Direct translation
The Yu Menglong case reveals a shocking connection to the "Cai Family System," with netizens alleging a link between Tianyu Media and 798 Art Zone
—The Cai Family Conspiracy and the 731 Symbol Behind the Yu Menglong Case
Reporter : Bi Gu / Editor: Zhongkang / Source: People's Daily / https://www.aboluowang.com/2025/1113/2304832.html
More than two months have passed since Yu Menglong's unexpected death. Despite the suppression by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) authorities, netizens within China continue their relentless pursuit of the truth.
Regardless of netizens' pleas for the CCP's public security organs to address the suspicious points in the case and reopen the investigation, the CCP's propaganda department has only one option: silence.
However, netizens stubbornly persist in speaking out for good and justice, continuously uploading clues to platforms like X and Telegram.
I. Why are Tianyu Media and 798Cube both associated with the surname Cai? The X platform account @TuomasLinLi recently exposed the powerful figures behind Tianyu Media: Cai Huaijun, chairman of Mango Excellent Media and Tianyu Media; Xin Qi (Xin Xiaoxiong), a shareholder of Beijing 89 Entertainment Culture Media Co., Ltd.; Cai Junwu, director of Beijing Qixing Huadian Technology Group Co., Ltd., which invested in Beijing 89 Entertainment Media Co., Ltd. and Beijing 798 Cultural and Creative Industry Co., Ltd. (Qixing Group is the property management company for 798); Cai Yiquan, chairman of Fujian Junbao Service Group Co., Ltd.; and Cai Yijia, who netizens have revealed is related to the Yu Menglong case.
This inevitably raises the question: why are they all surnamed Cai? Netizens uploaded information about the Yu Menglong incident from the dark web to the Telegram account @JOYL1917, conducting a deep dive into people with the surname Cai and discovering a hidden secret: in southern China, kinship is highly valued, and those with the same surname are considered family.
In the Chaoshan region, there's a saying that "Xin, Ke, Cai" are one family. According to this saying, Xin Qi is another "Cai Qi," and this involves an old story.
It is said that in the late Southern Song Dynasty, there was a famous wealthy merchant in Quanzhou named Pu Shougeng.
Pu Shougeng's ancestors were merchants from Arabia who settled in China for generations, and by his generation, they were truly Chinese.
The Pu family first did business in Guangzhou, and later moved to Quanzhou, Fujian.
Why move? Well, at that time, Quanzhou was the largest port in East Asia, offering boundless business opportunities! The Song Dynasty treated the Pu family quite well, granting them many privileges. However, when the Yuan army marched south, the Song imperial family fled to Quanzhou, hoping to utilize Pu Shougeng's naval power to resist the Yuan. Pu Shougeng refused, and to demonstrate his loyalty to the Yuan, he massacred the entire Song imperial family in Quanzhou! After the Yuan Dynasty was established, Pu Shougeng was indeed given important positions, becoming the Military Governor of Fujian and Guangdong, and concurrently serving as the Maritime Trade Commissioner of Fujian and Guangdong.
After the Ming Dynasty was established, Zhu Yuanzhang, whose parents and elder brother had starved to death under Yuan rule, harbored deep hatred for the Yuan Mongols and, consequently, for the Pu family who had helped them seize power.
Therefore, Zhu Yuanzhang ordered all descendants of the Pu family who had not yet changed their surname to be designated as "remnants."
All men with the surname Pu were exiled to the army, and all women were forced into prostitution or slavery, a fate to befall generations to come! Consequently, their descendants changed their surname and scattered to various places, some even adopting the surname Cai.
An article by the Central News Agency, titled "Newly Appointed Politburo Standing Committee Member Cai Qi Visited Taiwan and Met These People," unearthed a visit by Cai Qi to Taiwan in July 2012, after which he published a "Taiwan Trip Diary" in mainland media.
According to the diary, Cai Qi met with his maternal uncle in Kaohsiung and several political and economic figures, also inspected various locations, and praised Taiwan's convenience stores.
The article points out that Cai Qi visited Taiwan from 6 to 12 July 2012. At the time, he was a member of the Standing Committee of the Zhejiang Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China and the head of the Provincial Organization Department. Cai Qi's maternal uncle had been living in Taiwan for over 50 years by 2012. Based on the timeline, this maternal uncle was likely a Kuomintang soldier who fled to Taiwan with Chiang Kai-shek.
The diary entry reads: "Speech by KMT Central Party President Kao Hui, Taipei City Council Speaker Wu Pi-chu, and New Taipei City Deputy Mayor Hsu Chih-chien.
