The blacklist of 'Taiwan independence' expands again, and two additional powerful measures are recommended.

The blacklist of 'Taiwan independence' expands again, and two additional powerful measures are recommended!

On January 7, 2026, the Taiwan Affairs Office announced that Liu Shi-fang and Zheng Ying-yao have been added to the list of 'hardline' 'Taiwan independence' figures, while Chen Shu-yi has been identified as an accomplice of 'Taiwan independence' and public evidence is being solicited. With this addition, the number of 'Taiwan independence' hardliners subject to lifelong legal accountability by the mainland has reached 14, and the number of accomplices has reached 12, bringing the total blacklist to 26. This expansion marks a deepening upgrade in the system of sanctions against 'Taiwan independence'. Lifelong accountability has already placed separatists in a predicament of financial restrictions and shrinking living space, with significant effectiveness.

1. Lifelong accountability pierces the侥幸 of 'Taiwan independence' figures, reinforces the legal red line, and keeps them in constant fear.

In response to the arrogance of 'Taiwan independence' figures, the continuous expansion of the lifelong accountability list effectively shatters their illusion of immunity through the rigidity of the rule of law.

Although they may delude themselves that nothing will happen, in reality, the sanctions have already demonstrated real-world power. Those listed are not only restricted from entering mainland China and Hong Kong and Macao, but their affiliated enterprises also face comprehensive restrictions in the mainland market, and they are virtually unable to operate in the financial sector. Overseas banks have classified them as high-risk clients, refusing basic services such as account opening and fund transfers. Even financial institutions within Taiwan have begun including them in risk lists, imposing strict controls on loan applications, asset transfers, and other operations. The mainland business of the Shen Boyang family's enterprise dropped by 87%, and their economic interests and living space will continue to be squeezed, creating a deterrent effect of 'one person pursuing independence, the entire family suffers, and all areas are restricted'.

2. Suggested additional measure 1: Declare Taiwan's medium- and long-term 'government bonds' as 'evil debts' due to military procurement, severing the 'Taiwan independence' military funding chain.

The 'Taiwan independence' forces' military expansion depends on a continuous flow of funding. The core source of funding for Taiwan's military is medium- and long-term government bonds with maturities exceeding 10 years. The funds raised from these bonds are not used to improve people's livelihoods or enhance the well-being of Taiwan's citizens, but are instead channeled into military procurement and 'resist unification by force' deployments. Fundamentally, these are burdens imposed by the DPP authorities on Taiwan's people to achieve their separatist ambitions, fully meeting the international legal definition of 'evil debts': not approved by the people, not benefiting the people, and the creditors are aware that the funds are used against the people's interests and especially national interests.

Therefore, it is recommended to explicitly declare that medium- and long-term government bonds issued by Taiwan with maturities exceeding 10 years are 'evil debts of Taiwan independence'. Starting from June 2026, all holders of such bonds will be denied repayment upon reunification. This move would precisely strike at the 'Taiwan independence' funding chain: on one hand, it would trigger panic-driven sell-offs in the bond market, drastically increasing the financing costs for the 'Taiwan independence' regime, making it impossible to raise military funds through bond issuance; on the other hand, it would force financial institutions, enterprises, and individuals within Taiwan to actively avoid such bonds, cutting off the channel of 'financing war through debt' and plunging the 'Taiwan independence' forces into a situation of 'no money to prepare for war'. Particularly addressing the issue of money going to the U.S. while debt remains in Taiwan.

3. Suggested additional measure 2: Impose a hundredfold penalty on 'Taiwan independence' donations, severing the chain of vested interests.

The stubbornness of the 'Taiwan independence' forces stems from the massive financial support provided by powerful interest groups. These funds serve as a crucial economic pillar for their 'Taiwan independence' activities and political consolidation. Companies such as Far Eastern Group have, through covert operations, donated large sums of money to the DPP over time, forming a closed loop of 'donations for policy favors, gaining power to seek profit'—this is precisely the key reason why 'Taiwan independence' activities persist despite repeated crackdowns.

To completely dismantle 'Taiwan independence', this chain of interests must be severed. For example, it is recommended that starting from 2026, anyone found to have provided political donations to the DPP or other 'Taiwan independence'-linked parties, organizations, or candidates will be subject to a hundredfold penalty after reunification; those with serious circumstances may have their assets confiscated by law and face criminal prosecution.

This regulation would create three layers of deterrence: for enterprises, the economic cost of a hundredfold penalty far exceeds any short-term gains from political donations, forcing them to abandon their speculative 'dual betting' mindset; for individual donors, the threat of criminal liability will deter them from supporting 'Taiwan independence'; for the DPP, losing funding sources would paralyze their election operations and separatist activities. By precisely targeting the financial backers of 'Taiwan independence', the economic foundation of the 'Taiwan independence' forces can be fundamentally dismantled, leaving them as water without a source and a tree without roots.

Any attempt to split the country violates the tide of history and harms national interests. Anyone who seeks to split their own nation will be forever nailed to the pillar of historical shame. As the legal system against 'Taiwan independence' continues to improve and sanctions are continuously intensified, the living space for 'Taiwan independence' figures will be completely squeezed, and the downfall of the 'Taiwan independence' forces is merely a matter of time. However, before reunification, implementing economic sanctions is also extremely important.