Promises Made Promises Kept
Indeed, China has now seen the full fruition of The CCP’s pledge.
You once owned land? You now own nothing — it belongs to The CCP.
You built your own home? The lease expires in 70 years. You can’t leave it to your grand child. It returns to The CCP.
You think you own your tower condo? Check the concrete. Tofu dreg.
Hollow buildings, hollow economy, hollow legacy — all wrapped in shiny glass.
The prosperity was real… Right up until the elevator stopped working, the roof caved in, and the bank called saying your “wealth” is now under demolition.
And the Security part of The CCP’s promise? Try speaking out against Emperor Xi or The CCP aristocrats and see what happens. You won’t be debating policy — you’ll be featured in another documentary called “Where Did They Go?”
China — the oldest civilization on Earth as we’re told, once rich with landowners, thinkers, farmers, and poets — now filled with: • Empty homes • Rotten loans • Tofu Dreg • Idle Factories • And bullet trains to no where
And all it cost you was your freedom, your land, your voice, and your future.
That’s 5,000 years of ancient Chinese wisdom for you.
Dark Omens
They thought the ghost cities were the problem. That the Tofu Dreg buildings collapsing before move-in day were the scandal. That bank glitches was the end of the story.
They were wrong.
Something much more ominous was happening across the Chinese territory.
It started with a hole in the sun. A black void burned through daylight like someone had stabbed the heavens. Farmers saw it. Kids saw it. Even the scientist couldn’t explain it.
Then came the crows. Hundred’s of million of them.
Crows. Oceans of crows. Blacker than coal, louder than air raid sirens. Cities from Shandong to Suzhou were swallowed whole in winged storms. Streetlights clicked on at noon. Grandmothers fainted. Traffic crashed. People dropped to their knees screaming, "Where did we go wrong?"
Then came the vultures.
By the millions they circled government compounds, banks, and palaces. Even over Zhongnanhai—the seat of power. Video footage showed a spiral of death circling the chairman’s roof with the caption: "Has Death Come To CCP." before vanishing
“I’m seventy years old. I’ve lived through wars, the cultural revolution, earthquakes—everything,” said Zhao Lin, 73, gripping his balcony rail as the crows swarmed above. “But I’ve never seen so many crows and vultures before. Something is going on. Something bad is about to happen.”
“People joke online until it happens to them,” said Chen Ai, 29, a shop assistant in Kunming. “Yesterday the sky went black and all the street dogs hid under cars. My neighbor’s kid cried for an hour because the windows wouldn’t stop shaking from all the wings flapping. You can feel it in the air—like the whole country is holding its breath.”
“My mother said crows don’t travel like that unless someone powerful is about to fall,” said Mei Xian, 43, a former civil servant who requested anonymity. “Now she won’t leave the house. Keeps lighting incense and praying for The Buddha’s protection.”
What was The CCP’s Response?
Flag it. Block it. Buried it.
Just a sudden internet blackouts. Cell towers jammed. Citizens questioned. Security forces in markets keeping a watchful eye on the students.
Then came a statement from The State Security Bureau: "The sun is fine. The birds are normal. Go shopping. Spend money you don’t have. And if you don’t have it, borrow it.”