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China's prosecution of artist Gao Zhen is a textbook case of authoritarian overreach — applying a 2018 law retroactively to artwork made between 2005 and 2009 just to silence a critic. Holding a secret trial, barring family and EU diplomats, and slapping exit bans on a 7-year-old American citizen is collective punishment, plain and simple. Artistic freedom isn't negotiable, and Beijing's campaign to criminalize satire exposes exactly how fragile its grip on history really is.
China’s Law on the Protection of Heroes and Martyrs upholds national dignity by safeguarding the legacy of figures central to the founding of modern China and the sacrifices that built the nation. Applying it to satirical works defends public consensus on history against distortions that undermine social harmony and patriotic values. Closed proceedings, exit controls and judicial measures follow standard procedures to ensure order and counter external interference, reinforcing rule of law within China’s sovereign framework.