Chinese men will outright refuse to marry, or even date, a “tainted” Chinese woman that has ever dated or been romantically involved with a foreign man.(91)
We need to only look at what Xi has done to his own people to have a clear vision of how he plans to eliminate one to two hundred million Americans.
IN 2021, THE US DEPARTMENT OF STATE REPORTED:(92, 93)
- In Xinjiang, the government of President Xi, is the human trafficker. This is a modern day genocide and crimes against humanity.
- President Xi has as many as 1,200 state run concentration camps throughout Xinjiang.
- President Xi has human trafficked over one-million Chinese and American(94) citizens.
- President Xi targets religious minorities, whom he portrays as devil foreigners, and then used criminal military surveillance technologies, much from Silicon Valley, along with trumped-up administrative and criminal charges, to abduct and detain more than one-million people.
- Targeted minorities include Muslims, including Uyghurs, ethnic Hui, ethnic Kazakhs, ethnic Kyrgyz, ethnic Tajiks, and ethnic Uzbeks.
- Forced labor is a central tactic used for this repression. In Xinjiang, President Xi and his criminal military are the human traffickers dealing in modern day slavery.
- Authorities use threats of physical violence, forcible drug intake, physical and sexual abuse, and torture, to force detainees to work in adjacent or off-site factories or worksites producing garments, footwear, carpets, yarn, food products, holiday decorations, building materials, extractives, materials for solar power equipment and other renewable energy components, consumer electronics, bedding, hair products, cleaning supplies, personal protective equipment, face masks, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and other goods.
- Entire communities in Xinjiang—communities with rich histories and immeasurable cultural significance—have become ghost towns.
- President Xi and his cadre’s Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps (Bingtuan), comprising nearly three million personnel, force members of prison populations and local communities alike to work in hazardous mining, construction, manufacturing, food processing, and—for many thousands of Uyghur adults and children—cotton harvesting
- The United States’ Departments of State, the Treasury, Commerce, and Homeland Security released the Xinjiang Supply Chain Business Advisory(95) to alert businesses and other entities to the reputational, economic, and legal risks of involvement with entities in or linked to Xinjiang and President Xi’s human trafficking.
- The Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border Protection has issued 44 Hold Orders on Chinese products because of human trafficking. The Hold Orders are published in their Withhold Release Orders and Findings List(96) against goods and companies connected to forced labor in Xinjiang to block their entry into the United States. Most of the 44 blocked products are still active.
   
(91)   Surviving Chinese Communist Detention, by Steven Schaerer, Liberty Hill Publishing, 2021, page 13.
   
(92)   Trafficking in Persons Report, by the US Department of State, June 2021, page 47, https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/TIPR-GPA-upload-07222021.pdf;
2020 Trafficking in Persons Report: China, by the US Department of State, 2020, https://www.state.gov/reports/2020-trafficking-in-persons-report/china
   
(93)   China 2020 Human Rights Report: Executive Summary, by the US Department of State, page 1,
https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/CHINA-2020-HUMAN-RIGHTS-REPORT.pdf
   
(94)   Trafficking in Persons Report, by the US Department of State, June 2021, page 47, https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/TIPR-GPA-upload-07222021.pdf;
   
(95)   Xinjiang Supply Chain Business Advisory, by the US Department of State, the US Department of Treasury, the US Department of Commerce, the US Department of Homeland Security, the Office of the US Trade Representative, the US Department of Labor, July 1, 2020, updated July 13, 2021, https://www.state.gov/xinjiang-supply-chain-business-advisory/
   
(96)   Withhold Release Orders and Findings List, by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, updated daily, https://www.cbp.gov/trade/forced-labor/withhold-release-orders-and-findings