China Accussed Of Horrible Crimes Against Humanity

Let me paint you a picture. It’s 2026, and the world’s second-largest economy — a country we’ve handed the keys to our supply chain, our rare earth minerals, and half our manufacturing base — is allegedly running what amounts to a human chop shop. And the global response? Crickets. A polite cough. Maybe a sternly worded memo nobody reads.

Welcome to the most horrifying story nobody wants to touch.

The Book That Should Make You Lose Sleep

Jan Jekielek, senior editor at the Epoch Times, just dropped a book called Killed to Order, and he brought the receipts to a speaking event at the Trump Kennedy Center this past Monday. Actor Rob Schneider joined him on stage — and even a guy who’s made a career out of comedy couldn’t find anything funny about this one.

Here’s the core of it: China’s organ transplant system operates at a speed that would make Amazon Prime jealous. Patients in the U.S. wait months, sometimes years, for a kidney or a liver. In China? Days. Weeks. You don’t need a medical degree to know that math doesn’t add up unless you’re sourcing organs the way most countries source auto parts — on demand, from a warehouse.

Except the warehouse is a prison. And the “parts” are people.

The Numbers That Won’t Go Away

Jekielek pointed to researcher Ethan Gutmann, who “under oath defended the number 60 to 100,000 transplants per year… and that’s a low bound.”

Let that land for a second. A hundred thousand transplants a year on the low end. In a country with no functioning voluntary organ donation system anywhere near that scale.

And here’s where it gets worse. The infrastructure isn’t shrinking — it’s growing. Jekielek noted that “there were 146 hospitals… since then, there are 200 hospitals” capable of performing these procedures. You don’t build 54 new transplant-capable hospitals because you’ve got a surplus of generous donors. You build them because business is booming.

This isn’t a handful of rogue doctors. This is industrial capacity. A assembly line with a body count.

The Crime Scene That Cleans Itself

The book describes what researchers have called “execution by organ procurement” — meaning the surgery itself is the execution. Teams of surgeons reportedly remove organs from prisoners who are still alive. Then the bodies get incinerated. No corpse, no autopsy, no evidence.

Jekielek put it with chilling simplicity:

“The crime scene is an operating room… scrubbed clean every time.”

That’s why this story stays buried. It’s not like a mass grave somebody stumbles across with satellite imagery. Every piece of evidence gets sterilized, burned, and flushed. You have to build the case like a mosaic — transplant wait times here, hospital capacity there, documented mismatches between official donation numbers and actual volume everywhere.

And when you step back and look at the whole picture, only a fool or a liar pretends it’s coincidence.

It’s Not Just One Group Anymore

Falun Gong practitioners have been the primary documented victims for years. But Jekielek issued a warning that should chill anyone paying attention:

“I’m genuinely worried that they’re looking for new groups to add to this machine of death.”

Uyghurs. Tibetans. Political dissidents. Anyone Beijing considers disposable becomes a potential organ catalog. The Chinese Communist Party didn’t build a system this efficient to limit it to one target population. That’s not how totalitarian regimes operate. They scale.

Why the Silence?

So why isn’t every major network running this wall-to-wall? Why aren’t Western governments pounding the table at the UN? Jekielek was blunt: “They’re afraid to touch it.”

And the reason is as old as corruption itself — money. Access to China means research grants, business deals, cheap manufacturing, and fat trade agreements. Report on forced organ harvesting credibly, and as Jekielek put it, “they will lose that.”

So the media looks the other way. Academic institutions keep their partnerships. Corporations keep their supply chains. And somewhere in a sterile operating room in China, somebody doesn’t wake up.

Rob Schneider sat on that stage and you could watch the disbelief drain from his face in real time, replaced by something heavier. The audience went through the same transformation. That’s what happens when someone walks you through the logic step by step and you realize you can’t explain it away.

The Bottom Line

Jekielek drew a comparison to ancient Rome — the empire that fed Christians to lions in the arena. But even the Romans didn’t figure out how to monetize the bodies afterward. The CCP did. They built a machine that turns political persecution into a profit center, repression into a renewable resource.

And unlike Rome, the world is still shaking hands with this regime, still signing trade deals, still pretending the monster in the room is just a business partner with “different cultural values.”

Trump has been tougher on China than any president in modern history — tariffs, sanctions, calling out the CCP when the entire establishment class begged him to play nice. But this? This demands more than trade pressure. This demands the kind of moral clarity that makes diplomats sweat and lobbyists lose their lunch.

Because if even a fraction of what Killed to Order documents is true, we’re not dealing with a human rights issue. We’re dealing with an ongoing atrocity — one the world has chosen to ignore because confronting it is bad for business.

History has a way of judging the people who looked the other way. And right now, the whole world is squinting real hard at its shoes.


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