we can hear his mother crying and saying that,
you know, Peng Xun, you know, I'm going to seek justice for you.
It goes viral on X, you know, Twitter.
And so it garnered, I don't know, maybe half a million or a million views.
And Radio Free Asia reported and some other media reported.
And so this is just one of the over 5,000 cases, the documented death cases.
I mean, it's astonishing. I also remember there was this sort of unwritten rule,
if I recall, that Jiang Zemin initiated back in the day. Falun Gong deaths will be considered suicides
in the prison. But why would you have a rule like that? Why are they torturing him in the
first place?
This is not only a persecution to eliminate a physical body. Basically, this is a persecution
to try to eliminate a faith. So, eliminating something from people's mind. That's hard, right? How can you
eliminate something from people's hearts and minds? So what they do is they force you to
renounce your belief and if you don't, they're going to torture you. It's very simple. If you
give up Falun Gong, if you sign some things, you know, say Falun Gong is evil and you renounce it and you stop practicing it, you could be
fine. But if you don't and they're going to torture you, they're going to use all kinds
of means. They're going to use your family member to pressure you to quit. They're going
to torture you. They're going to use various psychological abuses to force you to renounce
your belief. And so in this way, you know, this is the, I would say this is the evil part of this
persecution because they try to eradicate a moral value, a faith from people's minds.
They portrayed the fundamental principle, which is choose compassion and tolerance.
They try to turn that into something evil.
And so you can imagine what that does to a society.
If true compassion forbearance becomes evil in a society,
it just destroys the moral fabric of the society.
That's exactly what's happening in China right now.
So this impact of this persecution is not only just trying
to destroy a group, it's just cause huge damage to the whole society because of
this moral decline. And they tie that into your job performance. For those
policemen, prison guards, their job performance is how many following
practitioners you transformed, which means that you force them to renounce
their belief, actually.
And that's tied into their job performance and how much bonus they can get, how much
salary they can get.
This is one of the most brutal, the largest, and the longest running human rights atrocity
in modern Chinese history, but very likely you never heard about it.
Why? Because the Western media has been really pretty silent in the persecution of Falun Gong.
And I remember Andrew Junker, who is a sociologist, had a book in 2019 published by
Cambridge University Press. The title of the book is Becoming Activists in Global China.
And he also agreed in the book that Falun Gong
is one of the most, and by some measure,
is the most severely persecuted group actually in China.
That's his assessment.
But why is so much ignored by the West?
And he basically explained that two reasons.
One is a secular bias,
because this is a spiritual practice rooted in Buddhist tradition.
And the other thing is just the possible CCP retaliation,
because Falun Gong, you know, basically perceived as CCP's number one enemy.
And so whoever doing even just a neutral study,
you pretty much will have a huge retaliation,
whether you're a scholar or you're media,
because they all need access in China.
They need a visa.
They need to stay there.
Some of the media's parent company,
they also have big business interests in China.
They don't want all those things jeopardized.
For example, the New York Times publisher went to Beijing in 2001, had a meeting with
Jiang Zemin, the party chief who single-handedly started the persecution of Falun Gong. A few
days after that, NewYorkTimes.com was unblocked in China. It used to be blocked. It was unblocked
in China. These two factors, Andrew Jen It was unblocked in China. And so these two
factors, Andrew Jenker said that, created such a blindness on Falun Gong issues. And
he used a very interesting metaphor. And he said that, you know, when we look from outside
the historical episode of Falun Gong and peer in, it is as if one of our eyes is poked out
by the CCP. And then we cover the other eye with our own hand.
So there's two things that this makes me think of.
The first one is, having spoken to a number of experts over the years,
this is sort of the persecution of Falun Gong was not taken very seriously by the West,
by free liberal democracies 25 years ago, and frankly, for a
lot of times since. And so the consequence of that, if people had opened their eyes,
this is what a number of experts told me and saw what was happening then,
they might have gotten much more of a hint of what would happen to other groups, what would
happen in Hong Kong later, what would happen to the Uyghur people, what would happen to Tibetans.
The other part is that Fang Bing practitioners have been responsible for a lot of citizen
reporting out of China on incredibly important issues where there's kind of a total media
blackout. Yeah, exactly. For example, for example, during the COVID, Fang Bing,
who is a citizen journalist in Wuhan, and he shot some videos at the very beginning of the COVID
on site. He shot some of the videos from Wuhan hospitals, just how people just, you know, died
there, you know, and he posted it online. So many international media picked him up and reported that.
