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Jeff J Brown: Mao Zedong died 47 years ago today. He made the world a much better, safer place for all of us.

China Rising Radio Sinoland by By Jeff J. Brown

Note:  Jeff did extensive research into Mao Zedong and Jeff’s library is impressive.

Pictured above: The Man with the Visionary Plan. In spite of almost three generations of the Big Lie Propaganda Machine’s (BLPM) poisonous fabrications, 95% of the Chinese people still follow Mao’s anti-imperial world vision and know that without him, China would be a continental-sized, raped and plundered hellhole, balkanized into ten different, Western controlled puppet states. I took this photo in Changsha, when I visited Mao’s ancestral home. It is a huge statue of young Mao, made collectively with the guidance of the Hunan Provincial Government.

Pictured above: Changchun, the capital of Jilin honoring Mao Zedong today. This is being repeated uncountable times all over the country. Same thing happens for his birthday in December.

On September 9, 1976, Mao Zedong, humanity’s most effective national leader ever, and 20th century’s most influential, died. Nineteen-seventy-six had been a tough year already for the Chinese people. Premier Zhou Enlai and Marshal Zhu De, both revered by the masses, had passed away and just weeks before Mao died, China experienced one of the worst earthquakes in recorded history, in Tangshan, between Beijing and Tianjin. In spite of this quadruple blow to the national consciousness, the Chinese nation bounced back to where it is today. Mao’s vision and teachings continue to guide and inspire his people into the future.

The vast majority of humanity outside China is so brainwashed by the West’s Big Lie Propaganda Machine (BLPM), that they cannot even begin to imagine what a towering, visionary and wildly successful national leader Mao Zedong truly was. My encomium for the man is,

Mao Zedong. Never in the history of the human race has one person done so much incredible good for so many people in such a short period of time.

I did a huge amount of research into Mao Zedong, when writing The China Trilogy (see below). In my first book, 44 Days, I was still clinging to all the anti-communist-socialist BLPM projectile vomit that has covered Planet Earth knee deep: “Mao was a blood drinking monster who lustily massacred tens of millions of his fellow citizens, while cleaning his mossy-covered vampire fangs with his saurian claws”. Thanks to the uber-efficacious BLPM, that is unfortunately the image that the vast majority of the human race has about Mao Zedong. Very sad, indeed, because he has much to teach all global citizens.

I regretted those first-book errors, set the record straight in Book #2, China Rising and with even more research, in Book #3, BIG Red Book on China, explaining who Mao really was as a person and a leader of one-fourth of the human race, from the 1930s to 1976. Mao was not a killer, he was first and foremost a teacher and a charismatic, inspiring visionary, who worked to create a more just, more democratic, more equitable society for the Chinese people – and he succeeded beyond anyone’s wildest imaginings.

Without Mao Zedong, China today would be a continental-sized, raped and plundered hellhole, balkanized into ten different, internecine, war ravaged, drug soaked, Mafia sodomized, Western controlled puppet states. Think Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Sudan, Somalia and every other of the hundreds of countries and peoples Eurangloland has debauched, destroyed, exterminated and exploited for the last 500 years. The Chinese call the 110 years when the West and then Japan did exactly that to their country, 1839-1949, as the century of humiliation.

Thanks to Mao, since then, the Chinese call their country New China and all but the most extreme Mao haters know that without him, they would not be where they are today, leading the world into the 22nd century, by the communist-socialist example of people-powered democracy and socioeconomic justice. It’s not even close. Case closed. Deng Xiaoping’s dramatically successful reforms and opening up after Mao’s death would have been impossible without the latter’s industrial-scientific-infrastructural-agricultural development and bottom-up, mass line democratic foundations for the country and his people.

Even 95% of Mao haters in China acknowledge and accept his anti-imperial, anti-colonial world vision. They don’t want to be Asia’s next Libya either and thanks to Mao, they are free, independent and not occupied by foreign armies, something none of Eurangloland’s supposed “allies” can claim. The world would be a very frightening, miserable place without New China counterbalancing the West’s soul- and planet-destroying Six E’s of Racism: Expansionism, Extermination, Expropriation, Extraction, Enslavement and Evangelism.

Because of Mao’s once-in-human-history achievements, giving the Chinese people the vision, means and moral authority to prosper, progress and stand up to Western imperialism, Eurangloland has spent billions of dollars, euros and continues to do so in Asia, Africa, Latin America and Oceania, to destroy Mao’s Dream – adopted by current President Xi Jinping as the Chinese Dream – first for country’s people and then as an alternative model of win-win cooperation and multipolar governance for all of humanity.

