Famous party school professor praises Canada’s welfare, surrounded by five hairs shut down microblogging

Liu Yuying (formerly), a well-known professor at the Communist Party School, was forced to close her Weibo account after she posted an article praising Canada’s equal health care benefits for all, and was besieged by 50 cents. (Liu Yuying’s microblog)

Liu Yuying, a well-known professor at the Party School of the Communist Party of China (CPC), was forced to quit Weibo on May 6 after she posted an article praising universal equality in Canadian health care benefits, and was “attacked” by an army of “Dibao” war wolves.

The first thing you need to do is to get a free medical card in your hand, and the same medical card is in the hands of the Prime Minister’s small potatoes and farmers. Seeing this news, I remembered the brackets (quotation marks) in an obituary I saw the other day, ‘enjoy the medical treatment of deputy ministry’.”

(Screenshot from Weibo)

Netizens interpreted Liu Yuying as referring to the inequality of medical resources in Chinese society, so whenever an official passes away, the media will begin the obituary with “officials who enjoyed medical treatment at the vice ministerial level” or “officials who enjoyed medical treatment at the full ministerial level,” which is a Communist Party rule that officials at the full ministerial level The Communist Party stipulates that medical expenses for officials at the ministerial level are reimbursed by the health department and hospitals, while officials at the vice-ministerial level have to go to their original units for reimbursement of medical expenses.

Liu Yuying, a well-known professor at the Central Party School, graduated from Peking University and is now a professor and doctoral supervisor in the Party Building Department of the Central Party School of the Communist Party of China.

However, Liu Yuying’s latest remarks have sparked discontent among the mainland’s five-hair war wolves, and the official microblogging site of “Dibao” has even conscripted Liu Yuying’s microblog. An hour before she announced her withdrawal from Weibo, Liu Yuying retweeted the article “Let people speak, the sky will not fall”, showing that she was forced to shut her mouth.

(Screenshot from Weibo)

Liu Yuying later posted, “As of today, I will stop updating my Weibo account, uninstall the Weibo software from my phone, and close down to study. I’m going to finish what I’ve finished and start what I’ve started. Thank you for your attention over the years.”

(Screenshot from Weibo)

Six hours later, she wrote in her final posting at her coordinates in Changchun, “I’m not afraid of anything because I’m clearing my Weibo messages. I want to say goodbye to microblogging completely, and there are reports of my already screenshot, there is no need to keep.”

(Screenshot of microblogging)

Some netizens searched for Liu Yuying’s early sensitive comments, showing Liu’s long-standing concern for the welfare of citizens such as medical treatment, and his appreciation for the welfare and humanistic systems of Western countries, “Japanese garbage incineration plants are built next to government buildings” and “the doctor in charge of a Japanese hospital even bowed to him before surgery “.

(Screenshot of microblogging)

(Screenshot of microblog)

(Screenshot of microblog)

In addition, she has also posted her dissatisfaction with the corruption of the mainland officialdom, reproducing posts that satirize the current situation in China where “where there are party members, there are disasters”. She criticized the Chinese characteristic of “those who are in power, think imperially; those who are not in power, think revolutionarily.”

(Screenshot from Weibo)

(Screenshot from Weibo)

(Screenshot from Weibo)

She also quoted from her daughter’s collection of essays, lamenting that “we adults are not ‘living like human beings'” and so on.

(Screenshot from Weibo)

Liu Yuying also shut down her Weibo account on September 12, 2015, saying, “Starting today, my Weibo account is closed. Only read, not talk, not comment, not reproduce. Don’t ask me why.”

But a day later, on September 3, she left another message saying, “Today I saw a Turkish proverb: ‘An ordinary person with two upright legs is taller than a celebrity on bended knees. Although I am an ordinary person, I am ‘upright on two legs’. Since I am ‘upright on two legs’, why should I be afraid? So, decided to reopen the blog.” The reason for this is unknown.

Before Liu Yuying, Cai Xia, a former professor at the Communist Party School in exile in the United States, had also criticized the CCP as a “political zombie” and “fundamentally abandoned the system,” and was expelled from the Party, her retirement benefits were revoked by the school, and her bank account was frozen.

In an article in Foreign Affairs magazine, Cai Xia described the CCP as a “failed party” and that she had officially “broken with Beijing” as a member of the system.

Analysts say there is now a significant group of reformists in the party who are as desperate as Cai Xia.