But they didn't report he is a Falun Gong practitioner.
And he was jailed before for practicing Falun Gong.
But then he was sentenced to three years in prison because of posting the COVID-related videos online. And another one, Xu Na, she's an artist in Beijing, and she and a group of other Falun Gong practitioners
also took some photos, just empty streets in Beijing during the COVID lockdown and posted
them online.
They were arrested and she was sentenced to eight years in prison right before the Beijing
Winter Olympics in January 2022. Her husband was tortured to death
right before the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Her husband was a very famous folk musician in China.
At that time, many international media also reported his death, Yu Zhou, that's her husband's
name. You can see this family, just two Olympics, one dead,
one sentenced to eight years in prison. So these are some of the citizen journalists.
But I want to tie into your earlier question about the consequences of ignoring Falun Gong.
Some people say, well, the persecution is half a globe away from me.
You know, what does it have anything to do with me, right?
And so I want to just mention one story.
In December 2012, that was 12 years ago, an Oregon woman called Julie Keith,
and she bought something from Kmart, Halloween tombstone kit for her
daughter's birthday and when she opened up she found a letter stuffed inside that
tombstone kit and it was written in choppy English saying that we are making
this product in a Chinese labor camp it's called Ma Shan Jia and we were
jailed here for our belief for practicing Falun Gong.
We were tortured, we work 14 hours a day under extremely hard, dirty situation,
and if you receive this letter, please bring this letter to international human rights organization.
So it's such a plea letter, and she posted on her Facebook and later on Oregonian the
largest newspaper in Oregon reported then after that international media all
reported on this you know and so there was a amazing story but about a year
later and some of the international reporter found the person who wrote this
letter and he was released from the Masanjia labor camp and his name
is sunyi and so later on documentary was made out of this and the two person even met uh i believe
it's in indonesia and uh and a documentary made after that is called a letter from masanjia and
it's available it's an incredible documentary you can can find it in Amazon, iTunes, all the
regular platforms.
Watching that story, that document just made me think.
Lot of things I buy from department stores, Walmart, Target, all those stores that I buy
from China, made in China, most of them were made in
China, right? How many of them were made in a labor camp by a fellow Falun Gong practitioner like me?
Right? I mean, endure extremely harsh, dirty environment, slave labor, only four hours to sleep
and being tortured. Have we ever thought about that? So that just made me think
that this persecution is far closer to Americans' living room than what we think we can imagine.
And so that's just one example. And another example is just this organ harvesting thing.
And I remember, you know, David Meadows is one of the leading investigators about forced organ harvesting from Falun Gong practitioners.
Maybe just very briefly, what does that mean, forced organ harvesting?
So the CCP has been harvesting organs from deaths or prisoners.
Those are criminals sentenced to death penalty.
And starting from 1980s, they even have a regulation for that. Basically,
it's allowed. It's legal in China. But that's kind of a small scale, I would say.
But after the persecution of Falun Gong started in 1999, and this is according to Chinese
transplantation doctors' own words from their own publication. They said the year of 2000 was a watershed moment
for Chinese transplantation industry.
The number of liver transplants they did
like 10 times from the year ago,
and then five years later, they tripled that number.
So anyway, just after the persecution of Falun Gong started,
the number of transplants that Chinese hospitals
have been doing just
going skyrocketing, you know, grow exponentially.
That just matched perfectly with the timeline of persecution of Falun Gong when hundreds
of thousands, maybe millions of people were sent to various detention camps, concentration
camps.
The world basically gave a free pass, I will say this, because in 2006, this news of Oregon
harvesting first came out, and so a lot of people didn't believe it.
But over the years, there's more and more evidence coming out, and people gradually
believe in it.
And so China Tribunal in 2019 is an independent tribunal in London.
It was led by Sir Geoffrey Nice, who was the lead prosecutor of Milosevic in the 1990s.
And so the China tribunal spent a year to study all the evidence about forced organ
harvesting and they concluded in 2019 that forced organ harvesting has been going on
in China for a long time on a significant scale. Falun Gong is probably the primary organ supply.
And in the same year, China Tribunal
testified in front of the United Nations Human Rights Council.
