An exposé by a second-generation Red elite offers a piercing psychological portrait of Xi Jinping. Drawing on insider knowledge of the princeling class, the author unpacks Xi’s insecurities, hypersensitivity, and stubborn mediocrity—traits that shaped his rise and ruined the CCP from within. Xi’s need for control stems from a lifelong inferiority complex, especially among peers who quietly despised him. Lacking vision or charisma, he stumbled into power as a compromise figure—only to become the Party’s greatest liability. This exposé reveals not just Xi’s personal flaws, but the broken system that enabled his rise—and may soon collapse under his weight.
