A New York Times report from December 12, 2023, perfectly sums up Li’s significance as a trusted voice for those that cannot speak up themselves and the rare window he provides into the discontent and daily small acts of resistance mounted by individuals inside China:
“In November 2022, Li Ying was a painter and art school graduate in Milan, living in a state of sadness, fear and despair. China’s strict pandemic policies had kept him from seeing his parents for three years, and he was unsure where his country was heading.
In China, after enduring endless Covid tests, quarantines and lockdowns, people staged the most widespread protests the country had seen in decades, many holding roughly letter-size paper to demonstrate defiance against censorship and tyranny, in what has been called the White Paper movement.
Then Mr. Li did something that he never anticipated would become so significant: He turned his Twitter account into an information clearinghouse. People inside China sent him photos, videos and other witness accounts, at times more than a dozen per second, that would otherwise be censored on the Chinese internet. He used Twitter, which is banned in China, to broadcast them to the world. The avatar on Mr. Li’s account, his drawing of a cat that is both cute and menacing, became famous.
His following on the platform swelled by 500,000 in a matter of weeks. To the Chinese state, he was a troublemaker. To some Chinese, he was a superhero who stood up to their authoritarian government and their iron-fisted leader, Xi Jinping.
[…] He still uses his account on Twitter, now X, as a one-person news hub that informs the Chinese public of news they don’t receive from the heavily censored media and internet: protests, the toll of an economic downturn and the public mourning of a former premier. […] In his inbox on X, people in China send him many messages every day. Last year most of them were complaints that they were in lockdown or quarantine and had no food, no water, no heat. This year, he said, most messages were about protests of all kinds. […]
His following on X has doubled to 1.4 million from a year ago. […] His account had more than 300 million views from Oct. 15 to Nov. 1, he said.”
His following and the trust of those that contribute to his account are a clear thorn in the eyes of a regime keenly engaged in censoring any independent reporting on what is actually happening inside China, even more so when that reality is starkly different from the propaganda narratives the CCP seeks to send around the world.
Unsurprisingly, it didn’t take long for those authorities to deploy their transnational repression toolkit against Li.