And in their testimony, they estimated
hundreds of thousands of people have been killed
in forced organ harvesting.
A majority of them were Falun Gong practitioners.
And so talking about our earlier conversation about genocide, you know, we talked about the
5,000 documented death cases. Those are only the people we know. We know their name, we know how
they died. But for these people who are killed by organ harvesting, we don't know yet their name. We
don't know that information yet. But this is just estimated based on all the
various data, based on the number of transplant done in China, based on the number of deaths,
execution. There's a huge gap between them and that was fueled by these prisoners of conscience,
mostly Falun Gong practitioners. And they basically treated Falun Gong practitioners like
cattle. Here you have to wait for three or four years for matching organ or kidney or liver or heart.
But you can get that in China within a few weeks, two weeks, at most a month.
For big money.
Yeah, for big money.
So that's why China became the hub of international organ tourism.
Whenever rich people would like to pay that money or foreigner or communist party
officials, they will find a match from their Oregon data bank. And these are the people,
living people in prison, in various concentration camps. And they will pick that person,
just like, you know, you go to a Chinese restaurant, you see a lobster in a tank.
And then they pick that person and extract it organ, and certainly in the process killing that
person, make a huge amount of money. And so this is something we call forced organ harvesting.
It's very different from some of the other, you know, illegal organ treat in some other
third world country, you know, some of the poor people, you know, sell a kidney, something like that. This is done by state and state sanctioned.
And it's a whole system from the police, securities apparatus, to hospital. You
know, it's very coordinated, industry scale. So David Matus, who is the lead
investigator about forced organ harvesting,
he said this, if international community paid enough attention to forced organ harvesting in
China and force Chinese healthcare system to be more transparent, we wouldn't have this
coronavirus pandemic. Yeah, when I saw that statement, when I saw that remark, I just felt it was so enlightening.
Because sometimes you don't really make that connection.
Let me see if I've got this right.
Basically, he's saying if we understood the moral reality around medicine
and biomedical research in China, we wouldn't have
engaged with them.
Yeah, my interpretation is twofold.
One part is about this engagement, collaboration with
the Chinese medical industry.
Because a lot of the transplant doctors in China
were trained here, and a lot of the pharmaceutical company,
medical industry here, have a lot of collaboration
with China in the transplantation industry.
And so that's one part.
The collaboration really helped their healthcare system
to develop this so-called transplantation
industry but it's really based on you know killing people the other thing is
this transparency you know because we allow them you know we give them a kind
of a green pass free pass for them to to lie to us you know and to cover up the dirty things they did in their healthcare system.
And so if we can force them to be more transparent, we can actually,
because there are a lot of leverage international community can do.
Like one of the transplantation journals here banned Chinese paper on transplantation.
So that's one way.
There are a lot of ways you can force them to be more transparent.
And if they're more transparent,
they wouldn't be able to cover up the onsite of the coronavirus so easily.
There's no doubt that it was because of the CCP's cover-up
of this onsite of the COVID pandemic.
Millions of lives were lost. know, millions of lives were lost.
Otherwise, millions of lives could be saved.
Right.
And certainly, you know, the collaborations
that were done in all sorts of areas
might have been treated with a different light,
with a different level of credulity and so forth.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, why do you believe Chinese government's narrative
that it doesn't transmit between person to person?
Why WHO initially said that? It's not transmissible. It's not an issue, whatever.
WHO actually is also one of the organizations that actually helped to protect China in terms of these forced organ harvesting issues.
All of these issues are connected.
I'm haunted by the fact that some of the more recent reports
of developments around this forced organ harvesting regime,
which frankly I've called murder for organs,
are coming out of Xinjiang province.
That's the thing.
If you don't stop the persecution to one group, that will go to
other groups. I remember Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said that injustice anywhere is a threat to
justice everywhere. And sometimes I understand that kind of conceptually, right? But it's real.
You know, for example, in the case of Xinjiang, they did terrible things to Uighurs, but many of
their tactics and tools were applied to Uighurs, but they were developed and honed in the persecution
of Falun Gong.
