On Feb. 22, according to the “China’s Word Prison Incident Inventory” account, the author of the April 2020 Weibo hit “The Man Who Sat on the Balcony and Knocked on the Gongs and Sounded Sick”, @MarilynMengLiu, disappeared after posting the article and claiming to have been “drunk on tea”. In fact, he was sentenced to six months in prison for “provoking and provoking trouble”, and the official considered that the content he spread contained “rumors”.
@SpeechFreedomCN: “Marilyn Mengliu” sentenced to six months in jail: Weibo user “Marilyn Mengliu”, real name Zhang Wenfang, who lives in Yanjiao, Hebei province, posted a long Weibo post on April 4, the national day of mourning for the victims of Newcastle pneumonia, pointing out that Some of the Epidemic‘s unofficially reported folk tragedies were officially recognized as containing rumors and sentenced to six months in prison.
The one who sat on the balcony and banged the gong to sound the sickness.
The person who chased after the funeral car late at night, crying out “mommy”.
The person who watched “The Origin of Political Order” in the isolation house where 1,000 people shared one bathroom.
The one who drove a truck on the highway without a place to return.
The person who died sitting with his head held by his Family waiting for the funeral car.
The one who died of starvation in isolation at Home.
The one who spent $200,000 on her pregnancy and was eventually given up for treatment because she couldn’t afford it.
The person who dug a grave for himself and hanged himself in secret for fear of infecting his family.
The person who had nowhere to go for medical treatment and was afraid of infecting his wife and children and jumped off a bridge to kill himself.
The person who spent five days and nights in the hospital at the age of 90 to get a bed for his 60-year-old son.
The person who commented under the microblog for a hospital bed: “My family just passed away, a bed is vacant, I hope I can help you”.
The person who first scolded the person asking for help for howling affects his mood and then had to call for help in the same way.
The person who now learns to tweet a hello for help.
The person who covered his mouth with a scarf when being questioned and cried in shame because he couldn’t buy a mask.
The person who used an orange peel as a mask.
The person whose mother and father and grandparents all died and had to report to the civil affairs bureau alone.
The person who donated all the masks that were paid for his work.
The person who wrote, “It’s Time to die with peace of mind” and “It’s time to give yourself”.
The person who wrote “I can, I understand” and died twice with a red handprint.
The person who returned to his village after working tirelessly to build the Vulcan Mountain Hospital, but was considered a plague by the people of his village.
The person who was suffering from leukemia and needed to go to Beijing for a bone marrow transplant, but had no way to get out of town and was in so much pain that he wanted to be euthanized.
The person who called for a bed in his birthday suit and collapsed in failure.
The person who couldn’t do hemodialysis because of the epidemic, begged in front of the community to no avail and jumped to his death, only to have his body pulled away 6 hours later.
The person who was punished by the police station for writing “Always wear a mask when you go out” 100 times.
The person who was slapped and bled without wearing a mask.
The person who shouted I’m hungry, I’m starving to death, my wife and children are starving at home, I think your stomach is full, right?
The person who made a living from beekeeping and finally committed suicide because the bees could not be transferred due to the epidemic.
The person who wrote a suicide note to use his body for scientific research for fear of infecting his wife and children, so that the world would not suffer from the disease, and then left his keys and cell phone and ran away from home, finally dying on his way back home.
The one who wrote, “After I die, my body will be donated to the state. Where is my wife?” The man who wrote, “Where is my wife?
The man who had to carry his mother around for three hours because the city was closed to cars.
The person who entrusted his newborn child to the hospital and wrote, “I spent all my savings on the birth of my child, so I was desperate to get out of here.
The person who climbed down from the 10th floor in order to go out to buy meat.
The child who spent five days guarding her grandfather’s body and covered him with a quilt.
The one who came home after being cured of a serious illness and found his family dead, and hanged himself on the roof of the building.
The one who, in her 60s, alone took on the purchasing, washing, cooking, dishwashing, and cleaning of the kitchen of more than 60 police officers at the police station, and finally got so tired that she cried in the hallway.
That person who wandered the streets of Wuhan for more than 20 days, his hair was half white.
The person who has no money to buy a cell phone for Internet classes and swallowed a handful of her mother’s medication for mental illness.
The one who resigned from CCTV at the age of 25, went live to Wuhan at the most dangerous time, and recited to the people who were going to take him away from the door that the young man is strong and the young man is weak.
The person who shouted “It’s all fake” upstairs when the leaders were inspecting.
The person who cried after rescuing the bodies of three children from the collapsed Quanzhou Hotel.
The person who wrote 60 diaries about the city, was blocked several times, and was beaten up and abused by hooligans.
The one who was only seven or eight years old and followed the adults in the procession to collect ashes for his Parents.
The person who sighed softly after calling government officials with good reasoning and saying that the virus had to be prevented and people had to eat.
The person who was loved by the patients, was reprimanded by the hospital for wearing a mask, and later died of the virus.
The person who said, “If I had known this day would come, I wouldn’t care if he criticized me, I would have said it everywhere.
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