Before a government can persecute large numbers of people, it has to solve a political problem.

It must persuade everyone else that the victims are not quite ordinary citizens—that their suffering is acceptable, deserved or simply too dangerous to oppose.

Maoist China developed a brutally effective method for doing this. Society was divided into politically approved and politically contaminated identities.

The favoured populations belonged to the Red Categories: workers, poor peasants, revolutionary soldiers, Party cadres and the families of revolutionary martyrs. Landlords, rich peasants, counter-revolutionaries, “bad elements” and rightists belonged to the Black Categories.

Red meant politically reliable; black meant politically suspect.

These categories were not merely descriptions of class or occupation. They distributed safety, status and opportunity. Being recognized as red could open doors, while being classified as black could close them—sometimes for an entire family.

More importantly, the system told every Chinese citizen how to behave toward the people the Party had marked.

Friendship with the wrong person could become evidence of disloyalty. Defending a black-category neighbour might endanger a career. Denunciation could demonstrate revolutionary commitment. Silence was safer than sympathy, while visible hostility could be rewarded.

The Party did not need everyone to become a committed revolutionary. It needed ordinary self-interest to reinforce the political category.

That is the process at the centre of this essay. The state identifies a troublesome population, assigns it a contaminated identity, isolates its members from ordinary society and removes the protections attached to citizenship. Once that work is complete, exploitation becomes easier—and resistance becomes more costly.

The original Black Categories belonged to Mao’s political campaigns. The labels have changed, but the method remains visible in the treatment of Falun Gong practitioners and Uyghurs.

The category is the weapon

In a system based on individual responsibility, the state begins with an act. It gathers evidence, identifies the person responsible and attempts to prove guilt.

Political classification reverses that order.

The state begins with a kind of person. Membership in the category becomes evidence of danger before any particular wrongdoing has been established.

A landlord was presumed exploitative because he belonged to the landlord class. A rightist was presumed hostile because the Party had named him a rightist. The label did not merely summarize an accusation; it reduced the need to prove one.

Once imposed, black status could follow a person long after the original circumstances had disappeared. Land had been confiscated, businesses nationalized and social relationships transformed, yet the former landlord or rich peasant remained politically stained.

Children could inherit the consequences of identities assigned to their parents. Education, employment, political participation, friendships and marriage prospects could all be affected by family background.

The supposed class category had become a moral caste.

Its power depended upon incentives. People wanted to be recognized as red because red status brought security and belonging. They avoided black-category families because association carried risk.

This transformed political persecution into social coercion. The state imposed the label, but neighbours, colleagues, teachers and relatives helped enforce it. By the time the police arrived, the condemned person could already be isolated.

Redemption through surrender

The black-category system did not always require physical destruction. Often, it demanded ideological submission.

The accused could confess, undergo self-criticism, denounce former beliefs and demonstrate that Party education had corrected the defective self.

This offered the appearance of a way out, but the price was significant. The person had to accept the state’s description of him.

A man classified as a class enemy was expected to acknowledge his guilt. A religious believer had to recognize faith as superstition or political manipulation. A dissident had to admit that disagreement revealed hostility rather than judgment.

The state converted an identity into an offence, assigned collective guilt and then demanded gratitude for providing the cure.

Refusal carried its own penalty. If someone would not confess, the Party could treat that resistance as proof that the person remained dangerous, stubborn or insufficiently transformed.

Disagreement therefore became self-confirming: submission proved that re-education had been necessary, while resistance proved that more coercion was required.

Falun Gong becomes a suspect population

The campaign against Falun Gong shows how readily this method could be transferred to a population that had nothing to do with Mao’s original class structure.

Falun Gong spread rapidly during the 1990s as a decentralized spiritual discipline involving meditation, physical exercises and moral teachings. The Chinese Communist Party banned it in 1999 and began a national campaign to eradicate the practice.

The Party did not limit its response to prosecuting people who had committed identifiable crimes. It classified Falun Gong itself as an “evil cult” and treated continued adherence as evidence of danger, irrationality or political disloyalty.

That designation compressed millions of individuals into a single suspect identity.

Practising publicly, possessing literature, distributing information or refusing to renounce the movement could expose a person to detention and coercive re-education. Human Rights Watch documented the use of labour camps and “transformation” facilities where practitioners were pressured to abandon their beliefs. Officials established transformation targets, while former detainees described physical and psychological abuse intended to produce recantation.

The Party first identified a population it could not fully control, then assigned it a category that carried its own accusation. Ordinary citizens were taught to regard practitioners as dangerous or deluded, while employers, schools, families and neighbourhood authorities were drawn into enforcing the distinction.

A practitioner could recover a measure of safety, but only by accepting the Party’s judgment and repudiating the identity that had made him suspect.

Falun Gong practitioners were never formally added to Mao’s Five Black Categories. They did not need to be.

They had been placed in the same political position: outside the circle of people whose conscience, liberty and bodily integrity commanded ordinary protection.

Uyghur identity becomes evidence

The Party has used a related process against Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim peoples in Xinjiang.

China has faced real acts of separatist and terrorist violence. The state has a legitimate responsibility to investigate attacks and prosecute the individuals who organize or commit them.

The abuse begins when suspicion moves from perpetrators to a population.

Under the campaign against religious extremism, ordinary conduct has been treated as evidence that someone requires surveillance, detention or ideological correction. The UN human-rights assessment of Xinjiang found that people could be referred to so-called vocational education and training centres for reasons including wearing a veil or beard, applying for a passport, possessing certain communications software, maintaining foreign contacts or having more children than state policy permitted.

These are not findings that a particular individual planned an attack. They are identity markers.

