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2026年6月29日 星期一

The Human Livestock Market: When Efficiency Meets Absolute Evil

 

The Human Livestock Market: When Efficiency Meets Absolute Evil

The news of Liu Ren’s capture in Cambodia—and the discovery of his "office" hidden behind a secret wall—is a chilling reminder that we haven't evolved as much as we like to pretend. We imagine we are civilized, governed by laws and rights, but underneath that thin veneer of modernity lies the same ancient, predatory impulse that once hunted in the wilderness. Only now, the hunting ground is a digital borderland, and the prey is the most educated, "modern" generation yet: university students.

The 2,100 iron cages found in that basement represent the ultimate, grotesque end-state of a system stripped of moral friction. It is capitalism decoupled from humanity; it is "optimization" applied to human biology. When you reduce a person to a set of metrics—blood type, organ health, lactation capacity—you aren't just committing a crime; you are rebranding human beings as raw industrial output.

We see this pattern throughout history, from the horrific efficiency of the slave trade to the systematic dehumanization seen in totalitarian regimes. The dark brilliance of Liu Ren’s operation was not in the violence itself—violence is cheap and common—but in the marketization of that violence. By putting a price tag on each cage, he turned a dungeon into a warehouse, and torture into a logistical supply chain.

It is easy to recoil in horror and label this a "monster's" work, but that is a comforting lie. This wasn't a monster; it was a businessman who realized that in the absence of law, human bodies are just another commodity to be harvested. We shouldn't be surprised when the world becomes a slaughterhouse once the rules of the game are replaced by the raw, unfettered mechanics of profit. When we allow society to become a place where only the strong survive, we are building the very cages that will eventually hold us.