The Chinese people are great, every part of them is a treasure.

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Not long ago, the "allogeneic bone" industry, ignited by a lawyer named Yi Shenghua, has quietly faded away after a few days of heated discussion, much like the incidents of mixing chemical raw materials with cooking oil.

Looking at the current scene of pride and joy over the number of Olympic gold medals, one can't help but recall the poem by Wang Zhaoshan, Chairman of the Shandong Writers Association in 2008: "I only wish there were a TV in front of the grave, to watch the Olympics, cheer together, and be happy even as a ghost." It also reminds me of the descriptions of all animals in the Xinhua Dictionary: meat can be eaten, skin can be made into leather, fur can be made into clothes, bones can be used for medicine...

"Every part is a treasure" is the annotation for almost all animals in the Chinese dictionary.

In fact, the annual output value of the corpse-dismembering and bone-digging industry is not large, only breaking through 5 billion yuan in 2023, with the full-year expectation for 2024 being just 6 billion. Perhaps it's because the Chinese people, inheriting the spirit of remembering to eat but not the beating, have bones that are too cheap, and even with deep processing, they remain worthless. Compared to these cheap bones, the "hot blood" that can boil up in the Chinese people when watching a rocket launch, an Olympic gold medal win, or even enjoying an anti-Japanese drama is much more valuable.

In 2022, the output value of China's blood products industry broke through the 50 billion yuan mark. In 2023, the output value became a state secret and is no longer publicly disclosed. The stock price increases of more than ten listed blood product companies all exceeded 13%, with the lowest increase surpassing that. This is also why the number of "voluntary" blood donors has increased year after year, yet the Red Cross blood banks remain in a state of emergency 24 hours a day.

Of course, the most valuable part of the Chinese people's bodies is undoubtedly the living organs.

After the "Human Organ Donation Law" officially came into effect on May 1, 2024, incidents of young Chinese people suddenly collapsing and suffering brain death have emerged one after another, blooming everywhere across the country. The number of human organ transplant surgeries nationwide has consequently hit new highs repeatedly, with frequent reports of good news.

The cheap bones are still proud and honored to be the people of a great nation that is the world's center for organ transplants.

Actually, for the Chinese people, the motherland's scientific research and development endeavors are the most comprehensive in human history. Not only can blood be used for medicine, organs can be transplanted, and bones can be processed, but even this skin after death is not spared. Not long ago, I wrote an article detailing the state-owned "allogeneic bone" industry chain. From procurement, transportation, processing, storage to packaging and sales, private enterprises are not qualified to participate. Those nine leading human bone industry stocks that surged against the trend already explain everything. The industry that is even more low-key and mature than "allogeneic bone" is called the "allogeneic skin tissue" industry. As the name suggests, going to great lengths to mess with your relative's corpse and only digging out a few bones obviously cannot maximize profits.

There's a saying: "High activity in the two thighs, good elasticity in the abdominal skin, a large sheet from the back."

The first two areas are suitable for "allogeneic skin" transplant materials. The "large sheet" from the back has a large area but poor quality, so it can only be made into medical materials like acellular dermal matrix. I wonder if everyone feels their scalp tingling reading this. I only remember saying "my scalp is tingling" after hearing it, and the response was: "If you hadn't mentioned it, I would have almost forgotten. Good scalp rich in hair follicles is even more valuable now"....

Earlier, it was said the allogeneic bone industry is state-owned, with Sinopharm at its core. The allogeneic skin industry exists in an industrial model where two separate forces perform their respective duties.

One side, also the supplier of goods, is the Red Cross organizations spread across the country. You've heard of blood banks and organ banks, but haven't noticed this charity also has a branch called the "Medical Tissue Bank," right?

The other side is the dealers engaged in deep processing of human skin and wholesale of finished products. These are the various levels of "People's Liberation Army" hospitals, which are also spread across the country like the Red Cross, and are even envied by ordinary public top-tier hospitals.

Reading this, don't you think the title of Lao Wang's article, "Every Part is a Treasure," is not at all "clickbait"?

We originally thought that being born Chinese, "born planned, living by luck, dying randomly, unable to afford a grave," was miserable enough. We never imagined that after death, we would still suffer the torture of being skinned, bones scraped, and bodies dismembered.

As the saying goes: No human rights in life, no intact corpse in death.

Finally, sharing a piece of good news: throughout China, from municipalities directly under the central government down to prefecture-level counties, all crematoriums produce these medical materials.

By: Wang Yajun (Wang Waizui)

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