Malachi151
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- May 24, 2003
- Messages
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Really more of a history leading up to the Communist takeover.
http://www.rationalrevolution.net/maoist_china.htm
http://www.rationalrevolution.net/maoist_china.htm
Mao is deserving of much criticism. There are many areas but I think the worst were his decisions to both kill the sparrows and the back yard steel production.Dancing David said:The book by Tuchman Stillwell seems to paint an accurate picture. Mao is greatly misunderstood because of the Cold War. I understand why he did the great leap backwards but it was a Great Mistake. he should have followed the Tao more than he did.
Pre revolutionary China was a mess.
simply because that man chose to rely on his own judgment and didn't bother to check out the facts.
Actually more like Bill Clinton.Malachi151 said:Yeah, like George Bush?
While that is a valid lesson to learn, I don't think it is the most important one.Obviously the leasson to learn when about all dictators is not that "dictators are bad", duh, we all know that, but HOW these people come to power. What are the conditions that make is possible for these people to take power and gain a following and receive enough support to do what they do?
That's the real lesson to learn, and what you see all throught history is that these kinds of people take power when the majority of the population is desperate.
The question there is, why were the desperate in the first place?
Actually more like Bill Clinton.
While that is a valid lesson to learn, I don't think it is the most important one.
Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
That is your opinion. I can respect it. I hope you can respect mine.Malachi151 said:Yes, actually it is.
Hardly, if people from around the world understood this concept and worked to install Democracies we could stop these problems.A bit of a truism, but yes, its not good for anyone or any group to have absolute power, thats like a 'duh" statement. Its like saying that its bad to be a mass muderer.
You are putting words in my mouth. No, people like me say, the problems in this world are caused by too much power in the hands of a few and we should stop this practice. We need to get rid of dictators and install representative democracies. We need to find a way to educate those currently in nations that are controlled by dictators and convince them that their lives could be much better if they stopped bitching about America and marched against those who truly enslave them and bring them real pain and misery and it isn't the Americans. It is there own leaders.And this is what it gets down to. You, and people like you, like to sit back and say "murder is wrong, its bad, murders need to be punished because they are evil."
I have no problem with that but we understand all to well why people of this world suffer.Ummm... okay, that's all well and good, but the REAL lesson to be learned here is not that murder is bad, we all know that, but why do some people grow up to become murderers in the first place?
And practical people realize that the root causes of the problems are well understood and that we need to get rid of reliance on religion and governments that don't foster freedom.This is where more advanced people like to learn some deeper lessons, and get at the root causes of problems to determine WHY they happen in the first place so that those issues can be addressed so they they WONT happen in the future.
No argument.Entire societies who are abused tend be become more and more extreme in their efforts to combat the abuses that they are being subject too, and the harder they have to fight to defend themselves the more extreme he causes become. The obviousness of this is everywhere if you read a little history. As a society becomes more and more threatened by some enemy they unite behind some other entity to comabt that threat, and it is during THAT process that extreme leaders almost always come to power.
The problems you cite were real. I don't dispute them. The problem that you fail to grasp is that the people did not understand the inherent problems of Comunism. One of the most important things that we can teach the world is that the solution to its many problems lies in empowering individuals and not leaders.What were the extreme pressures that were being put on China that united the country behind Mao? The threat of Western and Japanese imperialism accompanied by the internal threat from the corrupt regime of Chaing Kai Shek and the dominearing Chinese warlords.
My only point is that when humans are faced with a choice of government they should choose representative democracy and not be lured by the temptation of Communism or any government where power is concentrated in the hands of a few. Hitler rose to power because people wanted to believe that he cared about them and were willing to put their trust in him.Dancing David said:RandFand,
I am not a Mao apologist by any means, he like most humans showed a mixed bag of good and evil. I think that China like Russia had and has a great deal of cultural baggage that led to the horrible choices he made.
So you have proof that Clinton took advice from impartial advisors and Bush does not? And it seems that it is the advice from the intelligence community is what got Bush in trouble. Oh, and Bill DIDN'T always take advice from the intelligence community. He signed agreements with China that were against the whishes of the intelligence community that came back to haunt him.Malachi151 said:Not that I'm any fan of Clinton's, but he did take advice from impartial advosors very often, from both Democrats and Republicans, and he listened to the intelligence community.
RandFan said:My only point is that when humans are faced with a choice of government they should choose representative democracy and not be lured by the temptation of Communism or any government where power is concentrated in the hands of a few. Hitler rose to power because people wanted to believe that he cared about them and were willing to put their trust in him.
Given the fact that in China the power came from the barrel of a gun it is not suprising that one autocracy replaced another. Mao was definitly in his cultures mindset as he weilded power.
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America figured it out 150 years before the Chinese and Russians decided to experiment with communism.
The founders of our nation very deliberatly set up the constitution, it was meant to be what it became. But they also came from a constitutional monachy that was developing balance of power. Not an autocracy.
My question is how many more countries will dabble in facism or communism before it is finally figured out that they simply don't work.
There sure are plenty countries in Africa, Asia ans Latin America that continue to practice military dictatorship. What happened here in the US is rather unique.
Agreed.Dancing David said:Given the fact that in China the power came from the barrel of a gun it is not suprising that one autocracy replaced another. Mao was definitly in his cultures mindset as he weilded power.
The founders of our nation very deliberatly set up the constitution, it was meant to be what it became. But they also came from a constitutional monachy that was developing balance of power. Not an autocracy.
There sure are plenty countries in Africa, Asia ans Latin America that continue to practice military dictatorship. What happened here in the US is rather unique.
Talk to Korea. China was all those things, the only difference was that they viewed China as the only important part of the world and thus weren't as expansionistic as the West... they simply felt the rest of the world was unimportant so didn't move to exploit it. There's a lovely example of why absolute autocratic governments can be a problem... the Chinese had the finest sailing vessels in the world until an internal power struggle caused the government to shut down all of the shipmaking industry. This had absolutely nothing to due to the Evil Imperialist West, btw. Purely internal.Malachi151 said:The Chinese were essentially thr richest region of the world about 600 years ago when they came in contact with the West, however, unfortunately for they were not as aggressive, militant, or exploitive...
Last I heard Marco Polo never made it to China. Anybody with more knowledge want to comment on that? In any case, I'd suggest that the Japanese were far more devastating to China during WWII than the West has managed to be through imperialism.as the Western people who crushed their civilization adn rodbed their culture or its treasures to fuel their empires, so the past 500 years have been tought for them, going from a stable wealthy civilization to an exploited and poverty stricken one, and they are now slowly back on the rise, but I doubt they will ever see the type of civilization they had before Marco Polo visited them.