And even some of the top officials in Xinjiang that carried out all of those persecutions
were used to be the ones that carried out the persecution of Falun Gong. Yeah, the same people,
the same tool, whether it's a torture method, whether it's a psychological abuse, conversion,
you know, force you to renounce your belief, all those things they developed and the tactics they
honed in the persecution of Falun Gong, and then they applied Uighurs and they're doing that later on do some of the underground Christians you know family church house churches and you know later on they
do that to Hong Kong if we give a CCP a free pass they're just going to move on to one group after
another and then each time it becomes closer and closer to us because next time they will aim at Taiwan, right?
That will be much closer to U.S. That will break the first defense island train.
So that's their strategy.
So, Larry, before we continue, maybe tell me a little bit about what you exactly do.
Sure.
And also, you know, how it is that you came to be doing it.
Yeah.
Actually, I'm just a volunteer, actually.
And in doing all the human rights work,
it's just my volunteer.
My full-time job is a senior statistician.
Nowadays, you call it a data scientist,
basically interchangeable.
And so I was born, grew up in China, in the Liaoning province,
northeastern part of China, and I went to college in Beijing at Tsinghua University.
And in 1995, after graduation from my college, I came here and I went to
Washington University in St. Louis to pursue my PhD study.
And so at that time the persecution happened actually.
That was July 1999, exactly 25 years ago this month.
And it was my summer break and I saw the news
and Chinese government banned Falun Gong overnight.
Thousands of people howled from their bed overnight.
Propaganda marathons started. All the Chinese language media in China and all
of them state-run media to demonize Falun Gong. And at that time I thought, I
couldn't believe it. I thought Chinese government really misunderstood us. They
thought we have a political agenda. Maybe they thought that we're China seeking
political power or something and we're not. we're trying to seek political power or something.
And we're not. Falun Gong never seek political power, never before, never will. And so at
that time, you know, I saw the news that practitioner went to Beijing, you know, my mother even
went to the city government, went to the provincial government to appeal. And later on, she went
to Beijing too. And so I thought that, well, I'm here, and later on she went to Beijing too.
So I thought that, well, I'm here.
I can't go back to China.
What I can do is I go to Washington.
There's an embassy here, so a bunch of us, we're all students, and we run one.
We drove to D.C. and I stayed in D.C. for three weeks.
Basically we have a daily protest
in front of Chinese embassy.
And we went in there, actually.
We presented the letter, told them they misunderstood us.
You know, we're not really trying
to overthrow Chinese government.
We have no interest of that.
We just want to be left alone to have our own right
to practice our own faith.
But gradually the persecution just continued,
and getting more and more severe.
And then we realized that, no, they didn't misunderstand us.
And they just want to do it, actually.
So later on, we find out that the best way
to counter this persecution is to help Chinese people to learn the truth and to counter the propaganda
narrative by the Chinese government. If nobody cooperates with the
persecution, the persecution will end. And I guess you've
mentioned a number of times as we're speaking, you're of course a
Falun Gong practitioner yourself.
So how did that happen?
When I was studying at the Tsinghua University in Beijing,
there were quite a few qigong masters
came to Tsinghua University.
Just broadly, for those that aren't familiar with qigong
concept, what is that?
Just very briefly.
Qigong is a general term, and there
are many schools of qigong. You can say tai chi is a form of qigong general term, and there are many schools of qigong.
You can say tai chi is a form of qigong.
You can say yoga is a form of qigong.
So a lot of them involve breathing, but some of them don't.
Like Falun Gong doesn't involve breathing.
But it's generally a slow movement, meditative exercise.
And a lot of people practice it for health benefit.
It certainly can improve your health, energy level.
But certainly Falun Gong has more than just the health benefit,
the physical component, but also has a spiritual component.
And so at that time in 1980s, 1990s, early 1990s,
there was a Qigong boom in China.
There are hundreds of different schools of Qigong,
Qigong masters.
At that time in China,
the scientific community is very open to Qigong,
because it's really tied into
some of the traditional Chinese medicine,
some of the traditional belief in China.
It has a historical root.
And so in 1995, I came to US,
and in 1996, one year after that during the summer
break, my mother in China wrote me a letter. And she practiced many different kinds of
qigong before, and she never really wholeheartedly recommended me to practice one, but she wrote
me a letter saying that I started to practice Falun Gong, and this one is different, very
different from all the qigong that I practiced. It's Gong and this one is different very different from all
the qigong that I practice. It's free completely free it doesn't really charge money a lot of the
others all charge money money and and it's very effective her chronic stomach problem just getting
better and better and this one teach people to you know the principle choose compassion tolerance
and I thought oh this is a little interesting.