The West’s capitalist elites are scared to death you may start demanding Mao’s Dream, the Chinese Dream of a better world and shared vision for all peoples, starting with the oppressed global 99%. That is why they work eight days a week, 25 hours a day to keep you brainwashed and Pavlovian fearful of all the communist-socialist success stories for the last 100 years, and continue to try to destroy their superior ways of life.

As the Chinese are fond of saying,

May Mao Zedong live 10,000 years! (毛泽东万岁!= Mao Zedong wansui!)

If not in body, then in spirit. Mao’s visionary struggle for socioeconomic justice and people’s democracy continues across the globe.

—o0o—

Besides extensive writings in The China Trilogy (see below), here are companion articles/podcasts I have done about Mao Zedong:

http://chinarising.puntopress.com/2017/09/12/mao-zedong-died-this-day-in-1976-china-rising-radio-sinoland-170909/

http://chinarising.puntopress.com/2018/03/08/mao-zedong-was-the-greatest-liberator-of-women-in-human-history-china-rising-radio-sinoland-180308/

https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-best-Confucian-quote-to-describe-Mao-Zedong/answer/Jeff-J-Brown

https://www.quora.com/How-would-you-react-if-someone-says-I-hate-Mao-Zedong-in-front-of-you/answer/Jeff-J-Brown

https://chinarising.puntopress.com/2018/10/11/reflections-on-my-travels-to-proud-revolutionary-hunan-province-china-rising-radio-sinoland/

https://chinarising.puntopress.com/2018/12/28/merry-maomas-mao-zedong-was-born-125-years-ago-today-china-rising-radio-sinoland-181226/

https://chinarising.puntopress.com/2019/01/12/wildly-successful-mao-era-is-airbrushed-out-of-western-media-and-history-books-china-rising-radio-sinoland-190112/

Why and How China works: With a Mirror to Our Own History

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Liz
Liz
2 years ago

I have always been curious about Mao Zedong, but I have never been able to find anything on him that isn’t the usual “BLPM” narratives. The author describes him as “humanity’s most effective national leader ever”, which is a very interesting perspective. Where do people get the idea that he… Read more »

Snow Leopard
Snow Leopard
2 years ago
Reply to  Liz

Liz; Good questions. I recommend a book that really worked for me. Get a copy of Edgar Snow’s “Red Star over China.” It is written by an American who had direct personal experience of Mao during the revolution. The idea that Mao killed millions of people is, as you might… Read more »

Snow Leopard
Snow Leopard
2 years ago
Reply to  Snow Leopard

Liz; Red Star over China is available on Amazon and has great reviews. I also recommend anything by Michael Parenti.

Grieved
2 years ago
Reply to  Liz

Liz, here are two very readable articles from western-speaking authors that should be both readable and a joy to read. Godfree Roberts, who appears currently in recent Global South pages, has this reconsideration of Mao: Mao Reconsidered: One Hundred Percent Good (Part 1) “A benign colossus has walked amongst us…” The… Read more »

Grieved
2 years ago

I would like to offer profound thanks to Jeff Brown, and those few other writers qualified to explain China, for helping me to understand the singular greatness of Mao. China does indeed march today on his shoulders. The achievement of the much-misunderstood Cultural Revolution is something perhaps never enacted in… Read more »

Snow Leopard
Snow Leopard
2 years ago
Reply to  Grieved

Grieved: It is a pleasure to align with you again. I am always glad when you bring forward the enormously positive and liberating effects of the “cultural Revolution.” It is so hard to get true information about the economic democratizing impact of Mao’s cultural revolution. It was a true revolutionary… Read more »

AHH
AHH
2 years ago
Reply to  Grieved

Well said. 🙏🏼 Me too, thanks Jeff “Transferring education and political power deliberately to the bottom tier of society is the unheard-of act that gave China its priceless human capital..”  This, in addition to fostering meritocracy in leadership at all levels, and generously sharing knowledge, tech and skills worldwide gives hope… Read more »

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Snow Leopard
Snow Leopard
2 years ago

I am delighted to note that Jeff Brown’s excellent piece makes reference to the current Chinese Leadership as carrying forward the wisdom of Mao ZeDong’s thought. Westerners would have to go as far back as Ancient Egypt and its concept of “Maat” to be able to fully understand the rich… Read more »

amarynth
Admin
2 years ago
Reply to  Snow Leopard

So well stated Snow Leopard! So very very well!