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Showing posts with label china. Show all posts
Interesting paper on one of the issues mainstream media are reluctant to pick up on, namely the correlation of socialism, wealth-redistribution, state-controlled famines and widespread cannibalism.
The first part of the paper deals with Cannibalism in the ever-present slave-labour camps on which socialist countries rely. It also tells the horrifying stories of massive scale cannibalism during the large-scale state-imposed famines of the Holodomor and "the Great Leap Forward"
The second part includes surprising reports on cannibalism during Mao´s cultural revolution, in the summer of ´68, which apparently had no relation to starvation. (quoted below).
I guess the hippies now running the mainstream media are somewhat embarrassed by the fact that while they were dancing around butt-naked, showing off their copy of "Mao´s Little Red Book", Maoist revolutionaries were literally feasting on the "class enemies", in "Human Flesh Banquets" on the other side of the globe. On the other hand, hippies are hardly ever embarrassed by anything, so it is probably more accurat to assume, that they simply find it inconvenient to explain, why the utopia of the socialist revolutionaries, when implemented, almost always ends up in thousands of mothers forced to eat their own children.

In spite of death tolls far exceeding the national-socialist holocaust, information on these international-socialist cruelties is scarce to say the least. So, any tips on additional material are most welcomed.
In the course of the eleven days between July 26 and August 6,
1968,
in Binyang County alone, 3,681 were beaten to death. During the previous two years of the Cultural revolution "only" sixty-eight suffered death. In consequence of this frenzy killing, around 100,000 people lost their lives in the southern province of Guangxi. Communist party leadership was in the forefront of this campaign of brutality through the "model demonstrations of killings."
They wanted to show to the masses how to apply maximum cruelty to the prospective victims. This became a widespread forced massacres, which culminated in "obligatory cannibalism." This process began with the accusation and denunciation of the selected "class enemies," continued with their bludgeoning and dismembering, and ended with their partial consumption. After having been bludgeoned to death, some of their organs—their hearts, livers, and occasionally their genitals were cut out, sometimes even before the victims died. Then these body parts were cooked and eaten by the assembled dignitaries in what were labeled"human flesh banquets.'"**'These "banquets" were particularly widespread in the Province of Guangxi, where even the minor children of the former ruling classes were tortured and killed. As an example, a sixty-eight-year-old peasant caught the minor son of the former landlord, slit his chest open in front of everyone, and watched the boy die in agony. When questions about
his deed by an investigating reporter, he boastfully declared: "Yes, I killed him.... The person I killed is an enemy.... Ha, ha! I make revolution, and my heart is red! Didn't Chairman Mao say: 'It's either we kill them, or they kill us?' You die and I live, this is class struggle!'"

Cannibalism                                                            

 
1967 Documentary
China: The Roots of Madness; National Security Council. Central Intelligence Agency. (09/18/1947 - 12/04/1981); ARC Identifier 616322 / Local Identifier 263-69.
This film covers China's political history including Mao Tse-tung, the Boxer Rebellion, and the Nationalist - Communist victory. Made possible by a donation from John and Paige Curran.Producer: National Archives and Records Administration; Creative Commons license: Public DomainTV documentary. An introduction to the complex state and cultural ambivalence of China. The programme covers a period of one hundred and seventy years. The visuals include lithographs and line drawings from the early 1800's, still photographs from mid-century, early footage from Burton Holmes, Pearl Buck, Reuters newsmen and current footage. Experience the American Journey through our country's visual heritage in this historical recording provided by the National Archives of the United States. This film covers China's political history, including Mao Tse-tung, the Boxer Rebellion, and the Nationalist-Communist victory. From the Central Intelligence Agency Securities and Exchange Commission.

On 1 January 1912, the Republic of China was established, heralding the end of the Qing Dynasty. Sun Yat-sen of the Kuomintang (the KMT or Nationalist Party) was proclaimed provisional president of the republic. However, the presidency was later given to Yuan Shikai, a former Qing general, who had ensured the defection of the entire Beiyang Army from the Qing Empire to the revolution. In 1915, Yuan proclaimed himself Emperor of China but was forced to abdicate and return the state to a republic when he realized it was an unpopular move, not only with the population but also with his own Beiyang Army and its commanders.