Legislators Lo Shu-lei and Chang Ching-chung, KMT Central Standing Committee member Chen Ming-yi, Taipei Party Chairman Chung Tse-liang, Nantou Mayor Hsu Shu-hua, commentators Chiang Min-chin and Yu Mei-jen, and Wei-Ge Foundation Chairman Lee Chuan-hung attended.
Cai Qi's wife, Lin Cheng-sheng, became Deputy Director of the Zhejiang Provincial Taiwan Affairs Office, visiting Taiwan in November 2012 and April 2014 in this capacity.
As Cai Qi moved north and rose to the Politburo Standing Committee, Lin Cheng-sheng became Deputy Secretary-General of the Cross-Strait Entrepreneurs Summit (China side), increasing her interactions with Taiwanese political and business figures and businesspeople, demonstrating that the couple wielded significant resources within the CCP's high-level leadership and Taiwan-related systems.
Cai Qi's "Taiwan Trip Diary" contains many vivid descriptions, a stark contrast to his later image of purging "low-end population" in Beijing.
On 27 March 2014, Cai Qi was transferred to the newly established Office of the Central National Security Commission as Deputy Director. In April 2015, he became the Executive Deputy Director of the Office of the Central National Security Commission (at the ministerial level).
During his tenure, numerous terrorist incidents involving spies were reported overseas, involving the murder or intimidation of dissidents.
So, was Cai Qi, who was considered friendly by Taiwanese people more than a decade ago, influenced by Xi Jinping, or did he influence Xi Jinping by recalling his Pu-style identity? II. The Symbolic Meaning of 798cube: Yu Menglong's last photo of himself at 798cube before his death holds profound meaning:

Image : Yu Menglong took a photo in front of the 798 Art Zone in Beijing this August. (Photo taken from Yu Menglong's Weibo)
The arrangement of 798cube is peculiar, but it contains a hidden meaning. Viewed vertically from left to right, it forms 7CE—731. Why is that? C is the third letter in the alphabet, and E sounds like "1," so together they form 731. If we represent the word "cube" alphabetically: c—3, u—21, b—2, e—5, 3 + 21 + 2 + 5 = 31, which, combined with 7, still equals 731. The black "一" after "cube" corresponds to "98," signifying 918.
The September 18 Incident, or Mukden Incident, occurred on 18 September 1931 during the Japanese invasion of China.
According to the *Veritable Records of the Ming Dynasty*, Zhu Yuanzhang was born on the 18th day of the ninth lunar month. He was called Zhu Chongba because, as recorded in the late Qing Dynasty book *Spring in Tang Notes*, his parents were 88 years old when he was born.
Therefore, during the September 18 Incident, Japan invaded Manchuria with the aim of eliminating the Manchu people to achieve its aggressive goals.
Thus, Japan established Unit 731 in Northeast China to perform human dissections on local Chinese people, also with the aim of eliminating them and forcing them into submission through inhumane means. This is exactly the same as the atmosphere of terror that the Communist Party is creating in mainland China today.
I once interviewed Gao Xin (pronounced "shen"), one of the founders of 798 Art Zone. He said he wanted to kill Chinese people. Why does he hate Chinese people so much? Radio France Internationale (RFI) published an article on 31 August 2024, titled "Chinese Artist Gao Xin May Be Arrested for Allegedly Infringing on the Reputation of Martyrs," introducing this not-so-obvious, seemingly eccentric old man.
Gao Xin and his brother Gao Qiang have been active in the contemporary art scene since the 1980s, working on paintings and performance art.
Their works, such as "Midnight Mass," "The Execution of Christ," and "Mao Kneeling in Repentance," are considered satirical of Mao Zedong.
Later, due to the tightening of creative freedom in mainland China, the two brothers emigrated to the United States.
In 2024, the elder brother, Gao Xin, suddenly returned to China and was subsequently arrested by the Sanhe City Public Security Bureau in Hebei Province.
The younger brother, Gao Qiang, wrote to France, and Gao Xin was rescued.
In 1979, young artists such as Wang Keping spontaneously organized the "Stars Art Exhibition" in Beijing. The Gao brothers were also members of their group. The artworks of these artists were considered a reflection on the Cultural Revolution; they were a generation that criticized the Mao era.
However, the reality is that a group of people who are "anti-Mao" are still deeply entrenched in Maoist ideology.
Mao Zedong rose to power through "struggle."
These people, who consider themselves anti-Mao, believe that "an eye for an eye," even killing those who oppose them, constitutes anti-Maoism.
In fact, "violence begets violence" is imitation, not reflection.
The opposite of evil is good. True anti-Maoism should promote charity and kindness.
Only by overcoming "struggle" with "goodness" can one truly "oppose Mao."
(First published in People's Daily) △
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