Do not believe in Marx and Lenin believe in the master Qin Guangrong cloth “eight trigrams formation” to unlock the dragon veins

Recently, the Yunnan Provincial Discipline Inspection Commission of the Communist Party of China (CPC) launched a series of feature films disclosing the inner workings of former provincial party secretary Qin Guangrong’s corruption. While the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China has been cautioning party members to believe in Marxism-Leninism and not to believe in ghosts and gods, Qin Guangrong, a senior provincial minister, arranged for a feng shui master to unlock the dragon veins and set up the “innate Wuji Bagua Formation” in order to promote himself to wealth and power.

On January 13, the third episode of a series of feature films launched by the Yunnan Provincial Commission for Discipline Inspection and Supervision of the Communist Party of China (CPC), “Clearing the Flow of Poison – Yunnan in Action”, revealed some absurdities about Qin Guangrong. There is a famous mountain called Longworm Mountain in Kunming, Yunnan, where folklore has it that a Taoist priest from Qingcheng Mountain set up a “Dragon Locking Formation” during the Qing Dynasty, sending seven of the mountain’s nine dragons flying away, thus locking up Yunnan’s dragon veins and causing damage to Yunnan’s feng shui, thus preventing the emergence of “big leaders” in Yunnan Province. This led to the destruction of Yunnan’s feng shui, so that no “big leader” could emerge in Yunnan Province.

During his tenure in Yunnan province, Qin Guangrong had 2 “masters” he trusted: Chen Zhirong and Zhang Weiling. They are a husband and wife who also used to look at the ancestral graves of Qin Guangrong’s hometown in Hunan province. Qin Guangrong also paid some money for Chen Zhirong and Zhang Weiling’s daughter to study abroad.

The Beijing Youth Daily reported that Qin Guangrong had heard this rumor about the long worm mountain in Kunming and sought a way to break the formation in order to soar in the future. The two “masters” believed that if the feng shui of the Long Worm Mountain could be restored, important people would emerge in Yunnan who would influence China, “in the past it was a king, but now it is at least a state-level leader”.

Qin Guangrong was convinced of this. So Chen Zhirong and Zhang Weiling prepared peach wood nails and were accompanied by Qin Guangrong’s subordinates to the mountain to break the formation.

According to the report, Chen Zhirong and Zhang Weiling laid out eight “innate heavenly bagua formations” in eight different directions on the mountain, plus one in a star-shaped place, a total of nine formations. Afterwards, a company agreed by Qin Guangrong donated 800,000 RMB as the cost of breaking the formation.

However, these “innate wuji bagua formations” did not guarantee Qin Guangrong a smooth career path and became a national-level leader.

On May 9, 2019, the State Supervisory Commission of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection of the Communist Party of China announced that Qin Guangrong was suspected of serious violations, took the initiative to surrender, and accepted the investigation. Mainland China’s Caixin reported on August 16, 2019 that Qin Guangrong surrendered mainly because his son Qin Ling was deeply involved in the corruption case of Lai Xiaomin, the former chairman of China Huarong Asset Management Co. After he was controlled by Beijing authorities in Hong Kong, Qin Guangrong could not bear this huge psychological pressure and had to take the initiative to surrender, becoming the first senior provincial official in the CCP officialdom to do so.

Qin was the chairman of Hong Kong-listed Huarong Investment Co. and a subordinate of Lai Xiaomin. He was found to have corrupted more than RMB 200 million in a single transaction, and the case was extremely serious in nature.

On August 7, 2019, the First Branch of the Tianjin Municipal Public Prosecutor’s Office of the Communist Party of China (CPC) filed an indictment in the Tianjin First Intermediate Court Court for Qin Ling’s alleged bribery and embezzlement.