Welcome to Gaia! ::

The Marxist, Communist, and Socialist Guild

Back to Guilds

Formerly called the NCS, this is a place for communists and socialists to talk about communism and socialism. 

Tags: Marxism, Communism, Socialism, Political, Left 

Reply Homework Help and Member Essays
A Defense for Mao

Quick Reply

Enter both words below, separated by a space:

Can't read the text? Click here

Submit

Forgotten_Martyr

PostPosted: Tue Dec 12, 2006 1:08 pm


A Defense for Mao

This thread is dedicated to discuss what Mao and what he did in his life, weather you find him good or evil. I'm probably going to get flamed for this, but I must post a Defense for Mao, as I truly think he wasn't purely "evil."

There are four main atrocities people tie Mao Tse-Tung in with, The Invasion of Tibet, The Hundred Flowers Campaign, The Great Leap Forward, and The Cultural Revolution; which happened in that order. I wish to present a case in Mao's defense for each.

1) The Invasion of Tibet: In 1950, the Red Army invaded Tibet, a British colonial possession, Mao Tse-Tung was widely blamed for the destruction of Buddhist temples and crack down of religious practices as well as the thousands of deaths during the invasion.
On the contrary, the Red Army was democratic at this point, as was Mao’s wish, so Mao himself had no authority over when the Chinese army invaded the colony. He merely pretended to as to not appear weak to the western imperialists, which would have taken such opportunity to fund a counter revolutionary operation to remove the new communist government.
As for the invasion itself and atrocities which occurred, since Mao had little control over the red army at the time, he obviously didn’t control when soldiers went out of line and torched a Buddhist temple, which were actually rare occurrences. Besides the deaths, which were mostly those of enemy combatants anyways, the Invasion actually liberated Tibet from harsh British rule, healed the poverty of the region, and promoted further rebellion against the British on the continent.

2) The Hundred Flowers Campaign: Once Mao had a firm grip on party policy, he launched the Hundred flowers campaign 50 years ago in 1956. It was started by Mao as an attempt to liberalize party policy and allow multi ideal practices in China. The hardliners of the party, which also held some influence, saw Mao as trying to restore capitalism, failing that a loose socialism, and aimed to stop him.
Mao was forced to step back from full power because of bombardment by his enemies, and during this time, those who expressed their ideals to the party were attacked because of their "reactionary" thinking, and as a matter of fact, the failure to liberalize party policy and the deaths of those attacks in truth, greatly grieved Mao.

3) The Great Leap Forward: In the late 50's and early 60's Mao noticed that the Nationalists failure to commercialize the Agricultural network in China and the booming population would soon lead to a disaster. Noticing the coming problems, Mao launched a series of Industrial and Agricultural reforms to combat the coming starvation.
In any other scenario, Mao would have prevented many deaths except for one problem; drought. During the middle of his agricultural reform, drought struck China and many died from Famine, a famine which Mao is widely blamed for. It can be noted and seriously debated however, that without the Great Leap forward, many more, as much as three times as recorded, could have died from starvation. Despite US propaganda at the time, the Great Leap Forward was actually a big success and saved many lives.

4) The Cultural Revolution: The Cultural Revolution, affectionately called "The Time China went mad" by anti-communists, is the major folly Mao is remembered for, that being that the atrocities of the failures in this campaign were actually Mao's fault... at least partly that is.
Before Mao died in 1976, he launched his final campaign which he called the Cultural Revolution. Mao saw reactionary capitalists gaining ground in the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) as well as external forces demonizing the party’s actions (Including attempts to overthrow the Congolese government, end Pol-Pot’s primitive reign over Cambodia, and send economical aid to Albania during the Sino-Soviet Split).
Mao called upon the masses for a second revolution and for the proletariat and farmers alike to besiege party headquarters and end the reactionary threat. The people applied and formed the Red Guard which went beyond Mao's plans and attacked religious sites of worship, immigrants that were thought to be working for reactionaries, and even each other. Mao, foreseeing the coming anarchy, quickly moved to restore order in China and called the Cultural Revolution a "success" and asked the Red Guard to dismantle.
Shortly after, Mao died of illness and China was left in a power struggle. In truth, had the Red Guard not gone out of hand and the Cultural Revolution been truly successful, China could have been on its way to a true communist utopia. Arguably, it was the Cultural Revolution that was the closest period in time in which a nation was the closest to reaching true communism.

~Comrade Xan blaugh
PostPosted: Tue May 05, 2009 1:03 pm


It is all very true what you say. And I really do believe (in particular points 1 and 3) that Mao himself is not to blame for many of the atrocities that occured in the developing Communist China. But understand that Mao was an incompetent, arrogant misanthrope of a tyrant, and that considering the climate and the extremist nature of the Chinese uprising that he should have thought out many of his mandates a LITTLE bit more before he ordered them (especially the Cultural Revolution). He needed to regulate his officials and he didn't. Why? Because he had better things on his mind. His excessive boldness was and is emulated by the Chinese government, and the Tibetan Buddhist oppression of today is a direct cause of his past actions.

But admittedly, your information did make me see Mao is not all evil. He isn't as bad as Castro or Stalin, but he in no way can measure up to late Soviet leaders like Lenin, Khruschev and Gorbachev (even though he was a p***y... joking, of course). Thank you for this, comrade. smile

P.S: HAHAHAHAHA, I love that quote at the bottom!

Comrade Texidor

Reply
Homework Help and Member Essays

 
Manage Your Items
Other Stuff
Get GCash
Offers
Get Items
More Items
Where Everyone Hangs Out
Other Community Areas
Virtual Spaces
Fun Stuff
Gaia's Games
Mini-Games
Play with GCash
Play with Platinum