Religious practice, family life, cultural difference and contact with the outside world become entries in a political risk profile. Once Uyghur identity is associated with extremism, officials no longer need to demonstrate that each person poses a threat. The classification supplies the suspicion.

Former detainees described being required to confess, repent and accept political instruction even when they did not understand what offence they had committed. The centres combined language and vocational programs with ideological “transformation,” while operating outside the ordinary safeguards of criminal justice.

The terminology is modern and technocratic, but the logic is older. The Party defines the acceptable identity, identifies deviations from it and offers restoration through surrender.

The Han-nationalist reversal

There is a particular irony in the treatment of Uyghurs.

Maoist doctrine officially condemned Han chauvinism. The Communist Party presented itself as the guardian of a multinational revolutionary state, not an instrument of ethnic domination by the Han majority.

That promise was never consistently honoured. Minority religion and culture were attacked during Maoist campaigns whenever they conflicted with revolutionary conformity.

Even so, the Party formally treated Han chauvinism as a political danger.

Today, Uyghur religious, linguistic and cultural difference is increasingly subordinated to a standardized national identity built around Party loyalty, Mandarin and cultural norms drawn largely from the Han majority.

The Party that once denounced Han chauvinism now pressures minorities to demonstrate their legitimacy by becoming less distinct from the Han-centred national mainstream.

The preferred identity has changed—from revolutionary class identity to national and civilizational unity—but the coercive authority remains the same. The Party still decides which identities are politically healthy and which require transformation.

From political unperson to biological inventory

This process helps explain how the conditions necessary for forced organ harvesting could be created.

Political classification does not prove that every person placed inside a suspect category will be killed for organs. Most people targeted by Maoist categories were not executed, and not every Falun Gong practitioner or Uyghur detainee has been subjected to the same treatment.

The category serves a broader purpose. It removes the expectation that each person must be treated as an individual citizen whose detention, injury or disappearance requires explanation.

A forced-organ procurement system would need more than corrupt surgeons and wealthy recipients. It would need captive populations that could be medically examined without meaningful consent, records hidden from public inspection, families unable to demand answers and officials confident that the disappearance of a politically contaminated person would not provoke the same response as the disappearance of someone considered respectable.

That infrastructure begins outside the hospital.

The process starts by identifying a problem group and assigning it a category associated with danger, sickness or moral contamination. Society is encouraged to withdraw sympathy—and to punish those who refuse—until the categorized population can be deprived of freedom, legal protection and bodily autonomy with little political cost.

Once that has been accomplished, human beings can be handled as state resources. Labour can be extracted from them. Confessions can be extracted from them. In the most extreme form of the system, organs can be extracted from them.

The hospital is the final stage, not the first.

Who dies?

The question is not answered simply by asking who has committed the most serious offence.

In a system governed by political categories, those most at risk are the people whom the state has successfully moved outside the moral community.

Mao’s Black Categories taught Chinese society that some identities carried guilt before an act had been proved. They gave citizens strong incentives to distance themselves from the condemned and stronger incentives to display loyalty to the favoured red identity.

Falun Gong practitioners and Uyghurs are not interchangeable with Maoist landlords or rightists. Their beliefs, histories and circumstances differ.

The continuity lies with the Party, which still identifies populations that resist or complicate complete political control, compresses individuals into suspect identities and demands confession, transformation and submission as the price of restored acceptance.

Most importantly, it still uses political classification to determine whose suffering can be ignored.

Before bodies can be farmed for organs, the people inside them must first be made into political unpeople.

The Black Categories provided the method.

“Divided by Category: Red (favored, content) and Black (suspect, under duress) — the Maoist tool that made persecution socially acceptable.”

 

References and Further Reading

Maoist classifications and the Cultural Revolution

Guo Jian, Song Yongyi and Yuan Zhou, Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Scarecrow Press, 2006.

A scholarly reference work covering the Five Black Categories, the favoured Red Categories, political campaigns, struggle sessions and other institutions of the Cultural Revolution.

https://books.google.com/books?id=T5-4zOdHKOIC&q=Five+Black+Categories


Song Yongyi, “Chronology of Mass Killings During the Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1976),” Sciences Po Mass Violence and Resistance Research Network, August 25, 2011.

An academic chronology of Cultural Revolution violence. It describes the Five Black Categories—landlords, rich peasants, counter-revolutionaries, bad elements and rightists—and documents how political classifications exposed individuals and their families to confiscation, expulsion, persecution and killing.
https://www.sciencespo.fr/mass-violence-war-massacre-resistance/en/document/chronology-mass-killings-during-chinese-cultural-revolution-1966-1976


Evan Osnos, “Born Red,” The New Yorker, March 30, 2015.

A profile of Xi Jinping that also describes the status attached to revolutionary family background during the Cultural Revolution. It includes the “born red” culture, inherited political prestige and the stigma imposed upon children of people classified as reactionaries.

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/04/06/born-red

Mao on ethnicity and Han chauvinism

Mao Zedong, “On the Ten Major Relationships,” April 25, 1956.

English text of Mao’s speech addressing relations between the Han majority and China’s minority nationalities. Mao formally identified Han chauvinism as a danger and argued that the Party should oppose discrimination by the Han majority.

https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-5/mswv5_51.htm

Falun Gong persecution and “transformation”

Human Rights Watch, “Falungong in Custody: Competing Accounts,” in Dangerous Meditation: China’s Campaign Against Falungong, January 2002.

Human Rights Watch’s examination of detention, re-education through labour, extrajudicial transformation centres and coercive attempts to force practitioners to renounce their beliefs. The report also discusses the difficulty of verifying claims because China prevented independent monitoring of prisons and labour camps.

