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| Communist China at 60 | | Print | |
| Written by Warren Mass | ||||||||||||||
| Thursday, 01 October 2009 00:00 | ||||||||||||||
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The culmination of the day’s events will be an evening gala performance on Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. In preparation for the day’s events, the government has imposed stringent security restrictions, which include a ban on the rental of hotel rooms along the parade route, a ban on the opening of windows or occupying balconies adjacent to the route, and a ban on the flying of kites or allowing the flight of domesticated pigeons near the square — apparently out of fear that miniature explosive devices might be attached to them. Immediately following a massive military parade, there will be a civilians' parade comprising 36 formations and six performing groups involving about 100,000 citizens and 60 floats. It is complemented by 80,000 primary and middle school students in the Tian'anmen Square forming background patterns.... The civilians' parade will have three themes: ideology, achievements and future prospects, Wang said. One wonders if any placard will sport one of Chairman Mao’s most famous quotes: “Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.” Beijing is still unwilling to permit any open examination of the darker chapters in the story of the past 60 years. The ideological mistakes that led to famine and murderous purges will not be open for discussion; Beijing's failure to end half a century of rebellion and repression in Tibet and other regions such as Xinjiang, home to the Uighurs, will not be assessed. And 60 years after the defeat of the Kuomintang, the differences with Taiwan, now a democracy, remain considerable. When President Hu Jintao delivers his keynote speech in Tiananmen Square, he will certainly ignore the massacre of democracy activists at this site 20 years ago. Another editorial willing to discuss some of the unpleasant truths about the communist Chinese regime was found in the Wall Street Journal for September 30, “Communist China at 60,” subheaded: “Today's celebrations ignore history and the Party's uncertain future.” This isn't the people's democracy that Mao Zedong sold to a war-torn country in 1949, although it's largely in keeping with the way he governed. Mao's reign of murder, persecution, paranoia and famine left between 30 and 60 million people dead. When countries the world over congratulate the Chinese government on its anniversary — the Empire State building in New York is even lighting up with the red and yellow hues of the Chinese flag — they are paying a kind of tribute to Mao's ascendance and the dictatorship he bequeathed to 1.3 billion Chinese citizens. The editorial concluded by stating: Mao would not recognize today's modern Chinese economy, but he would recognize the Party that runs it. Until China's leaders can trust their own people to attend a parade — and pass judgment from the ballot box — the so-called people's revolution will remain unrealized. While such commentaries recognize the undeniable facts associated with 60 years of communist rule in China — such as the killing of between 34 and 64 million people according to a 1971 Senate subcommittee report — they fail to address the basic nature of communism, which is not so much an economic system or a political philosophy as it is a criminal conspiracy. Ironically, the revolution that brought the communists to power in China 60 years ago could rightfully be labeled “Made in U.S.A.” Photo: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (8)
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..., Lowly rated comment [Show]
Zee
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@Jki ????? The article was Anti-Communist, not Anti-Chinese. Any perceived racism was from your own mind. |
Thomas Paine
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JKi you loser If you don't get it that this country values personal liberty not dictatorial communism, then go back to the Red country you came from, and live out your life as a slave like the rest of them. |
Always American
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...preservation of our liberty Educate and inform the whole mass of the people... They are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty. Thomas Jefferson |
Jim
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... It's nothing more than a celebration of man's failure. Even the Empire State Building was bathed in colors of the Chinese flag last evening to recognize 60 years of the most repressive, brutal regime ever known on Earth. The Red Chinese exterminated more people than Hitler ever dreamed of. The Communist Chinese killed thousands of US troops in World War II, and supplied manpower and munitions to our Marxist enemies in the undeclared, no-win Korean Conflict and Vietnam War. How quickly we forget. The Devil certainly has a stupid audience. |
Ivanhoe
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... If only....we citizens of the United States had as much determination to show the world how advanced and committed to our founding Constitutional principals and Christian beliefs. It seems that America and the western nations are waining and the communist powers are waxing strong preparing to snuff us out. It is time to wake up and repel these totalitarian hoards from our God given inheritance. |
Linda
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Read up on true Comunism Please read up on the meaning of true comunism before continuing to call China a Comunist state. China is about as capitalist as you can get. |
Florida Warren
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Wrong brand of capitalism Quote: "Read up on true Communism Please read up on the meaning of true communism before continuing to call China a Communist state. China is about as capitalist as you can get. " Communism and capitalism are not opposites. Communists are MONOPOLIST capitalists because capital is monopolized by the state. The opposite is COMPETITIVE capitalism, or a free market. Nevertheless, your argument only addresses economics, not political reality. Communist governments are totalitarian slave states controlled by a criminal conspiracy of gangsters — mafiosi on steroids. |





On October 1, the Beijing government celebrates the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China, declared formally through a proclamation by the communist revolutionary Mao Zedong on October 1, 1949. As is traditional on such milestone occasions, the Chinese government will stage a mammoth military parade that will showcase China's newest nuclear missiles, displayed among more than 50 types of weapons.

