On January 9, 2026, in New York, reporter Lin Dan from Epoch Times reported that at the age of third grade in elementary school, Liu Shuangqing experienced a tragic incident when the Chinese Communist Family Planning officials invaded his home and forcibly took away his mother, who was six months pregnant and disabled, for an abortion. His mother, in a state of despair, cried in front of young Shuangqing, saying she didn’t want to live anymore… This traumatic experience left an indelible shadow on Liu Shuangqing’s childhood.
At that time, young Shuangqing did not know how to console his mother, who had suffered humiliation and loss of family, but he harbored a deep hatred towards the Communist Party from then on. Now in the United States, Liu Shuangqing can boldly speak about this wounded experience. On the evening of January 3, he participated in the “Weekly Call” protest against the CCP’s “Jasmine Movement” organized by the Chinese Democratic Party at Times Square in New York, holding up a banner he made himself: “Overthrow the Chinese Communist Party.” Although the banner was small, he said it represented his innermost call.
Liu Shuangqing said he was born in a northern rural village, his mother was disabled, and his father was a construction worker. Under the CCP’s family planning policy, his mother had been forcibly aborted three times. The last time was when he was grown up, in the third grade of elementary school. It was a day in 2006 when his mother was six months pregnant. Previously, two of her children had been forcibly aborted by the communist party. She was afraid of being caught again for forced abortion and did not dare to stay at home, hiding at her elder sister’s home several kilometers away. During the summer vacation, his mother returned home to attend his grandfather’s funeral, where the Family Planning Office found her.
After the funeral, several officials from the Family Planning Office forcibly entered their home, took his mother away to the hospital in front of him, and carried out a forced abortion.
Liu Shuangqing said: “My mother was taken to the hospital by them, forcibly tied to the bed for the abortion without anesthesia. My mother saw her own flesh and blood cruelly drained away like this, heartbroken. After the abortion, she was also forcibly sterilized and had to undergo regular checks to see if the sterilization ring was still in place. My mother completely lost her reproductive ability. My mother couldn’t save her own child, wanted to commit suicide in the hospital, hit her head against the wall, and was stopped by several people.”
“After returning home, my mother cried every day, washing her face with tears. She cried to me, saying she didn’t want to live, she wanted to commit suicide. She couldn’t even protect her own child, nowhere to seek justice. As a young child, I didn’t know how to comfort my mother… Seeing my mother cry, I was also very sad, leaving a shadow on my young mind.”
The Chinese authorities once claimed that the implementation of the family planning policy for 30 years had resulted in four hundred million fewer births in China. Experts pointed out that these unborn people include babies aborted at three months, six months, or nine months, as well as infants killed after birth, and women who lost their fertility after abortion. The CCP’s family planning policy can be described as a catastrophe against humanity.
During the era of family planning, slogans advocating violence and trampling on human rights could be seen everywhere: “Better to add ten graves than one extra person,” “Rather have rivers of blood than allow over-birth,” “Whether you get sterilized or not, your house will be demolished; whether you undergo abortion or not, your house will be destroyed,” “One person overbirths, the whole village gets sterilized,” “Whether you get sterilized or not, you’ll be caught on sight,” “If it can be aborted, abort it; if it can be sterilized, sterilize it decisively”…
Liu Shuangqing said, disgraceful CCP “changes its tune easily,” now urging Chinese people to have a third child, treating the wombs of Chinese women as its tools, and the CCP has never apologized for its anti-human family planning policy. This history should not be forgotten as time passes.
If the childhood experience was just a nightmare, Liu Shuangqing, after turning 18, learned to climb over the Great Firewall and saw the world outside the CCP’s information censorship. He said he understood more about the history and essence of the CCP, affirming his judgment of the Communist Party. He began to express anti-Communist sentiment through his TikTok account, and criticized the CCP through insinuations on Xiaohongshu, but his accounts were shut down.
Now in the United States, he can speak out freely. He made banners, spontaneously arrived outside the Chinese Consulate General, holding up signs: “The CCP is not equal to China, being anti-Communist is not being anti-Chinese.” He posted on social media: “The CCP is a cult,” “The CCP’s organ harvesting is evil, inviting retribution.”
However, these anti-CCP statements caught the attention of the CCP’s National Security, and CCP police threatened his mother. On December 14, 2025, several police officers from the local police station in his hometown went to his home, asking about his mother’s whereabouts, the country she was in, if she planned to return for the New Year, and demanded that he delete his posts and deactivate his accounts upon return.
Liu Shuangqing said that the CCP’s intimidation further highlights its thuggery and shamelessness. The tragic experience of his family is just a microcosm of the suffering of countless Chinese people. His three unborn siblings are among the souls sacrificed by the CCP.
Around the New Year, he participated in activities organized by the Chinese Democratic Party at Times Square in New York for several consecutive days. Amidst bustling international tourists, he braved the cold wind and loudly shouted along with other young people from China: “Overthrow the Chinese Communist Party! Without the Communist Party, there will be a new China!”