And also at about the same time, one of my schoolmates at Washington University in St. Louis,
and he attended a Falun Gong lecture in China.
And so he started kind of a nightly video series lecture in his house.
So I went there, and so I started. When I read the Falun Gong
I just feel it just explained all the questions that I have in my life and and
also it gave me a deeper understanding about about the science because I'm a
science major I'm a math major and so I can see science from a little higher
perspective you know after studying Falun Gong.
It certainly made me feel more energetic, improved my health, and so sleep better,
you know, and I just feel it kind of gave me a spiritual path, a tangible way for
me to elevate my mind and my body.
So you were talking about, you know, what the
significance is to Americans, right?
And one of the kind of features of what the CCP does to all sorts of groups, frankly,
not just Falun Gong, is kind of reach out to wherever these groups have managed to set up overseas
and influence them.
So the persecution is not limited in Chinese border, actually.
It's here. It's here.
And so it takes many forms.
And earlier years, they did a lot of physical attack.
You know, they broke into, say,
a Falun Gong volunteer coordinator's apartment,
like Dr. Peter Yuanli,
who is one of the key computer scientists
who developed this software
to circumvent Chinese internet firewall.
And they broke into his house and beat him almost to death and took all his computer
hard drive away, but without touching anything like money, cash or jewelry.
Obviously they are for the information.
And so that happened a lot.
And it happened on the Flushing Street in New York in 2008, just a mob of Chinese agents
just attacking Falun Gong practitioners on the street.
And I remember the Chinese Consul General in New York, Peng Keyu, was caught on tape
saying that how he instigated these mobs.
But now it becomes more sophisticated.
CCP certainly learned and they hone their skill, their tactics in transnational repression.
And for example, last year, Justice Department indicted two CCP agent for attempting to bribe a purported IRS official who was actually
an undercover FBI agent.
They are trying to bribe this purported IRS official to strip down the non-profit status
of Falun Gong affiliated organizations.
We later learned that that's Shen Yun, that's a performing arts group that's funded by Falun Gong practitioners in New York.
So that's something, you know, they try to use American system to their advantage and try to interfere or try to even destroy Falun Gong here. And I remember back in 2005, a senior Chinese diplomat in Sydney,
Australia, and he was the first secretary of Chinese Consul General in Sydney, Australia,
and Chen Yonglin, and he defected to Australia government at that time. And it made a headline and he testified at that time that he knows there are
about a thousand CCP agents and informants working for CCP in Australia. Australia's population is
only like less than one tenth of the U.S. population and so the true number in the U.S. population. And so the true number in the U.S.
could be many, many times higher than that, 1,000, right?
And so recently there was another former CCP agent
also defected in Australia.
He also testified that, based on his knowledge,
there are about 200 professional spies,
CCP spies in Australia, and then another 1,000
agent informants.
Some of them are paid, some of them are not paid.
There is a leaked document from Chinese government.
It was a 2017 document from Henan Province, CCP branch in Henan Province.
And so that document just laid out all the CCP's strategy
about combating Falun Gong, both inside China and outside China.
And for example, they say that we're going to use
our economic diplomatic influence and sister city program
to squeeze Falun Gong's activity space overseas.
And we're going to develop non-governmental sources, for example, China-friendly scholars,
experts, journalists to speak for us.
And we're going to strive to make foreign media to report favorably to us on Falun Gong
issues.
And so this is in our playbook and so I'm not really surprised you know
if one day I see a major say major media come out an article like attacking
Falun Gong or Shen Yun and some of the CCP agents behind the scenes tip them
information or you know guided their quote-unquote investigation or
facilitated their you know reporting process whatever I'm not surprised at
all if that happens,
because that's in their playbook.
Unrestricted welfare, right?
And so they're not using that to only counter America
in terms of military front,
but they use law-fire, they use all of things.
They may have some people to file a lawsuit.
That happened to Shen Yun, actually. Some people stay in China for many years
and come back to the U.S.
and begin to file a lawsuit
to accuse Shen Yun of some environmental violation,
which has no substance at all.
They use the American system,
like tax issues, media,
to paint a negative picture
about Falun Gong to carry their narrative.
So it's a lot more sophisticated.
It's a lot more hard to discern.
Talking about Shen Yun, it's a dance troupe.
