TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @LeisRealTalk

Saved - January 29, 2026 at 12:26 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I examine China's dark medical supply chain, the fear of disappearing children, helicopters landing on hospital rooftops, and censored videos. Parents are warned not to search, and as trust in the system collapses, society begins to fracture.

@LeisRealTalk - Lei's Real Talk

Children are disappearing across China. Helicopters land on hospital rooftops. Videos are censored. Parents are warned not to search for their missing kids. In this program, I examine China’s dark medical supply chain, the growing fear among families, and why many parents no longer believe the system will protect their children. When that trust collapses, society itself begins to break. Watch the full video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_g9k0367q94

Video Transcript AI Summary
The video argues that China has a unique, long-standing supply chain that involves state security, public security, hospitals, biotech companies, airlines, high-speed rail, and schools. This is described as a “hundred fifty year industry” that could cost lives if spoken about aloud, referencing the death of a actor as an example. The speaker explains that this concept derives from a moment when Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin discussed how humans could live to 150 years old while on the way to a military parade; the speaker asserts that Xi was expressing confidence in China’s medical system and the related supply chain. According to the speaker, a dark medical supply chain exists in which young people have become sources of spare body parts for the rich and powerful, with schools, hospitals, police, and local governments all implicated. Public discussion of this topic has surged as more people go missing. The age range of affected individuals is said to be expanding from toddlers to teenagers to young adults and now middle-aged men and women, including people in their fifties. The speaker notes that a Shanghai official told friends that people should not go to hospitals for physical exams if they are under 60, arguing that as demand for body parts rises, a 50-year-old who “still looks good” is valuable, while the biggest group affected remains children. As 2026 began, reports of missing children across China reportedly increased. The speaker cites a sequence of disappearances in Henan: a mysterious death of a 13-year-old boy, followed within a week by another boy’s disappearance in a township near Xincai County on January 9; a 14-year-old boy, Yang Jiahao, missing on January 11 in Shangji Township; a 13-year-old boy, Wang Yichun, missing January 12 in Heilong Township; and a 14-year-old girl, Xu Mengyao, missing January 12 in Dancheng County, Henan. Concurrently, helicopters were reported in busy urban areas transporting what many suspect to be organs or organ-harvesting victims. Around 2 PM on January 15, a helicopter was filmed lifting a white bag from the rooftop of a traditional Chinese medicine hospital in Xiamen, Fujian. Netizens noted the bag appeared to be moving, leading to heightened online scrutiny, while authorities began censoring the footage.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Now every country has supply chains. Every industry has supply chains, but China has a supply chain that no other country has. This supply chain involves state security, public security, hospitals, biotech companies, airlines, high speed rail, and most disturbingly, schools. What industry is this? Well, saying it out loud could cost your life as we as we've seen in the case of the actor who died. In China, some people called it a hundred fifty year industry. So where does that name come from? It it came from this picture. Remember this? September when Xi Jinping, and Vladimir Putin were talking about how humans could live to a 150 years old when they were on their way to the military to watch the military parade. At the time, many people laughed and thought that Xi Jinping was joking or bragging, but he wasn't joking and he wasn't bragging. He was expressing confidence, confidence in what China's medical system can do, and now more people are starting to understand what he meant. In simple terms, people are discovering a dark medical supply chain, one in which young people have become the source of spare body parts for the rich and powerful. Schools, hospitals, police, and local governments are all complicit. Public discussion of this topic has exploded inside China as more people go missing. And the age range keeps expanding from toddlers to teenagers to young adults to now even middle aged men and women, including people in their fifties. In fact, I told you, last week that there was a official from Shanghai who told his friend circle of friends that nobody should go to the hospitals to do physical to do physical exams if they are if they're under the age of 60. Because as the demand for body parts soared, when a 90 year old is in demand of organ, a 50 year old still still looks good. But still the biggest group affected is children. So just in 2026, right, as 2026 begins, reports of missing children across China have become noticeably more frequent. This is probably the the biggest topic, the hottest topic that I've seen coming out of China. So right after the mysterious death of that 13 year old boy in Henan, in less than a week, more kids disappeared in the region. He disappeared on January 8. Then on the following day, another boy met was went missing in a township 40 kilometers away from from the Xincai County. And then on January 11, a 14 year old boy, Yang Jiahao, went missing in Shangji Township. And then the next day, the January 12, a 13 year old boy, Wang Yichun, disappeared, in Heilong Township. And then that same day, a 14 year old girl, Xu Mengyao, went missing in Dancheng County, Henan. Now at the same time, helicopters began appearing repeatedly in busy urban areas transporting what many suspect to be organs or organ harvesting victims. So at around 2PM on January 15, the helicopter was filming lifting a white bag from a rooftop of of a Chinese a traditional Chinese medicine hospital in Xiamen, Fujian. Netizens immediately noticed something disturbing. The bag the white bag appears to be moving, and many suspected it contained a child. And all as online questions grew louder, authorities began aggressively censoring the footage.
Saved - October 16, 2025 at 10:06 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I see "free trade" as an open gate. When China joined the WTO, it wasn’t to embrace a free market, but to conquer from within. I recall Zhu Rongji’s line—“after we get in… following the rules, that’s up to us.” The result: trillions in red capital hidden in Western economies, gutted industries, and influence networks in politics, media, and finance. A weaponized trade war with no mercy—this is the Red Trojan Horse inside the walls.