The report documents official transformation targets and evidence of severe physical and psychological pressure, including torture and extreme pressure to recant.

https://www.hrw.org/reports/2002/china/China0102-04.htm

Uyghurs and the Xinjiang detention system

Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Assessment of Human Rights Concerns in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, People’s Republic of China, August 31, 2022.

The principal UN assessment of China’s counter-extremism policies, methods for identifying “at risk” people, detention in vocational education and training centres, treatment in custody and restrictions upon religious, linguistic and cultural identity.

https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/countries/2022-08-31/22-08-31-final-assesment.pdf


Permanent Mission of the People’s Republic of China to the United Nations Office at Geneva, “Response to the OHCHR Assessment,” August 2022.

China’s formal rebuttal to the UN assessment. The government rejects the allegations, describes the centres as lawful counterterrorism and vocational programs, and argues that the UN assessment relied upon politicized or unreliable sources.

https://www.ohchr.org/sites/default/files/documents/countries/2022-08-31/ANNEX_A.pdf

Organ profiling and the connection to the first essay

United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, “China: UN Human Rights Experts Alarmed by ‘Organ Harvesting’ Allegations,” June 14, 2021.

A statement by UN human-rights experts concerning reports that detained Falun Gong practitioners, Uyghurs, Tibetans, Muslims and Christians were subjected to blood tests and examinations of the heart, liver, kidneys and other organs without informed consent.

https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2021/06/china-un-human-rights-experts-alarmed-organ-harvesting-allegations

“Handle with Care” has the loose warmth of friends making music together, but beneath its easy rhythm is a song about bruised trust and stubborn hope.

George Harrison carries the verses with quiet weariness, while Roy Orbison’s soaring bridge opens the song into something almost operatic. Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne add texture without crowding it, giving the performance the feeling of five distinct voices serving one generous, unshowy whole.

It is a song about being disappointed without becoming closed off—about asking, after everything, to be treated with a little care.

Organ transplantation is one of medicine’s genuine miracles.

A failing heart can be replaced. A patient whose kidneys no longer function can be freed from dialysis. An organ donated at the end of one life can preserve another for decades.

Yet the legitimacy of transplantation depends upon a boundary that cannot be negotiated away. The person providing the organ is a human being, not a supply of biological material. Consent must be genuine, death must be independently determined, and the physician’s duty to the donor cannot be subordinated to the needs of the recipient.

China’s transplant system has a documented history of crossing those boundaries. Its government has admitted that organs were taken from executed prisoners, although it now says that this practice ended in 2015 and that voluntary civilian donation supplies the country’s transplant hospitals.

That defence cannot simply be dismissed, but neither can it be accepted on trust.

China’s official donation statistics show signs of systematic manipulation. Its transplant registries are not publicly accessible. Chinese medical papers have described organ removals in which the procurement itself appears to have caused the donor’s death. Investigators have also assembled evidence that prisoners of conscience, particularly Falun Gong practitioners, have been medically tested and killed for their organs.

The exact number of victims remains uncertain. The evidence that China has not provided a credible account of its transplant system does not.

What China has admitted

For years, Chinese officials denied that prisoners supplied the country’s transplant industry. That position eventually became impossible to maintain, and in late 2005 officials publicly acknowledged that organs from executed prisoners had been used.

The historical numbers show how dependent the transplant system had become upon state custody. Chinese officials reported roughly 120,000 organ transplants between 1977 and 2009, but only 130 voluntary donors had been identified by the end of that period. The country did not yet possess a voluntary donation system remotely capable of supplying the number of organs being transplanted.

Calling these donors convicted criminals does not resolve the ethical problem. A prisoner awaiting execution exists under the absolute power of the state. Consent given under those conditions cannot safely be treated as free, especially when the organs have substantial financial value and hospitals benefit from their availability.

The relationship also creates a dangerous incentive. Once the justice system becomes a supplier to the medical system, a prisoner’s body acquires value that may influence the timing and purpose of the execution.

China announced that, beginning on January 1, 2015, hospital-based voluntary donors would become the sole lawful source of transplant organs. It established a national allocation system known as COTRS, developed hospital-based procurement organizations and said that donation would be voluntary, unpaid, transparent and traceable.

That is Beijing’s strongest answer to the allegations: whatever happened before 2015 belongs to an earlier system that has since been reformed.

There is evidence that genuine voluntary donation has grown in China, and it would be irresponsible to assume that every transplant performed there today involves an unwilling donor. The central question is whether the new system has replaced the old one or partly concealed it.

China has not permitted the independent access needed to settle that question.

Its official registries are not publicly available, and the limited figures released by officials are difficult to corroborate against hospital-level activity. Nor did the 2015 announcement begin cleanly. Shortly after it took effect, former vice-minister of health Huang Jiefu suggested that condemned prisoners could still “donate” by entering the civilian allocation system because they remained citizens. He later said those remarks had been philosophical rather than a description of actual practice.

If prisoner organs can be reclassified as civilian donations, a change in terminology may disguise continuity rather than establish reform.

Numbers that look designed

China reported extraordinary growth in its new voluntary system. According to official figures, annual deceased donors increased from 34 in 2010 to 6,316 in 2018. Reported kidney and liver transplants also rose rapidly.

Researchers Matthew Robertson, Raymond Hinde and Jacob Lavee examined those figures using forensic statistical methods. They compared national data from COTRS and the Chinese Red Cross, provincial reports, hospital records and donation patterns from 50 other countries.

They found that China’s official donor, kidney and liver totals followed simple mathematical curves with remarkable precision. The R-squared values were 0.9993, 0.9995 and 0.9989 respectively, approaching a perfect fit with a predetermined quadratic formula.

