Source: The New York Times
The death of education influencer Zhang Xuefeng triggered a rare moment of collective grief-as-resistance in China, where mourners used his legacy to openly critique the country's brutal gaokao system and the tutor-industrial complex he'd paradoxically profited from. Rather than state-sanctioned mourning, citizens weaponized his passing to voice fury about educational inequality and mental health costs—a form of dissent that's harder for authorities to suppress than direct political speech because it's framed as personal loss. Influencers with authentic criticism embedded in their brand become lightning rods for suppressed public sentiment, particularly when the influencer himself becomes a casualty of the very system he critiqued.