@LeisRealTalk - Lei's Real Talk

They called it free trade. In truth, it was the opening of the gates. When China entered the WTO, it wasn’t to join the free market—it was to conquer it from within. Zhu Rongji’s words still echo: “After we get in… whether we follow [the rules] or not—that’s up to us.” The result? Trillions in “red capital” buried deep inside Western economies, industries gutted, and influence networks woven into politics, media, and finance. From weaponized trade to chemical warfare on America’s streets, the CCP’s unrestricted war knows no rules, no mercy. This is the Red Trojan Horse—already inside the walls. Watch my full live stream here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfG3YF9XeDM

Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript argues that the CCP’s most damaging strategies are not just cunning but enabled by Western eagerness to do business with Beijing. It begins with China’s entry into the WTO in 2001. On November 15, 1999, seven unresolved issues remained in negotiations. Chinese negotiator Long Yun Tu recounts that Premier Zhu Rongji told his team to sign the agreement that day, saying, “I will talk to them,” and acting on orders from Jiang Zemin to make major concessions. After signing, Zhu gave a state-council speech stating, “We agree to these conditions just to enter the WTO after we get in, whether we follow them or not. That’s up to us. Every rule has loopholes that we can exploit.” The speaker asserts that this shows China never intended to play fair, then or ever. Following WTO entry in 2001, the CCP, described as hostile to democracy and free markets, gained unprecedented access to Western trade, investment, and institutions. The West’s openness allegedly allowed China to build a global network of influence while the Chinese economy operated as a “war economy,” with the CCP controlling land, resources, factories, supply chains, wages, unions, markets, export prices, currency, and capital flow to serve political goals. Three unlimited resources—natural, human, and fiscal—are used to wage economic war: cheap production and dumping abroad through tax breaks, export rebates, low-interest loans, and subsidies to undercut foreign competitors. This comes at a cost to Chinese citizens, who face low wages, extreme work pressure, unaffordable housing and healthcare, a heavy education burden, and severe environmental degradation. The West’s manufacturing sectors—steel, aluminum, rare earths, electronics, machinery, solar panels, energy storage, pharmaceuticals, and medical devices—shifted to China, gutted U.S. manufacturing, and risked national security. The transcript cites a claim by Yuan Hongbing, via Epoch Times, that Deng Xiaoping-era to Hu Jintao-era CCP elites transferred about RMB 20 trillion overseas (roughly $3 trillion) as “red capital” used to infiltrate Western financial systems. This red capital network allegedly grew as a direct consequence of China’s WTO entry, enabling deep penetration into economic, political, and media systems with Western money and institutions as weapons. Unrestricted warfare is central: “everything is a weapon” and the CCP does not follow rules or compromise. The narrative casts the third kind of war as one with no rules. It links the American fentanyl crisis to CCP strategy, noting that attempts to impose tariffs faced denial of CCP responsibility; if the U.S. bans fentanyl chemicals, Chinese sellers adapt with new formulas, creating a “chemical shell game.” Kash Patel told Joe Rogan that the CCP sees America as its number one enemy and flooding the U.S. with fentanyl is part of a long-term plan to destabilize the country, with tens of thousands of American deaths each year. Negotiations with the CCP, the speaker claims, have never solved problems; the post–Cold War belief that communism collapsed and China embraced capitalism is labeled a miscalculation. The CCP is described as a machine built for total war, designed to achieve victory over its enemies, willing to cross any line and sacrifice anyone, urging the world to hurry in understanding this reality.