Actual organ donation depends upon accidents, illness, family consent, failed procurements, regional differences, hospital capacity and countless other unpredictable events. Even rapidly growing systems contain irregularity. The equivalent figures from the other 50 countries did not display anything close to China’s mathematical smoothness.

The researchers also identified contradictory provincial data, suspicious conformity with central quotas and apparent cases in which non-voluntary donors were classified as voluntary. They concluded that systematic manufacture and manipulation were the most plausible explanation for significant parts of the official record.

Their backgrounds should also be disclosed. Robertson has worked with the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, the Human Rights Law Foundation and End Transplant Abuse in China, and was formerly an editor at The Epoch Times. Lavee has served with Doctors Against Forced Organ Harvesting. Both had publicly opposed Chinese transplant abuses before publishing the study.

Those affiliations justify careful scrutiny of their assumptions and methods. They do not, by themselves, answer the statistical evidence. The paper was peer-reviewed, its methodology was published, its data sources were identified, and the international comparison can be examined independently.

The authors also did not claim that every voluntary donor was fictitious. They expressly acknowledged genuine voluntary transplant activity alongside the apparent manipulation.

Their conclusion was narrower: China’s official numbers cannot reliably demonstrate that voluntary donors account for its transplant activity.

That leaves the original question unanswered. If the published donor figures were manufactured or padded with non-voluntary cases, where did the actual organs come from?

When procurement becomes execution

Transplant medicine is governed by what is commonly called the dead donor rule.

Vital organs must not be removed from a living person in a way that causes death. The determination of death must be independent of the desire to obtain the organs. A physician cannot become an executioner because another patient needs a heart.

In 2022, Robertson and Lavee examined more than 120,000 Chinese-language medical publications and identified 71 papers, published between 1980 and 2015, in which the reported procedures failed to establish that the donors were properly dead before their hearts or lungs were removed.

The descriptions indicated that accepted tests for brain death had not been performed or could not have produced a valid declaration of death. The researchers concluded that, in these cases, removing the organs probably caused the donor’s death.

This dismantles a comforting distinction.

It is one thing to imagine doctors receiving organs after a prisoner has been executed. That would still involve coercion and serious medical abuse, but the transplant team could claim that it arrived after the killing.

It is another thing for organ removal to complete the execution. In that system, medicine does not merely benefit from state violence. The surgical procedure becomes part of it.

The order is reversed

In an ethical donation system, the donor appears first.

Someone dies under circumstances that allow donation. Consent is confirmed. Medical teams determine which organs remain viable, and allocation rules identify compatible recipients according to blood type, tissue compatibility, body size, urgency and time spent waiting.

The recipient waits because no hospital can promise when a compatible stranger will die.

Some of the most disturbing evidence from China describes that order being reversed.

Israeli transplant surgeon Jacob Lavee became concerned after one of his patients said that he had arranged a heart transplant in China approximately two weeks in advance. A heart cannot ordinarily be promised for a particular date through a system dependent upon unpredictable voluntary deaths.

A scheduled heart implies control over more than hospital availability. It implies that the system can locate a compatible donor and control when that person dies.

This is the logic behind the phrase “killed to order.” The recipient appears first, and a compatible person is then selected from a medically classified population.

The recipient may not understand how the organ was obtained. A gravely ill patient may be told only that China has an unusually efficient transplant system or a large donor pool.

But administrative efficiency cannot explain how a heart becomes available by appointment.

Prisoners of conscience

The most serious allegation is that China expanded its supply beyond condemned criminals to include people imprisoned for their religion, beliefs or political identity.

The largest body of evidence concerns Falun Gong practitioners.

Falun Gong is a spiritual discipline combining meditative exercises with moral teachings. After it grew rapidly during the 1990s, the Chinese Communist Party banned the practice in 1999 and subjected its followers to mass detention, imprisonment and ideological “transformation.”

Former detainees have described blood tests, X-rays, ultrasounds and organ examinations that bore little relationship to their medical welfare. Such tests would, however, be useful for determining blood type, tissue compatibility and organ condition.

In 2019, an independent people’s tribunal chaired by British barrister Sir Geoffrey Nice examined the allegations. The China Tribunal was not an international court and possessed no power to convict or punish anyone. It had been established by the International Coalition to End Transplant Abuse in China, an advocacy organization already committed to the issue.

Those limitations should be stated plainly.

The tribunal nevertheless heard more than 50 witnesses and experts and examined medical publications, hospital capacity, waiting times, recorded telephone calls, former-prisoner testimony and the official donor figures. It also considered material favourable to China and invited the Chinese government to participate. Beijing declined.

The tribunal concluded that forced organ harvesting had occurred for years on a significant scale and that Falun Gong practitioners had probably been the principal source. It also concluded that it had seen no evidence establishing that the practice had stopped.

That judgment does not carry the authority of a national or international court. It remains the finding of a privately convened inquiry, and readers are entitled to examine its evidence and institutional origins critically.

But the evidence does not vanish because the body examining it lacked formal jurisdiction.

Some investigators associated with the tribunal have estimated that China may perform between 60,000 and 100,000 transplant operations annually, far above the official totals. That figure is not a confirmed count of illicit procedures or identified victims. It was reconstructed from hospital beds, transplant wards, surgeon activity, hospital revenues and publicly stated capacity.

The essay does not need the upper estimate to be true.

China’s admitted reliance on prisoners, the statistical manipulation, the medical descriptions of execution by procurement, the short waiting periods and the testing of persecuted detainees already demand an explanation.

The warning from Xinjiang

Concern has also extended to Uyghurs and other religious minorities.

