Tuesday, May 12, 2026

CCP Is Running a Slave Labor Empire in Plain Sight

 For years Beijing insisted its mass detention of Uyghurs in Xinjiang was over — just a misunderstanding, some voluntary job training, a poverty alleviation program. That lie has now been shattered by the most detailed insider account ever obtained from within China's own security apparatus. Zhang Yabo, a Han Chinese police officer who served in Xinjiang from 2014 to 2023, has provided documented testimony describing what he witnessed firsthand: Uyghur detainees routinely beaten and tortured, a female detainee raped during interrogation by a colleague, deaths occurring with alarming frequency in overcrowded facilities, and armed government convoys transporting laborers to cotton fields with their identity documents confiscated so they couldn't leave. When the era of highly visible mass internment became an international embarrassment, Beijing didn't end the program — it buried it inside routine government administration. Forced labor transfers have since accelerated, reaching a record 3.4 million deployment instances in 2025, involving over three million individuals. Workers who refused transfers were subjected to coercive "thought work" sessions and explicit threats of detention. Exports from Xinjiang to the US, EU, Canada, and UK surged 465 percent between 2021 and 2025, meaning the clothes, electronics, and car parts in Western markets are increasingly built on this system. Five UN Special Rapporteurs declared in January 2026 that the severity of coercion in some cases may constitute the crimes against humanity of forcible transfer and enslavement.



Commentary: Beijing's masterstroke was realizing that the world would stop paying attention once the obvious concentration camps were out of the news cycle — so they traded barbed wire for bureaucracy, turning slavery into a line item in a five-year poverty alleviation plan. The products are still on our shelves, the profits still flow to the CCP, and the only thing that changed is that it's now much harder to photograph.

📰 https://foreignpolicy.com/2026/04/16/china-xinjiang-uyghur-camps-repression/

📷 Image: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7a/Xinjiang_Uyghur_Autonomous_Region_-_Kashgar_Prefecture_-_Kashgar_-_panoramio_%28109%29.jpg/1280px-Xinjiang_Uyghur_Autonomous_Region_-_Kashgar_Prefecture_-_Kashgar_-_panoramio_%28109%29.jpg Credit: Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 3.0 — Kashgar, Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

⚠️ This content was researched and written with AI assistance and may be fully AI-generated. All facts are sourced from the linked article and corroborating reporting from the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, Foreign Policy, and UN Special Rapporteurs.

Your Government Is Stealing Your Mail

For years, Indianapolis police have been stationing officers and drug dogs at the city's massive FedEx hub — the second largest in the country — and systematically seizing cash from packages passing through on their way between other states. Indiana has no connection to the senders, the recipients, or the transactions. The only connection is geography: FedEx routes packages through Indianapolis, and Indiana law enforcement has decided that's enough. When a drug dog alerts to a package and cash is found, the Marion County Prosecutor files civil forfeiture proceedings to keep the money — without ever identifying which law was broken or what crime was committed. Henry and Minh Cheng, a California jewelry wholesaling couple, had $42,825 seized this way — a legitimate payment from a Virginia client routed through Indianapolis by FedEx. Among the "suspicious" factors used to justify opening their package: the box had all its seams taped, exactly as FedEx recommends. Since 2022, Indiana has pursued forfeiture on more than $2.5 million from at least 130 packages in transit between other states, keeping roughly $1 million of it. The Chengs eventually got their money back after suing, but only after hiring lawyers and fighting a forfeiture action filed in a state they'd never set foot in.




Commentary: Indiana has essentially set up a toll booth on the FedEx conveyor belt — except instead of a dollar, they take everything in the package and dare you to come to Indiana and fight about it. The genius of the scheme is that most victims do the math, realize hiring an out-of-state lawyer costs more than what was stolen, and just let the government keep it. That's not a bug; that's the business model.

📰 https://reason.com/2024/08/12/lawsuit-claims-indiana-unconstitutionally-seizes-millions-in-cash-from-fedex-packages-every-year/

📷 Image: https://www.cbp.gov/sites/default/files/assets/images/2020-06/drug-dog-sniffs-mail-2400.jpg Credit: DHS Photo by Benjamin Applebaum / U.S. Customs and Border Protection — Public Domain

⚠️ This content was researched and written with AI assistance and may be fully AI-generated. All facts are sourced from the linked article.

CCP Is Running a Slave Labor Empire in Plain Sight

 For years Beijing insisted its mass detention of Uyghurs in Xinjiang was over — just a misunderstanding, some voluntary job training, a pov...