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: So the CCP has pulled off some of the most damaging scams and atrocities in modern history, not just because it's cunning, but because the West has been eager to do business with Beijing. And from the very beginning, the West was plagued. Let's go back to 1999 when China was negotiating its entry into the WTO. On November 15 of that year, it was the final day of negotiations. There were still seven issues remaining that were unresolved. And according to a Chinese negotiator by the name of Long Yun Tu, according to his memoir, then Chinese premier Zhu Rongji told his team, we must sign the agreement today. We can't let the Americans walk away. I will talk to them. So Zhu was acting on orders from Zhen Zemin, then CCP leader, to make major concessions, and he did. As a result, the agreement was signed. But behind closed doors after the agreement was signed back at the state council when the Chinese were assessing the impact of the agreement on Chinese economy and particularly Chinese agriculture, people were concerned that there will be severe impact or consequences. And then Zhu Rongji gave a now infamous speech to his state council. And he said, we agree to these conditions just to enter the WTO after we get in, whether we follow them or not. That's up to us. Every rule has loopholes that we can exploit. That one sentence says everything. China never intended to play fair. Not then, not ever. So after joining the WTO in 02/2001, the CCP, a regime hostile to both democracy and free markets, was welcomed into the heart of the global economy. The U. S. And other Western nations opened their trade, investment, academic, cultural, and even media sectors to China. This gave the CCP everything it needed to make money while building a global network of influence. But the Chinese economy isn't a real market economy. It's a war economy. It's a machine designed for unrestricted warfare. The CCP controls everything: land, resources, factories, supply chains, wages, unions, markets, export prices, currency, capital flow, you name it, everything. Whether under Mao's planned economy or today's so called market socialism, The economy has always been tightly controlled to serve political goals. So in this system, the CCP uses three unlimited resources. They are natural human and fiscal resources to wage economic war. It produces cheap products and dump them abroad using tax breaks, export rebates, low interest loans, and direct subsidies to undercut foreign competitors. And this comes at a cost, right? No government or economies could sustain that. But in China, it's paid by the Chinese people. Wages are low. Work pressure is extreme. Housing and healthcare are unaffordable and education is a crushing burden. Meanwhile, the environment is wrecked. The country has some of the worst air water. I don't think some of the worst, I think it has the worst, the worst air, water and soil pollution on earth. So to the CCP, Chinese citizens and natural resources are nothing more than disposable fuel in their war machine. And during the globalization boom, American industries like steel, aluminum, rare earth, electronics, machinery, solar panels, energy storage, pharmaceuticals, and medical devices all moved to China. This gutted US manufacturing and therefore putting on national security at risk. How could the CCP succeed in this strategy? Partly because The United States and the West misunderstood the post Cold War world geopolitical landscape. But most importantly, it failed to grasp the true nature of the CCP. And so this brings us back to the very core issue that is China's WTO membership was one of the most successful part of China's unrestricted warfare. On 06/17/2025, Chinese Australian legal scholar Professor. Yuan Hongbing revealed something stunning in an interview with The Epoch Times. He said that the CCP princeling, Kong Dan, recently criticized Xi Jinping for making two major mistakes. But in his speech, he inadvertently exposed a truth. That is, he gave a number. He said from Deng Xiaoping's era to Hu Jintao's CCP elites, aka the second and third generations of party elders, the red nobility, transferred around RMB 20,000,000,000,000 overseas. That's roughly $3,000,000,000,000 assets weren't