Can Xi Live Forever and Reach 150 Years Old

The last image of the "Iron Plate Diagram" (Image: Zhenjian Network)

[People News] During the live broadcast of the September 3rd military parade by CCTV, the footage showed that at 8:36 a.m., Xi Jinping walked side by side with Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un as they ascended Tiananmen Gate Tower to the viewing platform, chatting as they went. Among their conversations, Xi’s remark about “human beings living to 150 years” shocked the world, and overseas media widely replayed it. The comment attracted far more attention than the much-hyped Dongfeng-61, J-20, or J-35 advanced weapons.

Some say this “microphone-gate” incident was a slip of the tongue. But what they don’t realise is that every word and action of the CCP’s top leader in public is carefully arranged and scripted. Nothing happens by accident. Recently, rumours about Xi’s health and his possible downfall have been swirling in the media, filling the air. Xi deliberately took advantage of this rare occasion to release a message. The subtext was to tell the whole world: I, Xi Jinping, am only 72 years old — compared to the ancients, still at the age of a child — not even halfway to humanity’s ultimate life span of 150 years! That’s why I, like Tsar Putin, revised the constitution and abolished term limits! That’s why I eliminated the designated successor chosen by my predecessors, and therefore have no need to set up a successor in advance! But alas, throughout history, the tides of dynasties rise and fall not according to the personal will of those in power.

From “Three Horses Sharing One Trough” to “Cows Following Horses”

Daoists in ancient China believed that “the Southern Dipper governs life, the Northern Dipper governs death.” In Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Zhuge Liang used the “Seven-Star Lamp of the Northern Dipper” to extend his life. But even with this, he could not reverse the decline of the Han dynasty, and destiny could not be altered — he ultimately died at Wuzhang Plains.

Cao Cao knew well that Sima Yi had the look of an eagle and a wolf, and he warned his son Cao Pi to be wary of him. But what Cao Cao did not foresee was that Sima Yi, who could endure the unendurable, outlived the brilliant Zhuge Liang; at age 41, outlived Cao Cao himself; at 47, outlived Cao Pi; at 50, outlived Cao Rui; and eventually usurped power from Cao Fang, the fourth-generation ruler of Wei.

Earlier, Cao Cao had dreamed of “three horses sharing one trough,” and thought it referred to Ma Teng, Ma Chao, and Ma Dai. After Ma Teng’s death, and with Ma Chao and Ma Dai defeated and fleeing to Shu, Cao Cao felt relieved that the crisis had been avoided.

But on his deathbed, Cao Cao dreamed again of “three horses sharing one trough.” In the morning, he asked strategist Jia Xu: “I dreamt again of three horses at one trough. What omen is this — good or bad?” Jia Xu explained: “Dreaming of the horse of fortune is an auspicious sign. With the horse of fortune returning to the trough, why should the lord doubt?” Cao Cao thus dropped his suspicion, allowing the Sima family to escape calamity.

“槽” (trough) is a homophone of “曹” (Cao). In reality, Cao Cao’s second dream came true in the form of the three Simas — Sima Yi, Sima Shi, and Sima Zhao — who, through the Gaoping Tombs coup, swallowed up the Cao Wei dynasty, with Sima Yan ultimately founding the Western Jin.

Later, Sima Yi read in a book of prophecy called Xuan Shi Tu about the saying “cows follow horses.” Since “three horses sharing one trough” had already proven accurate, he feared repeating the pattern and poisoned General Niu Jin to avert the omen.

But man’s plans never outmatch heaven’s will. Killing “Niu Jin” (General Niu) did not eliminate the threat. The Western Jin was destroyed, and the Eastern Jin was founded by none other than Emperor Yuan, whose personal name was “Niu Rui.” As the saying goes: “It started with a cow, and ended with a cow.”