In June 2021, United Nations human-rights experts reported receiving credible information that detained Falun Gong practitioners, Uyghurs, Tibetans, Muslims and Christians were being subjected without informed consent to blood tests, ultrasounds, X-rays and examinations of organs such as the heart, liver and kidneys. Other prisoners were reportedly not subjected to the same testing.

The experts expressed extreme alarm and called upon China to permit independent international monitoring.

Their statement did not establish that every medically examined detainee had been entered into an organ database. Nor did it prove that Uyghurs had already been harvested on the same scale alleged for Falun Gong practitioners.

It identified selective organ-focused testing within populations already deprived of liberty and legal protection.

The distinction matters because evidence should not be stretched beyond what it demonstrates. Yet an authoritarian state cannot reasonably expect unexplained medical profiling to be interpreted in isolation from its admitted history of prisoner procurement and its refusal to open the transplant system to independent inspection.

Under those conditions, suspicion is not a substitute for evidence. It is a conclusion drawn from the evidence that is available.

What we know

The case can be stated without pretending that every uncertainty has been resolved.

China used organs from executed prisoners and denied doing so before eventually admitting the practice.

Its authorities say that prisoner procurement ended in 2015 and that voluntary civilian donation now supplies the transplant system.

A peer-reviewed statistical study found strong evidence that important official datasets had been manufactured or manipulated and that some non-voluntary donors may have been misclassified.

A second peer-reviewed investigation found Chinese medical reports in which doctors appear to have caused prisoners’ deaths by removing their organs before a valid determination of death.

Former detainees have reported selective medical testing, and UN experts have received similar allegations concerning several persecuted populations.

An independent but non-judicial tribunal concluded that prisoners of conscience, particularly Falun Gong practitioners, had been killed for their organs on a significant scale.

What remains uncertain is the full number of victims, the present annual volume, the proportion of organs supplied by each source and the degree to which particular hospitals continue illicit procurement today.

Those uncertainties should govern the language used to describe the system. They should not erase what is already known.

This is not a criminal trial, and secrecy alone cannot prove every allegation. But medical cooperation does not require proof beyond a reasonable doubt before ethical safeguards apply.

A transplant system seeking international legitimacy bears the responsibility of demonstrating that its donors consented, that their deaths were independently determined and that the organs did not come from prisoners or persecuted detainees.

China cannot withhold the records needed to verify those conditions and then demand that foreign institutions presume the system ethical.

The responsibility of the West

Western governments cannot force China to disclose every detention record or open every transplant hospital, but they can refuse to confer legitimacy upon a system that cannot demonstrate ethical sourcing.

Medical journals can reject research that does not identify donor sources or document valid consent. Universities and hospitals can suspend transplant training and institutional partnerships where records cannot be audited. Governments can prohibit their citizens from purchasing organs obtained without consent and deny entry to people involved in the trade.

Canada took an important step in December 2022 when Bill S-223 received royal assent. The law created offences for obtaining, removing or facilitating the removal of an organ without informed consent, including certain conduct committed abroad by Canadian citizens and permanent residents. It also made participation in organ trafficking grounds for inadmissibility to Canada.

The principle should extend beyond criminal prosecution. Where consent and donor identity cannot be independently verified, cooperation should stop.

That standard is not hostility toward Chinese physicians or Chinese people. Many of those raising the alarm are Chinese survivors, dissidents, families and medical professionals who understand what Party secrecy can conceal.

Nor does the case depend upon approving of Falun Gong, accepting its teachings or supporting the politics of organizations associated with it. Human rights are not rewards distributed to groups we find familiar or fashionable.

A person’s body does not become state property because the government has classified that person as dangerous, irrational or politically disobedient.

China has offered laws, announcements and aggregate numbers as evidence that its transplant system has changed. What it has not offered is the independent access required to verify the identity, consent and cause of death of the people whose organs supply its hospitals.

Until it does, the moral cloud over that system remains, along with the question Beijing has never credibly answered: where did the organs come from?

References and Further Reading

Primary research and official documents

Matthew P. Robertson, Raymond L. Hinde and Jacob Lavee, “Analysis of Official Deceased Organ Donation Data Casts Doubt on the Credibility of China’s Organ Transplant Reform,” BMC Medical Ethics, November 14, 2019.

Peer-reviewed statistical examination of China’s official donation and transplantation data. The authors found evidence of systematic data manufacture, manipulation and the apparent classification of some non-voluntary donors as voluntary donors.

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12910-019-0406-6


Matthew P. Robertson and Jacob Lavee, “Execution by Organ Procurement: Breaching the Dead Donor Rule in China,” American Journal of Transplantation, July 2022.

Peer-reviewed analysis of Chinese medical publications describing heart and lung procurement. The authors identified 71 papers in which the reported procedures indicated that organ removal probably caused the donor’s death.

https://doi.org/10.1111/ajt.16969


China Tribunal, Judgment, March 1, 2020.

The complete judgment of the independent people’s tribunal chaired by Sir Geoffrey Nice. It includes the tribunal’s methods, evidence, qualifications and conclusions regarding forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience.

https://chinatribunal.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ChinaTribunal_JUDGMENT_1stMarch_2020.pdf

The tribunal was privately convened and possessed no formal judicial authority. Its institutional status and advocacy origins should be considered alongside the evidence it examined.


United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, “China: UN Human Rights Experts Alarmed by ‘Organ Harvesting’ Allegations,” June 14, 2021.

Official statement concerning credible information received by UN experts about non-consensual blood tests, ultrasounds, X-rays and organ examinations performed on detained religious and ethnic minorities.

https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2021/06/china-un-human-rights-experts-alarmed-organ-harvesting-allegations


Parliament of Canada, Bill S-223: An Act to Amend the Criminal Code and the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (Trafficking in Human Organs), Royal Assent, December 15, 2022.