People probably have heard or saw
some of the advertisement about that.
So it encountered tremendous amount
of transnational repression.
Cyber attack and their bus carrying the artist, the bus tire was slashed many times.
But it's not deep enough.
The slash is not deep enough.
The cut is not deep enough to deflate a tire.
But it's good enough for the tire to explode when driving on highway.
So it's very insidious way. And every time when that happened,
you know, and somebody tried to tamper the tire or the bus, and it wasn't done by Asian face or
Chinese. It was done by local thugs. So they hired local thugs to do that. And also this year,
you know, in March, the escalation, the transnational repression against
Xiong Yun just escalated and there were multiple bomb threats, mass shooting threats to both
the theaters that Xiong Yun performed and also Xiong Yun headquarters in New York.
You know, sometimes it's kind of bewildering to think about this. This is the best Chinese show and why Chinese Communist Party is so afraid of it?
A lot of people ask me that question.
This is a show that is reviving traditional Chinese culture, traditional Chinese values.
And a lot of Chinese after seeing the show said that I'm so proud of my culture.
I never seen such a beautiful show back in China but I saw it in America. The tagline of the show
is China before communism. And so it shows a very different China. People say I saw a free China,
I saw a spiritual China, I saw a moral China, I saw a peaceful China in the show,
very different from the CCP that we know about. CCP's political propaganda, media propaganda,
and education indoctrination, really blended the concept of China and CCP in a lot of Chinese people's
minds.
Whenever Western governments criticize human rights abuses in China, CCP always say that
they are hurting the feelings of 1.4 billion Chinese people.
They hide behind Chinese people.
But Shen Yun separated the concept of China from CCP. And so in this way, CCP really just feel that
their legitimacy of representing China
and Chinese culture is being challenged.
You know, and they cannot claim they are the sole guardian
of Chinese civilization and Chinese culture.
And so that's the real reason
that they're so afraid of Shen Yun.
So they tried everything to sabotage the show from
using diplomatic economic influence to pressure many countries, theaters to cancel the show,
and they succeeded in quite a few countries that were vulnerable to their influence. And also,
like I said, they used transnational repression. They filed a lawsuit, you know, have Americans to
do that, filed a lawsuit against Shen Yun, environmental lawsuits against Shen Yun, and also tried
to bribe IRS officials to strip down the nonprofit status of Shen Yun, all these kinds of things.
It's been 25 years and Falun Gong has been persecuted by the Chinese regime. Where are we at today as we finish up?
Falun Dafa Information Center released a new report and the title of the report is 25 Years
of Persecution and 25 Years Too Long. And so this report documented not only just the overall picture of the persecution over the past 25 years,
but more concentrating on now, what's happening now, the current situation.
And because there are some of the narratives out there saying,
OK, Falun Gong has been crushed in China,
but the internal document from CCP tells a very different story,
whether it's their CCP work plan, directives,
report, and so they all point to one direction that Falun Gong still remain the top target of
CCP. In 2020, the then Minister of Public Security, he gave a speech and in that speech he said that we're going to make full use of our
legal weapons and methods to severely crack down Falun Gong and he put that in a very high priority
position in his speech. And then in 2021 also from the Ministry of Public Security and in a
press conference they laid out that Falun Gong as a top target ahead of Xinjiang,
Tibet, and other enforcement areas. That basically just means that their campaigns
to crash Falun Gong, eradicate Falun Gong, just categorically failed after 25 years.
And another important thing that this report covered is the persecution
still going on unabated. So for example, from 2022 until now, just a little over two years,
there were over 1700 new sentencing of Falun Gong practitioners, and the longest is 15 years. And so there are still tens of thousands in custody.
You know, today, every two or three days,
there is a new death case confirmed.
The Falun Gong Protection Act,
it's passed the House now with this unanimous voice vote.
What's next for the bill?
After it passed the House,
the bill has been brought to the Senate.
So I hope the Senate can pass the bill as soon as possible
so that it can be brought to the president's desk
to be signed into the law before the end of the year.
And that's what we really hope for.
Final thought as we finish?
Yeah, I will say just this.
25 years of persecution, 25 years too long.
It's time to end this persecution. It's time to end this persecution.
It's time to end the CCP.
Well, Larry Liu, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you all for joining Larry Liu and me
on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
I'm your host, Jan Jekielek. Music