A Yuan dynasty book, Pinghua on the Records of the Three Kingdoms, says that since Liu Bang and Empress Lü unjustly killed generals Han Xin, Peng Yue, and Ying Bu, the Jade Emperor arranged their reincarnations: Han Xin as Cao Cao, Peng Yue as Liu Bei, Ying Bu as Sun Quan, while Liu Bang became the puppet Emperor Xian, and Lü Hou became Empress Fu. The three wronged men were allowed to split up Emperor Xian’s realm, creating the tripartite division. Since Han Xin was killed by Empress Lü, fate arranged for Cao Cao to come to the death of Empress Fu. Thus, the entire saga of the Three Kingdoms was a grand drama of karmic retribution.

From “8341” to the Huairen Hall Coup

“December 26 is the birthday of our great leader, Chairman Mao. The capital has held a grand rally. Chairman Mao is in very good health. According to research by physiologists and scientists, our great leader, our red sun, Chairman Mao, will live to be 140 to 150 years old. This is the greatest blessing for all the Chinese people and the people of the world. Long live Chairman Mao!”
— From a December 28, 196,6, bulletin signed by Beijing’s “Red Flag Corps Communications Group.”

Those educated in mainland China know that the very first page of the first-grade Chinese textbook bore the five characters: “Long live Chairman Mao!”

Until Mao’s death on September 9, 1976, people did not understand the mystery of “8341,” the code number of Mao’s bodyguard unit. Mao could not possibly live 140 or 150 years, nor could he truly live forever.

It is said Mao once asked three Daoist masters for divination. One, in 1949, before he entered Beijing, wrote down only two sets of numbers: “9,9” and “8341,” warning Mao that his fate clashed with past emperors, and the imperial aura of the Forbidden City was too heavy for him to dwell there.

Thus, Mao waited until September 9, 1949 — half a year after the PLA entered Beijing — before moving into Zhongnanhai. He never once stepped into the Forbidden City. When he died on September 9, 1976, his age was exactly 83 years. From the 1935 Zunyi Conference, when he seized power, his rule lasted exactly 41 years.

Mao himself had long believed “8341” to be his auspicious imperial number, naming his guard unit after it. But the truth was bitterly ironic.

Mao’s handpicked successors all ended in disaster. Liu Shaoqi was denounced as a “traitor, spy, and scab” and the “biggest capitalist roader in the party.” Lin Biao died in a plane crash in Mongolia while fleeing. Hua Guofeng, before Mao’s body was cold, arrested Mao’s wife Jiang Qing and nephew Mao Yuanxin, declaring this a great victory of Mao Zedong Thought.

Deng Xiaoping, after three political downfalls and returns, not only reversed Mao’s verdicts but also ousted Mao’s chosen successors. Even Party General Secretaries could be dismissed by a handful of retired elders at a “family meeting,” accused of “splitting the Party.” The CCP’s one-man dictatorship ensures that no leader will voluntarily give up power until the last moment of life.

Take Jiang Zemin — who never fired a shot in battle — yet manipulated behind the scenes, sowed discord, and struck down the “Yang family generals” who had survived real gunfire. He severed Deng Xiaoping’s lifelong bond with Yang Shangkun, a friendship of sixty years, destroyed by the CCP factional struggle.

Before Hu Jintao came to power as Deng’s designated successor, Jiang suddenly staged a military coup with Zhang Wannian, clinging to his chairmanship of the Central Military Commission. After Hu took office, Jiang continued to control the military through loyalists Xu Caihou and Guo Boxiong, sidelining Hu. Not until Hu’s full retirement did Jiang finally move his office out of the military headquarters. Jiang even plotted several assassination attempts against Hu.

Hu Jintao may have been the only CCP leader to voluntarily hand over all power after his term. Yet, at the 20th Party Congress, before the eyes of the world, the sitting Party chief had Hu forcibly escorted out of the hall in disgrace. Hu’s protégé, Premier Li Keqiang, died just months after leaving office, under mysterious circumstances from a sudden heart attack.

From “Snake at the Start, Snake at the End” to “No More After Jiang, Hu, and Xi”

According to recent disclosures from insiders, while serving in Zhejiang, Xi Jinping and his wife, Peng Liyuan, once secretly visited Jingshan Temple in Hangzhou. There, they met privately with the abbot, who predicted that Xi bore the face of an emperor and would soon take on a great mandate. Yet various folk prophecies and legends have also repeatedly pointed to the CCP’s and Xi’s own eventual downfall.