just personal fortunes. They were red capital controlled by these people. And they are funds strategically planted in the West to create a foundation for the CCP's influence and infiltration campaigns. If you want to measure or if you want to quantize how deeply the CCP has embedded itself in the Western financial system, that $3,000,000,000,000 is a good start. But this red capital network didn't just appear overnight. It was built as a direct consequence of China's WTO entry. It wouldn't happen if the CCP didn't earn US dollars through unfair trade. So this was a slowly buildup after China entered the WTO. That's what the red Trojan horse enabled deep penetration into the economic, political and media systems of the West using Western money, institutions, and values as weapons against themselves. If the CCP didn't exist, the world would mostly face two types of war: hot war and cold war. Both are brutal, but they come with rules, lines you don't cross, agreements like the Geneva and Vienna conventions. They exist to protect civilians and prisoners of war and diplomats. But the CCP doesn't follow any of that. Its entire strategy is based on something else. It's based on its unrestricted warfare where everything is a weapon. Business, technology, culture, even human decency can be weaponized. So unlike The US or the Soviets, China never admits what it's doing, compromises and never plays fair. And that's why we now live in a world where the third kind of war has taken root. The type of war with no rules at all. And that is the CCP's unrestricted warfare. And now let's look at American fentanyl crisis. When the Trump administration tried to hold Beijing accountable using the tariffs, the CCP refused to admit any role. They would rather accept a 20% tariff than acknowledge their hand in the overdose epidemic. Trying to fight the CCP is like trying to punch a shadow. It's a one-sided invisible war. One-sided because you can't retaliate using their tactics. Invisible because they don't follow any rules while we still try to figure out what their rules are when there there are none. And then we still try to follow our rules. So if let's say The U. S. Bans certain fentanyl related chemicals and the Chinese sellers will respond by tweaking the formula, they will add masking molecules to avoid regulatory supervision or inspection. And once The U. S. Bans the new version, they will switch to another molecule. It's going to be a chemical shell game with lives at stake. And as long as the CCP's goal is to poison American youth, there's no traditional law enforcement solution. Actually, the FBI director, Kash Patel, told Joe Rogan on June 6 in a podcast that the CCP sees America as its number one enemy and that flooding The U. S. With fentanyl is part of a long term plan to destabilize the country. The victims, young Americans, future cops, teachers, and soldiers dying in the tens of thousands every year. I think it was forty eight thousand deaths related to fentanyl. So this isn't a drug cartel chasing profits. It's a rogue regime committing chemical warfare. One that's deliberately targeting Americans people. And when China agrees to negotiate, it's just part of the game. Their goal is to trap you in endless diplomatic loops while continuing their operations behind the scenes. Dialogue becomes a smokescreen for more drugs, more cyber attacks, more subversion. History shows that any negotiation with the CCP doesn't solve anything. Is there any negotiation with the CCP that has been successful? There isn't any. And after the cold war, the West somehow believed communism had collapsed and that China had embraced capitalism. That illusion led to one of the biggest strategic miscalculation in modern history. And the truth is the CCP functions like a machine built for total war. Its political system, economy, media, education, diplomatic apparatus all of it is designed to achieve one thing: victory over its enemies. And in pursuit of that goal, it will use any weapon, cross any line, and sacrifice anyone. I think the world is beginning to understand what that means, but I think we need to hurry up.
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