The complete text of the Canadian law criminalizing participation in organ removal without informed consent, including specified conduct committed outside Canada.

https://www.parl.ca/DocumentViewer/en/44-1/bill/S-223/royal-assent

Accessible reporting and summaries

Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian, “Study: Transplants in China Performed Before Proving Donor Brain Death,” Axios, April 4, 2022.

An accessible summary of Robertson and Lavee’s research into execution by organ procurement, including the case of a heart transplant reportedly scheduled in China approximately two weeks in advance.

https://www.axios.com/2022/04/04/study-transplants-china-donor-brain-death


Reuters, “China Is Harvesting Organs from Falun Gong Members, Finds Expert Panel,” June 17, 2019.

Contemporary reporting on the China Tribunal’s initial findings, China’s denial of the allegations and the persecution of Falun Gong practitioners.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-china-rights/china-is-harvesting-organs-from-falun-gong-members-finds-expert-panel-idUSKCN1TI236

 

In a major step toward operational readiness, officials have confirmed that a garbage can has now been installed at the Great Canadian Space Launch Pad.

The addition follows months of consultation, stakeholder engagement, environmental review, accessibility assessment and interdepartmental coordination.

No rockets have launched.

However, the facility is now better equipped to receive granola-bar wrappers, discarded briefing notes and the occasional five-year strategic plan.

Government officials described the garbage can as “a visible commitment to sustainable aerospace infrastructure.”

A ribbon-cutting ceremony is expected shortly.

If you supported Mark Carney because you believed Canada needed steady economic leadership, that was not an irrational choice.

He entered office during a serious trade conflict with the United States. Tariffs, threats and uncertainty weakened exports, discouraged investment and made long-term planning more difficult. Canada’s economic problems were not created by one prime minister, and they cannot be solved by one speech or budget.

Carney therefore deserves to be judged fairly.

But fairly does not mean uncritically.

A recent Nanos poll found that 60 per cent of Canadians believe Carney has done a good or very good job handling the economy, while only 24 per cent rate his performance as poor or very poor. That confidence exists despite real GDP shrinking by approximately 0.05 per cent during his first year—the weakest first-year result for a Canadian prime minister since comparable records began in 1963.

That historical comparison is striking, but it should not be treated as a final verdict.

Aggregate GDP has also been restrained by slower population growth. In the first quarter of 2026, total real GDP was unchanged, but real GDP per person rose by 0.2 per cent because Canada’s population declined. Comparing prime ministers who governed during very different rates of population growth is therefore not entirely apples to apples.

Nor does the poll necessarily prove that Liberal voters have been dazzled by Carney’s résumé.

Many may be judging him against the circumstances he inherited. They may believe he is managing a bad hand competently, even though the economy remains weak. That is a defensible position.

But the benefit of the doubt is not the same as a demonstrated economic record.

The record is mixed

Canada is not clearly in recession. The Bank of Canada has said so directly. More than half of industries were still growing, and recent data suggested that economic growth was beginning to resume. Consumer spending remained resilient, while some business surveys showed improving investment and hiring intentions.

Those facts matter. An honest assessment should include them.

But the broader picture remains weak. Real GDP was unchanged in the first quarter after declining 0.2 per cent in the final quarter of 2025. Final domestic demand edged down 0.1 per cent. Business capital investment fell another 0.7 per cent—its fifth consecutive quarterly decline—and residential investment fell by 2 per cent.

There were promising details beneath those numbers. Investment increased in machinery and equipment, software, mineral exploration and non-residential buildings. Those may be early signs of the more productive economy Carney says he wants to build.

But they are not yet evidence that the transformation has occurred.

The Bank of Canada’s own assessment is appropriately restrained: the economy remains weak, is operating below its potential and contains significant labour-market slack, even as some indicators begin to improve.

That is not an economic catastrophe.

It is also not an economic triumph.

Carney asked to be judged on delivery

Carney has presented his government as one that will attract investment, build major projects, diversify Canadian trade and make the country more economically independent.

Those goals are sensible. They may also take years to achieve.

But that makes it especially important to distinguish between a policy announcement and an economic result.

A project announced is not necessarily a project financed. A project approved is not necessarily a project built. Public spending is not automatically productive investment. A government can describe itself as ambitious without having changed the underlying economy.

Carney’s supporters should therefore ask clear questions.

Is total private investment rising over several quarters? Are major projects moving from consultation and approval into construction? Is productivity improving? Is real GDP per person recovering consistently rather than for a single quarter? Are Canadian businesses finding substantial new markets outside the United States? Are wages and disposable incomes rising after inflation?

Those are not Conservative questions.

They are the questions any economically serious government should be required to answer.

Support should remain conditional

Liberal voters do not need to abandon Carney simply because his first-year growth record is poor. They do not need to pretend that Donald Trump’s trade policies are irrelevant, or blame Ottawa for every economic difficulty.

Carney may be managing an extremely difficult situation competently. He may be laying foundations whose value will become visible only later.

But “may” is doing important work in those sentences.

A plausible strategy is not a completed achievement. A sophisticated explanation is not economic growth. Credentials can justify giving a leader responsibility; they cannot prove that he has used it successfully.

Carney has earned time to demonstrate that his plans can raise investment, productivity and Canadian living standards.

He has not yet earned a declaration of economic success.

Supporting a government should not mean protecting it from measurement. Serious support should be conditional: tied to clear standards, observable outcomes and a willingness to acknowledge when promises have not become reality.

Mark Carney may deserve the benefit of the doubt.

He does not deserve exemption from the burden of proof.