One folk prophecy says that the CCP regime will “begin with a snake and end with a snake,” a matter of destiny. That is to say, the regime began with someone born in the year of the Snake and will end with someone born in the year of the Snake. Strikingly, the CCP’s first leader, Mao Zedong, was born in the year of the Snake, and the current leader, Xi Jinping, is also a Snake.

Another folk seer once hinted that in the post-Deng era, the CCP’s fate would match the phrase “Jiang Hu Xi Wu” (江胡習五 / 江胡習無) — meaning “Jiang, Hu, Xi, five,” or “Jiang, Hu, Xi, and no more.” This suggests that after the five main leaders — Mao, Deng, Jiang, Hu, and Xi — there would be no sixth generation.

A prophetic book, Tie Ban Tu (The Iron Plate Diagram), contains a vision: after four black birds fly across a valley, the fifth bird, “a white-feathered bird, crashes midway up the mountain, bleeding on the cliff.” Add the radical “feather” (羽) on top of “white” (白), and it forms the traditional character for “Xi” (習). Did anyone notice that after this most recent military parade, 80,000 white doves were released in Tiananmen Square? The symbolism was clear: wishing Xi to spread his wings and soar high, with boundless prospects.

At Zhangbu Scenic Area in Pingtang County, Guizhou, a 270-million-year-old rock formation was discovered bearing the six characters “The Chinese Communist Party Collapses” (中國共產黨亡). This coincides with the prophecies above, showing that destiny is at work.

According to internal sources, on the eve of the 20th Party Congress, Xi Jinping — in order to abolish Deng’s system of leadership term limits — promised within the Party that he would justify his indefinite rule with three “tasks”: “unifying Taiwan,” “suppressing Falun Gong,” and “fighting corruption.” His aim was to save the Party in order to preserve his own power and life. This is also why, during the military parade, Xi made clear signals to the outside world that although he was already seventy, within the Party he was still “young.” But who could have guessed that it was Putin who accidentally slipped and revealed the shocking secret of Xi’s “organ transplants”?

Moreover, Xi is said to be deeply fearful of the Tui Bei Tu (Back-Pushing Diagram), another famous prophecy book that once circulated widely online.

Picture No. 46 reads: “A soldier bearing a bow, declares himself an old white-headed man. Within the eastern gate lies a hidden golden sword, and a warrior enters the imperial palace through the back gate.” The “bow” refers to bow-and-arrow, an ancient weapon, which in modern times has evolved into rockets. Xi’s 2023 purge of the Rocket Force generals was precisely to prevent the prophesied mutiny.

The line “a soldier bearing a bow” also alludes to Zhang Youxia, Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission and former Rocket Force commander. His surname “Zhang” (張) literally contains the “bow” radical. For this reason, after the 20th Party Congress, Xi began pressuring Zhang to retire. But fate would not bend to his will: during Xi’s brain surgery after a stroke, Zhang allegedly struck back, removing several of Xi’s close allies in the military.

As for the three generals Liu Yuan, Liu Yazhou, and Liu Xiaojian, Xi discarded them as well. The surname “Liu” (劉), in traditional form, contains the radicals for “metal” (金) and “blade” (刂), matching the prophecy of “the golden sword hidden in the eastern gate.” Xi feared their prestige in the army and that their merits might overshadow him. Thus, even before the 19th Party Congress, Xi had already decided to “use none of the three Lius.” But whether within the Party there still lurks a figure like Sima Yi or Khrushchev remains to be seen.

“Schemes too clever, backfiring against one’s own life.” In short, Xi cannot live to 150 years, nor can the CCP endure that long. On the contrary, Xi Jinping may soon be hollowed out in internal power struggles, ending up as the Party’s “second Hua Guofeng,” rather than a “second Mao Zedong.”

(First published by People News)