After Yuan Shikai's death in 1916, China was politically fragmented, with an internationally recognized but virtually powerless national government seated in Peking (Beijing). Warlords in various regions exercised actual control over their respective territories. In the late 1920s, the Kuomintang, under Chiang Kai-shek, was able to reunify the country under its own control, moving the nation's capital to Nanking (Nanjing) and implementing "political tutelage", an intermediate stage of political development outlined in Sun Yat-sen's program for transforming China into a modern, democratic state. Effectively, political tutelage meant one-party rule by the Kuomintang.

The Sino-Japanese War of 19371945 (part of World War II) forced an uneasy alliance between the Nationalists and the Communists as well as causing around 20 million Chinese civilian deaths.[35] With the surrender of Japan in 1945, China emerged victorious but financially drained. The continued distrust between the Nationalists and the Communists led to the resumption of the Chinese Civil War. In 1947, constitutional rule was established, but because of the ongoing Civil War many provisions of the ROC constitution were never implemented in mainland China.

Territories currently administered by two states that formally use the name China: the PRC (in purple) and the ROC (in orange).Post Civil War (1949present)
Main articles: History of the People's Republic of China and Republic of China on Taiwan. After its victory in the Chinese Civil War, the Communist Party of China (CCP) led by Mao Zedong gained control of most of Mainland China. On 1 October 1949, they established the People's Republic of China as a Socialist State headed by a "Democratic Dictatorship" with the CCP as the only legal political party, thus, laying claim as the successor state of the ROC. The central government of the Chinese Nationalist Party led by Chiang Kai-shek retreated to the island of Taiwan that it had occupied at the end of World War II, and moved the ROC government there. Major armed hostilities ceased in 1950 but no peace treaty has been signed. An estimated 36 million died during the Great Chinese Famine of 195861.

Beginning in the late 1970s, the Republic of China began the implementation of full, multi-party, representative democracy in the territories still under its control (Taiwan, and a number of smaller islands including Quemoy and Matsu). Today, the ROC has active political participation by all sectors of society. The main cleavage in ROC politics is the issue of eventual political unification with the Chinese mainland vs. formal independence of Taiwan.

After the Chinese Civil War, mainland China underwent a series of disruptive socioeconomic movements starting in the late 1950s with the Great Leap Forward and continuing in the 1960s with the Cultural Revolution that left much of its education system and economy in shambles.


This is the complete The Epoch Times' "Nine Commentaries on the Communist Party" Video Series - English Language Version from New Tang Dynasty TV. It has been available a number of times, but is often suspended by the various internet platforms, let´s see how long this stays up.
The much acclaimed book by the same title is available for purchase here
Visit the Nine Commentaries Website


This series is the definitive account of the most murderous regime ever to plague this planet
Many thanks to CrouchingTiger for this important upload.

Runs for about 8 hours - Long Live Long-form!




View this movie at cultureunplugged.com

The Dying Rooms is one of those documentaries that you stays with you long after you've seen it. It prompted a storm of media coverage on the situation in Chinese Orphanages and the Chinese government said it would affect relations between the UK and China permanently if the film were to be shown. This film demonstrates how powerful documentary can be and how it can have a lasting effect on the real world by raising awareness of a particular issue. Brian Woods and Kate Blewett have continued to make investigative, journalistic films that have an impact including Dying for Drugs in 2003 about the pharmaceutical industry. They also made a follow up to The Dying Rooms in 1996 called Return to the Dying Rooms. Be prepared for a hard watch.

Watch China's Stolen Children [Part 1] in Educational  |  View More Free Videos Online at Veoh.com

Part II and Part III

Chen Jie was a sweet, hard-working boy whose teachers praised his diligence. His slightly worried, solemn little face stares out from a much handled family photograph, which is just about all his parents have left of him. Aged five-and-a-half, Chen Jie was snatched from the street, more than likely to become one of 70,000 children annually who are stolen and sold for the best price. Child abduction is a raging epidemic in China, an unlooked-for, unconsidered result of the country's one-child policy. In this astonishing, harrowing, gripping film, the team behind 1995's awardwinning The Dying Rooms return to China (necessarily under cover) to follow Chen Jie's bereft parents as they try to find their son.
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