Editors Note : This essay is a summation of recent podcast interview between Peter Boghossian and Sarah McLaughin. 

Free speech is often defended too narrowly, as if it were mainly a permission slip for rude people, a tolerance ritual for offensive opinions, or a legal loophole that allows unpleasant citizens to be unpleasant in public.

That misses the deeper issue.

Free speech matters least when the opinion is popular, fashionable, institutional, or already protected by status. Those opinions usually have no trouble finding a microphone. Free speech matters most when the speaker is disliked, the claim is offensive, the argument is premature, or the government would prefer the matter not be discussed at all.

That is what makes Sarah McLaughlin’s defence of free speech useful. In her conversation with Peter Boghossian, she does not frame free speech as a favour extended to difficult people. She frames it as a limit on power.

The distinction matters because, in McLaughlin’s account, the First Amendment does not give people their speech rights. It restrains government from taking those rights away. The right comes first. The state comes second. Human beings possess speech rights by virtue of their dignity as human beings, not because a minister, judge, administrator, or police officer has granted them a temporary licence to speak.

Once that principle is reversed, free speech becomes a managed privilege. Government decides how much speech citizens may have, which topics are too dangerous, which emotions deserve protection, which claims count as misinformation, and which controversies must be moved from public argument into administrative control.

At that point, censorship does not need to announce itself as censorship. It can arrive as safety, anti-hate policy, national security, child protection, or a database entry no one tells you about.

That is one of McLaughlin’s strongest points. Censorship is not only a formal ban on a book, a newspaper, or a speech. It can also be the use of state pressure to make lawful expression risky. It can be a police visit, a record, an investigation, or the quiet creation of consequences around speech that the law has not actually made criminal.

Her example from the United Kingdom is revealing. She describes people being visited by police over legal tweets under the non-crime hate incident regime. In some cases, the person might not even know a complaint had been made, yet the incident could still be recorded in a government database and potentially become visible in employment-related contexts.

That is not the robust confidence of a free society so much as suspicion with paperwork. It also shows why “but no one was jailed” is not always a sufficient answer. A state does not have to imprison every dissenter to chill speech. It only has to teach citizens that lawful expression may bring police attention, reputational risk, bureaucratic trouble, or future consequences they cannot easily see or contest.

People learn the lesson quickly. They stop saying what they think, institutions stop asking hard questions, and the public square remains technically open while everyone gradually learns where the soft fences are.

McLaughlin’s argument is not that speech is harmless. This is important. She does not make the weak case for free speech by pretending words have no power. She concedes that speech can hurt, anger, provoke, disturb, and unsettle. But she turns that fact around: speech is powerful, and that is precisely why it must be protected. Scientific progress, political reform, religious dissent, civil rights, and moral correction all require the ability to say things that others may find offensive, dangerous, or wrong at the time.

The case for free speech is not that words are trivial. The case for free speech is that words are how free people fight without reaching for force.

This is why the claim that “speech is violence” is so corrosive. If speech becomes violence, then censorship becomes self-defence. If silence becomes violence, then compelled speech becomes moral duty. If offence becomes harm, then whoever claims injury first can demand power over the speaker.

McLaughlin rejects that collapse. Words and violence are not the same thing. A society that loses the distinction between being insulted and being assaulted has lost one of the basic habits that allows people to live together without constant coercion.

That does not mean speech has no limits. Actual threats are not mere disagreement. Incitement is not mere offensiveness. Harassment is not mere criticism. Criminal conduct does not become protected just because it has a political slogan attached to it.

McLaughlin’s approach is not anarchic. It is disciplined. Existing legal categories such as true threats and incitement to imminent lawless action matter because they are narrow. They require more than ugliness, anger, or offence. They require a serious connection to actual unlawful conduct.

That narrowness is the protection. Without it, “incitement” can become whatever makes people furious, and once that happens, the most volatile people in society get to set the boundaries of everyone else’s rights.

That is the heckler’s veto. If a mob threatens violence because someone burns a book, draws a cartoon, criticizes a religion, questions a movement, or says something politically forbidden, the proper response is not to punish the speaker for provoking the mob. The proper response is to stop the violence. Rights cannot depend on the emotional discipline of those who oppose them.

The law’s job is not to protect citizens from ever being angered. It is to prevent anger from becoming violence.

The most useful part of McLaughlin’s framework is her account of the four justifications governments use when they want to censor speech:

  1. Hate — the claim that some speech is too socially disruptive, cruel, or degrading to be tolerated.
  2. National security — the claim that dissent, protest, or criticism threatens public safety or the state itself.
  3. Misinformation — the claim that government must determine truth and suppress what officials judge to be false.
  4. Children — the claim that protecting minors justifies broad restrictions that often reach adults as well.

Each justification begins with a real concern. Hatred exists. National security threats exist. Falsehoods can cause damage. Children do need protection. But a real problem does not automatically justify broad state control over expression. The question is not whether something ugly, false, dangerous, or harmful can be identified somewhere. Of course it can. The question is whether the proposed cure gives officials power they cannot be trusted to wield honestly, narrowly, or evenly.

Who decides what counts as hate? Who decides when political criticism becomes misinformation? Who decides when national security includes criticism of government policy? Who decides what material is too harmful for children, and how many adult rights must be narrowed in the name of protecting them?

These categories expand because power has an appetite. Hate begins with threats and ends with legal speech recorded by police. National security begins with terrorism and ends with protest signs. Misinformation begins with fraud and ends with dissent from official narratives. Child protection begins with shielding minors and ends with surveillance architecture for everyone.

