Peng Lifa | Strike, Class Boycott, and Recall Xi Jinping Strategy

Before the protest on Sitong Bridge, protester Peng Lifa published “Strike, Class Boycott, and Dismiss Xi Jinping Strategy” on the ResearchGate platform. This document has 20 chapters, with a total of 21 pages excluding the cover and table of contents. It is a summary of Peng Lifa’s personal political thoughts and his explanation for this action.

Chapter 1, “Strategy for Attacking the National Traitor,” clarifies the purpose of the strike and class boycott, which is to oppose Xi Jinping’s illegal re-election and to promote China’s democracy, freedom, and prosperity. He also proposed protest methods: decentralization in the early stages, grid organization in communities and universities, and widespread dissemination through information technology and non-violent means in a short period of time. The protest methods he envisioned include car horns, strikes and class boycotts, banners, leaflets, burning tires, and roadblocks.

Chapter 2 is Peng Lifa’s limerick “Attacking Xi the Traitor”.

In Chapter 3, “A Letter to Fellow Countrymen,” he listed the regression of Chinese society under Xi Jinping’s rule, connected it to multiple power transitions, uprisings, and power changes in Chinese history, and condemned the oppressive nature of the nucleic acid zero-clearing policy. He called on soldiers, police, party members, the media, the unemployed and bankrupt, entrepreneurs, civil servants, college students, intellectuals, and all people to resist. Peng Lifa particularly emphasized the need to ensure that soldiers, police, armed police, and government officials could receive protest information, hoping that a leader like Cai E, the national protector general who opposed Yuan Shikai’s claim to the throne during the Republic of China, would emerge to oust the dictator in a more efficient manner. He wrote, “Fellow countrymen, we are the masters of the People’s Republic of China. If we remain silent, then all of us will become slaves of the dictator. For the right to vote, for fairness and justice, for freedom and democracy, for ourselves, and for the happiness of our descendants, let us launch a new national protection movement.”

Chapter 4, “Long Live the Ballot Song,” calls for universal suffrage for people’s congress representatives and officials at all levels. This chapter includes a cartoon he designed, which transforms a nucleic acid testing booth into a polling station, with the text: “Voting has been a show for three years, just put a ballot box on the nucleic acid testing platform.”

Chapter 5, “Who Are We,” lists the vulnerable groups in China, including migrant workers, the grassroots, flexible employees, unemployed college students, education and training employees, low-end population, small and micro businesses, and left-behind children. At the end, Peng Lifa wrote: “We need to be our own masters, we don’t want to live in a cage.”

Chapters 6 and 7 mention his envisioned China Communist Party Free Election Committee and China Universal Suffrage Committee, as well as the constitutional and party constitution basis for these political ideas.

Chapter 8 is Peng Lifa’s popular science on the relationship between the government, the state, and citizens. He uses the relationship between community property owners and property management companies to analogize the relationship between citizens and the state and government. He wrote: “I will not be grateful to the property management company, because I am the owner who pays the property fees, I am its master, and it is my servant.”

In the following chapters, Peng Lifa detailed his vision for the new government and his main policy demands, including canceling mandatory nucleic acid testing, implementing the “Charter 08,” reducing taxes, and carrying out state-owned enterprise reform. He finally quoted Xu Zhiyong’s article “To Xi Jinping,” who is imprisoned, to once again express his opposition to Xi Jinping’s re-election. In the copyright statement, he encouraged everyone to widely forward this “Strategy.”

Article from: China Civil Archives

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