This is brilliant. Having banks of cold callers contacting those paid to handle prisoners of conscience to ask them to quit the party lets them know that they are been watched and that they can quit. That is much more than NAZI prison guards could do in the death camps. So you ask them and in the process you reach out to them to help them escape it as well.
Better, the Party cannot cut off phone access without admitting something must be hidden. In the meantime, disclosure is taking place and the public is applying heat. The pressure has been ratchited up.
Will it end soon? I do not know. Otherwise there is a limited supply of organs and Chinese culture is unwilling to give up body parts in any event.
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‘Interrupting Eichmann’ in China: Falun Gong Calls the Persecutors
By Matthew Robertson, Epoch Times | April 15, 2015
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/1321216-interrupting-eichmann-in-china-falun-gong-calls-the-persecutors/
When Chen Guangcheng,
the famous, blind Chinese rights activist, was in Linyi Prison in
Shandong Province, a prison guard he was conversing with suddenly
received a telephone call to his cell phone. Still standing in front of
Chen, he picked it up—and then listened, saying not a word, for about
three minutes.
“What kind of call is it that you just listen and don’t speak?” Chen recalls asking the guard after he hung up.
“I think it was a Falun Gong call,” the
guard offered. “At the start they say this call will be three minutes
and how many seconds. It was about the Communist Party and Tuidang.”
Tuidang—meaning
“quit the Party” in Chinese—as of April 14 had attracted 200 million
signatories. People from all walks of life across China receive
telephone calls like the one that prison guard got, or get flyers
slipped under their doors, or are persuaded through conversation, and
later go on to renounce the Communist Party, or agree to have someone do
so on their behalf.
An unknown portion of that mammoth number
of Chinese who have quit their ties with the Party come from the bowels
of the Party apparatus itself—due to phone calls like the one the prison
guard received. Falun Gong volunteers overseas leverage these phone
calls—targeted not just at the security personnel themselves, but also
friends and family—to put persecutors under social pressure, have them
stop committing violence against Falun Gong, and ultimately quit the
Party.
One academic has called the phenomenon
“interrupting Eichmann,” a reference to the famous Nazi bureaucrat whose
later defense for crimes against humanity was that he was merely doing
his job.
Daily Caller
Yan Fulan, a practitioner of the Falun Gong
spiritual discipline and a Tuidang volunteer, is one of those that make
the phone calls. From her small apartment in Flushing, she spends
several hours in the morning—rising at 6 am to begin calling, for the
early evening in China—and several in the evening calling prison guards,
labor camp directors, and agents of the 610 Office, the extralegal
Party taskforce that was set up to oversee and coordinate the
persecution against Falun Gong.
“We call those in the public security
bureaus, the police lockups, and wherever their evil nests are,” Yan
said in a recent interview. She and other callers are fed the numbers
from volunteers, some of whom scrape them from Minghui, a Falun Gong
website.
“In past years we’d call them, and they’d
abuse us and wouldn’t believe what we were saying to them. They’d say
it’s all fake,” she said. They would be particularly resistant to the
idea that military hospitals in China had engaged in the mass, organized
live organ harvesting of Falun Gong practitioners, leading to tens of
thousands of deaths.
But these misgivings have diminished
somewhat in recent times, she says, particularly with some notable
purges of Party members who were instrumental in leading the anti-Falun
Gong security campaign, including Zhou Yongkang, the former security
chief, and Li Dongsheng, former head of the 610 Office.
“We’d play them the evidence over the
phone, five or six minutes. They’d listen to it all and have no
argument. They say ‘I get it, I get it.’ We then give them a phone
number for whistleblowers [so that they can report on crimes committed
persecuting Falun Gong].”
Yan said that about 70 percent of the time a
call goes through, the recipient is willing to listen, though other
volunteers report a success rate of only one in five or ten.
‘Evil Has Consequences’
One of the key messages that volunteers
seek to impart to the guards is the concept of karmic retribution, an
idea embedded in Falun Gong’s spiritual teachings.
A volunteer who calls herself Yinan, who
has settled in New Jersey as a political asylee from China, estimates
that she has persuaded several tens of thousands of Chinese people to
renounce the Communist Party. An unknown portion of these are Party
officials and members of the security forces.
“Everyone knows that the evil Party is
bad,” Yinan declares. Even to the extent that this idea is true, Yinan
has found that it can sometimes be difficult to impart to people whose
living is made from the Party. “We tell them that good and evil have
consequences,” she said. She goes on to talk about how Falun Gong has
spread through the world, and that only the Chinese Communist Party
persecutes it. Sometimes those calls end with a resignation from the
Party—other times, silence, or abuse.
Andrew Junker, a professor at the
University of Chicago, presented a paper at a recent Asian studies
conference looking specifically at the question of Falun Gong volunteers
reaching members of the security apparatus and urging them to stop
participating in the persecution of the discipline.
He called his presentation “Interrupting
Eichmann: Falun Gong’s Transnational Boomerang,” and said that Falun
Gong’s “telephone activism” is “an attempt to interrupt the street level
experience of everyday sovereignty of bureaucrats and targets of the
calls.”
“They’ll
call the brother-in-law or wife of a police chief,” Junker said in his
presentation. “Imagine that phone call from Taiwan: ‘Do you know your
brother-in-law is involved in tada tada tada?'”
Yinan, the Tuidang volunteer, said that
they often get their phone numbers from imprisoned Falun Gong
practitioners in China, who memorize them based on photographs and
numbers on the wall posters in jails and police lockups. Some of the
information is also available online.
The overall effect of these efforts are
difficult to quantify, since it is unknown what portion of the 200
million renunciations from the Party now recorded come from the security
forces or inside the Party—yet Chen Guangcheng says that the efforts
are making real headway.
Chen recalls telling staff members of a
re-education center of his encounter with the policeman that received
the Tuidang phone call and his wary relationship with the Communist
Party. “The cadres told me that this mistrust in the Party is deep and
common. The whole apparatus of the Party and the security forces feel
that the Communist Party’s days are numbered. Change will come, but no
one knows when.”
Chen added: “The people I had contact with
just serve the Party for a little benefit, or corruption. It was clear
they were waiting for a collapse, and so as soon as the Party goes down,
they’ll be ready to flee.”
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