McLaughlin’s examples cut across partisan comfort zones. She criticizes the UK. She criticizes Hungary. She criticizes American government actions. She criticizes China’s efforts to control not only domestic speech but how the Chinese government is discussed abroad.
That matters because free speech cannot survive as a team sport. If speech rights matter only when our side is speaking, then they are not rights. They are privileges for allies. A serious free speech principle protects the person we dislike, the argument we reject, the protest we think foolish, the religious claim we find absurd, the political claim we find dangerous, and the joke we think cruel.

Not because all speech is good, but because government power becomes more dangerous when it gets to decide which speech is good enough.

The deeper defence of free speech is not merely moral. It is epistemological. Human beings are fallible. Governments are fallible. Experts are fallible. Majorities are fallible. Institutions are fallible. Every society needs some way to discover error before error becomes policy, dogma, or law.

Free speech is part of that correction mechanism. It allows citizens to test claims, challenge authority, expose dishonesty, revise beliefs, hear minority viewpoints, and discover what people actually think. Without it, bad ideas do not disappear. They go underground. Official ideas do not become truer. They become safer to repeat. Citizens do not become wiser. They become more careful.

A coerced society may look orderly from a distance, but it does not know itself.

That is why compelled speech is also a problem. Forcing people to repeat approved formulas does not produce conviction. It produces performance. It teaches people which words keep them safe. It rewards dishonesty and calls the result consensus.

A society built on forced agreement may still function for a while, but it cannot correct itself honestly.

McLaughlin’s closing point is the one free speech defenders need to remember: free speech works for everyone, but only if people are willing to protect it for everyone else.

That is the bargain. We protect the speech we hate because one day someone else may hate ours. We defend the dissenter because one day the institution may be wrong. We limit government because one day the people holding power will not be our friends.

Free speech is not a guarantee that public life will be gentle, wise, or pleasant. It is a safeguard against something worse: a society where the state decides which thoughts may be spoken, which questions may be asked, and which truths may be pursued.

Censorship does not always arrive with a censor’s stamp. Sometimes it arrives with kinder language, but that does not make it less dangerous.

The phrase “Judeo-Christian values” is often used loosely, so it is worth defining what it means in its strongest form.

Judaism and Christianity are not identical. They differ profoundly on theology, covenant, salvation, scripture, and the person of Jesus. The term “Judeo-Christian” can also flatten real historical tensions, including centuries of Christian anti-Judaism.

Nor did the West emerge from religion alone. Western civilization is a synthesis: Hebrew religion, Christian theology, Greek philosophy, Roman law, English common law, Germanic custom, Enlightenment liberalism, and centuries of political struggle all helped shape it.

Still, the Judeo-Christian inheritance gave the West several core moral claims that remain foundational. They are not the whole story, but they are a decisive part of the story.

1. Human beings possess inherent dignity

Human worth is not granted by the state, the tribe, the ruler, the market, the collective, or the majority.

In the biblical tradition, man is made in the image of God. That idea helped ground the belief that each person has moral worth beyond usefulness, status, race, sex, class, strength, or productivity.

This does not mean the West always honoured that claim. It often failed it catastrophically. But the claim itself became one of the standards by which those failures could be judged.

2. Moral law stands above human law

Kings, courts, governments, and majorities are not the highest moral authority.

A law can be legal and still be wicked. A ruler can hold power and still be morally wrong. The prophets rebuked kings. Christian natural law later joined biblical morality to Greek and Roman philosophy. Out of that synthesis came a powerful Western intuition: political power is answerable to a higher standard of justice.

This is one root of the rule of law, constitutional government, and the right to resist tyranny.

3. Each person is morally responsible

Human beings are not merely products of tribe, class, history, oppression, biology, or circumstance.

People can choose. People can do right or wrong. Guilt and innocence matter. Conscience matters. Repentance, judgment, forgiveness, and accountability all depend on the belief that human beings are moral agents.

Greek philosophy also emphasized moral formation and self-examination, but the Judeo-Christian tradition gave personal responsibility a particularly intense moral and spiritual weight.

4. Justice must be joined to mercy

Wrongdoing matters. Evil should not be excused, ignored, or sentimentalized.

But justice must not become mere vengeance. The Judeo-Christian tradition also emphasizes mercy, repentance, forgiveness, charity, care for the poor, protection of the vulnerable, and restraint against cruelty.

This helped form some of the West’s most important charitable and reforming institutions: hospitals, schools, poor relief, abolitionist movements, prison reform, and the idea that the weak are not disposable.

5. Power must be morally limited

Human beings are fallen, proud, corruptible, and tempted by domination.

Therefore rulers are not gods. The state is not sacred. The majority is not automatically righteous. Authority must be restrained by law, conscience, duty, and moral limits.

This idea did not come from religion alone. Greek political thought, Roman republicanism, common law, and Enlightenment constitutionalism all mattered. But the Judeo-Christian suspicion of human pride and idolatrous power gave the West a deep moral reason to distrust unchecked authority.

The short version

So when people speak seriously about Judeo-Christian values, the strongest list is this:

  1. Human dignity
  2. Moral law above human law
  3. Personal moral responsibility
  4. Justice tempered by mercy
  5. Power limited by law and conscience

These values are not uniquely owned by Judaism or Christianity. They have parallels elsewhere, and they can be defended in secular language.

But in the West, they were deeply shaped, transmitted, institutionalized, and morally charged by the Judeo-Christian inheritance.

That is the strongest version of the claim. Not that the West was purely Judeo-Christian. Not that every Western failure can be excused by appealing to religion. Not that secular reason contributed nothing.

The better claim is this: the West became what it became through a moral synthesis, and the Judeo-Christian tradition supplied several of its most important claims about dignity, conscience, justice, mercy, and the limits of power.

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