Article By Frank Bergman
A billionaire Chinese tech tycoon has sparked alarm after posting a photo of more than 100 American babies he legally obtained through surrogacy services in the United States.
The children will reportedly be raised in Communist China.
However, because they were born in the United States, they also hold U.S. citizenship.
That means the children will be able to vote in American elections and could eventually be eligible to hold U.S. political office, including the presidency, once they reach age 35.
The shocking image was highlighted by China-focused commentator Jennifer Zeng in a post on X.
“Look at this terrifying photo!” Zeng wrote.
“At first, I thought it was AI-generated, but it turns out it wasn’t!”
“This is something Chinese tycoon Xu Bo himself posted on the official Weibo of his company Duoyi Network: more than 100 American babies he obtained through surrogacy services!” Zeng said.
Zeng said the case involves Chinese tech tycoon Xu Bo, whose former partner has claimed he has hundreds of children.
“Xu Bo’s former partner, Tang Jing, once claimed that Xu Bo has at least 300 children,” Zeng explained.
“However, Xu Bo only admits to having more than 100.”
🙀 Look at this terrifying photo! At first I thought it was AI-generated, but it turns out it wasn’t!
— Inconvenient Truths — Jennifer Zeng Reports (@jenniferzeng97) July 7, 2026
This is something Chinese tycoon Xu Bo himself posted on the official Weibo of his company Duoyi Network: more than 100 American babies he obtained through surrogacy services!… https://t.co/EUm79Xe1rU pic.twitter.com/v6zQ1a6zZY
Zeng also shared a screenshot showing that the photo had been posted on Bo’s company’s Weibo account.
Weibo is one of China’s largest social media platforms.
Surrogacy Loophole Raises National Security Alarm
The case has intensified concerns over America’s birthright citizenship laws and the commercial surrogacy industry.
The U.S. Supreme Court recently declined to end birthright citizenship in a ruling backed by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
Critics argue the decision leaves America exposed to exploitation by foreign nationals who can use U.S. soil to manufacture American citizenship for children raised under foreign regimes.
“The U.S. Supreme Court today rejected Trump’s birthright citizenship ban,” Zeng noted on June 30.
“So, is this good news for those who still want to come to the U.S. to give birth to ‘anchor babies?’” she asked.
The concern is no longer theoretical.
Bo’s case shows how wealthy foreign nationals can use American surrogacy services to produce U.S. citizens who may never be raised with any loyalty to America.
For critics, the problem is both moral and strategic.
Children are being created through commercial contracts, separated from their birth mothers, and then taken abroad to be raised in a hostile communist state while retaining the rights of American citizens.
Children’s Rights Advocate Calls Surrogacy a ‘Trojan Horse’
Katy Faust, founder and president of the global children’s rights organization Them Before Us, warned that the surrogacy industry has become a “Trojan Horse.”
Faust said the public has been sold a sanitized version of surrogacy focused on infertile couples.
However, she argued that the same system allows wealthy foreign nationals to manufacture American citizens at scale.
“Surrogacy about infertile couples having babies,” Faust wrote.
“That Trojan horse allows Big Fertility to manufacture 100+ American citizens to single Chinese billionaires.”
Faust said the human cost alone should be enough to stop the practice.
“100 motherless babies is enough of a tragedy,” Faust declared.
“The national security threat? Should be the nail in the coffin.”
Her warning cuts to the heart of the controversy.
The surrogacy industry is not merely helping families have children.
It is enabling powerful foreign elites to purchase access to American citizenship through rented wombs.
Senators Demand Investigation
Bo’s case is not isolated.
Earlier this year, after a Wall Street Journal exposé, Republican Sens. Tom Cotton (R-AR) and Rick Scott (R-FL) sent a letter to the Department of Justice demanding an investigation into “surrogacy centers operated by foreign nationals.”
The senators warned that Chinese nationals are exploiting both commercial surrogacy and birthright citizenship.
“Alarming reports indicate that Chinese nationals are systematically exploiting America’s surrogacy and birthright citizenship laws,” the senators wrote.
They said the scale of the problem is already massive, particularly in Southern California.
“Recent reports have uncovered more than 107 Chinese-owned surrogacy agencies operating in Southern California alone,” the letter asserts.
“These agencies cater almost exclusively to wealthy Chinese clients, and some are affiliated with Chinese state-owned entities.
“Chinese nationals pay women living in the United States more than $50,000 to serve as surrogates.
“The children are born on United States soil and granted automatic citizenship.
“And in most cases, the infants are promptly flown to China and raised there under the direct influence of the Chinese Communist Party.”
The senators warned that those children could later be used to advance Beijing’s interests.
“These children will eventually be eligible to vote in American elections, access sensitive positions, or otherwise advance Beijing’s interests, all while owing their allegiance to the CCP,” Cotton and Scott wrote.
They suggested the practice could be part of a “long-term strategy” to “ideologically and systematically undermine the United States.”
America’s System Is Being Exploited
Them Before Us spokeswoman Samantha DeLoach said the situation shows that America’s system is broken.
“When wealthy foreign nationals can shop for women’s wombs, contract for babies, and then use U.S. citizenship laws to their advantage, it’s a sign that the system is fundamentally broken,” DeLoach said.
She said the United States should stop functioning as a destination for commercial surrogacy.
“At minimum, the U.S. should stop functioning as a surrogacy haven by banning or strictly limiting commercial surrogacy,” DeLoach said.
“Surrogacy contracts treat pregnancy as a service and babies as products – something Them Before Us has consistently opposed because children are not commodities.”
The case now stands as a glaring warning about the collision of birthright citizenship, global wealth, foreign influence, and America’s largely permissive surrogacy system.
A foreign billionaire can legally obtain more than 100 American babies, take them back to Communist China, and leave them with the full benefits of U.S. citizenship.
The children will be raised under the influence of the Chinese Communist Party.
Yet they will retain the right to participate in America’s political system.
That is not compassion, family building, or freedom.
It is a national security loophole wrapped inside a human trafficking-style fertility market.
And unless lawmakers act, the system remains open for exploitation.

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