The Chinese Communist Party’s Misrepresentation of PLA Casualties Pan Rui Ranked among the “Four Young Men of the New Capital” with a Cannon Character

Pan Rui (right) and Wang Sicong (left) are known as the “Four Young Men of the New Capital”. (taken from Weibo)

Pan Rui, the eldest son of real estate tycoon and SOHO China chairman Pan Shiyi, born on September 4, 1990, is known by netizens as the “New Capital Four”, along with Wang Sicong, son of Wanda’s Wang Jianlin, Wang Shuo, son of real estate developer Wang Zhicai, and Zhang Quan, son of Fuli Real Estate’s Tension. The three “rich kids”, including Wang Shuo, son of real estate developer Wang Zhicai, and Zhang Quan, son of Fuli Real Estate’s Tension, were dubbed by netizens as the “New Capital Four. Before he made his “denigration of the People’s Liberation Army” comment, Pan Rui had criticized the Hong Kong issue and spoke out for dissidents, and now these comments have been unearthed one by one.

According to Hong Kong media, during the anti-revision controversy in Hong Kong, former Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying posted a reward of HK$1 million in the social media for clues about the throwing of the national flag into the sea. Poon Shui retweeted the post saying, “I would like to ask if anyone is offering a reward to the master of Yuen Long who attacked passersby indiscriminately with a cane?”

In early April last year, Pan Rui even released a series of “sensitive” text, saying “stability, can not be created on top of lies, ten thousand feet tall building if the foundation is made of lies, according to fall”; later for the Epidemic problem, Pan Rui directly asked “Unblocked, where is Qiushi?” It is suspected that he was sarcastic about the Chinese government’s falsification of the epidemic and his solidarity with Chen Qiushi, a citizen journalist who was arrested for reporting on the epidemic in Wuhan.

The public is curious about Pan Rui’s “outspokenness” and how he developed his cannon personality. In response, Pan Rui said on Weibo, “Thanks to Han Han, Ren Zhiqiang, and Big Eye (referring to the well-known media personality Li Chengpeng), these people appeared when I was 15 or 16 years old, when my ideology was just taking shape, five years earlier or five years later, they would not have had such a big impact.”