By Vision Times TV
Independent commentator Edward Wenming has released a bombshell account alleging a disturbing link between the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), the entertainment industry, elite medical programs, and rumors of organ harvesting.
His remarks follow the still-unfolding scandal surrounding Chinese actor Yu Menglong, whose death continues to expose what he calls “the darkest corners” of China’s entertainment and political systems. Yu Menglong’s case, said Wenming, “has illuminated every corner of the entertainment world under CCP control,” making clear that no one escapes the system.
RELATED: Inside China’s ‘Rejuvenation’ Scandal: Rumors of Organ Transplants, Blood Replacements
He describes a hierarchy in which:
Sudden transformations that don’t track
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Social media in China is now filled with videos showing Jet Li acting “like a child — jumping, skipping, almost hyperactive.” Online commenters claim he carries not only “Qiu Feng’s heart” but “two organs from two young girls — one quiet, one rebellious.”
The dramatic shift is fueling speculation:
Their collective “rejuvenation” has fueled widespread fears that the treatments may have involved unwilling donors.
Organ transplants, blood replacement, missing children
Chinese netizens overwhelmingly tie these transformations to organ harvesting. One user based in Sichuan warned, “Everyone in mainland China is an organ supplier. Watch your children carefully — never take your eyes off them.”
Other commenters connect the phenomenon to China’s rising number of missing persons, state incentives for childbirth, and rumored “human resource pipelines.”
One viral video claims that CCP elites are extending their lives using “extracellular vesicles” found only in the blood of 17–21-year-old males. A single treatment may cost between 1.5 million yuan to over 100 million yuan, requiring the blood of several young men. Users are now asking:
China’s recent surge in school “blood collection drives” has only intensified fear. Critics warn that when human bodies become “resources” in a profit-driven chain, laboratories and capital interests gain incentives to exploit them under a veneer of legality.
An explosion of missing persons
Overseas data platforms report 107 disappearances in just 22 days this past October, many of them children — the youngest being just five years old. Human rights lawyers point out that China has over 700 million surveillance cameras, yet the state claims it cannot locate these missing individuals.
Insiders allege:
Dr. Wang Zhiyuan, chairman of the World Organization to Investigate the Persecution of Falun Gong, has stated that the CCP’s organ harvesting apparatus began in the early 2000s and has since expanded “across all of society, even to infants.”
RELATED: Children’s Organs ‘On Sale’: Jilin Hospital’s Free Liver Transplants Spark Organ Harvesting Fears
A system built on fear and blood
Wenming’s analysis concludes with a chilling historical account from Cultural Revolution scholar Fang Yingzhu, who described “killing competitions” inside elite schools for children of high-ranking CCP officials. He recalls a conversation with a 15-year-old student during the Cultural Revolution:
Fang recounts the boy casually holding a blood-soaked leather whip, describing how Red Guards:
Winners were then awarded the title of “champion.” The most frequent “champions,” Fang writes, were girls, including one of his favorite, shy, academically gifted students.
Wenming concludes that the CCP’s brutality is not new — it is “in its bones.” From the Cultural Revolution’s normalized violence and widespread oppression to today’s alleged organ-harvesting networks, he argues that a consistent logic runs through the system: