Chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
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So much of the manufactured cultural dichotomy is nothing more than a test to identify potential enemies of the state. Who will believe and advocate for contradictory ideologies that change on a whim? Who will ask questions objectively? Who will react in the opposite extreme? In Russia it was Operation Trust, in China the program was 100 Flowers, and in the United States it's called Trust the Plan. Issues like the recent WHO guidance on sexualizing children is certainly real, but also intended to draw out resistance in order to socially combat it - and perhaps physically at some point; it's a beta-test. Lists are being made. Algorithms are being set. Behavior is being programmed. And violent resistance is being grown as a justification for more violence - the Sith blaming the Jedi. This is all part of stress testing of the red revolution.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5328407/advertisement
Miljontals människor dog när Mao Zedongs Kina skulle ta "det stora språnget". Men trots politiska experiment, massvält och utrensningar, verkar den store ledarens gloria aldrig riktigt falla. Mellan 40 och 70 miljoner människor uppskattas ha dött under Mao Zedongs styre, vilket gör honom till en av förra seklets värsta diktatorer. Ändå fortsätter Mao att dyrkas av många i Kina. Som utropare av Folkrepubliken Kina 1949 har han fått rollen som befriare i historieskrivningen. Hans ansikte återfinns än i dag på landets sedlar och ett Mao-porträtt hängande från backspegeln anses, av vissa, medföra tur och beskydd.I det här specialavsnittet om Mao Zedong hör vi journalisten och författaren Göran Leijonhufvud berätta om hur han reste till Kina på 1960-talet och tvingades ompröva sina idéer om ett harmoniskt styre i Kina. Han återvände senare till Kina som Dagens Nyheters korrespondent.Sinologen Göran Sommardal har studerat Maos ideologiska tankegods. Hör honom berätta om Maos lilla röda den skrift som så starkt förknippas med kulturrevolutionen och som brukar sägas vara världens mest sålda bok.Hör också Sveriges Radios Hanna Sahlberg om hur 2000-talets och dagens Kina förhåller sig till Mao. Fortfarande är det Maos porträtt som hänger ovanför Himmelska fridens port i Peking. Kommer Mao för evigt att behålla denna upphöjda position?Programledare: Axel Kronholm Producent: Therese Rosenvinge Tekniker: Adam Alvin
Xi Van Fleet fled communist China, Mao's Cultural revolution and tells America what we need to do to stop the revolution that is here in America!#communism #America #criticalracetheory Follow Xi Van Fleet:Twitter: https://twitter.com/XVanFleetQuisha King's Links: SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeWs...FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/IamQuishaKing OFFICIAL WEBSITE https://www.quishaking.com/ Massexodus Resources www.massexodusmovement.com BOOKING: quisha@kingconsultingco.com Massexodus Shirts here: Show Some Support - https://actionup-america.creator-spri... - Social Media YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeWs... INSTAGRAM https://www.instagram.com/iamquishak/ TWITTER https://twitter.com/ImQuishaK
Frankie's guests are the producer and director of Elvis's '60 Comeback Special Steve Binder, novelist and author of Forbidden City Vanessa Hua, and senior vice president of global commercial operations for the Verizon Business Group: Wendy TaccettaSteve Binder (pronounced like Fender)BOOK: Elvis '68 ComebackThe Story Behind the Specialhttps://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Elvis-68-Comeback/Steve-Binder/9781645176732Steve Binder is an Emmy and ACE award-winning producer, director, writer, educator, and Golden Globe nominee. Steve has written, produced, and directed dozens of television specials, including multiple Diana Ross specials and Petula with British singer Petula Clark and Harry Belafonte. In 1968, Steve conceived, directed, and produced ELVIS, The ‘68 Comeback Special. TV Guide called this landmark event “the second greatest musical moment in television history next to the Beatles' debut on the Ed Sullivan Show.” https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0004596/Vanessa HuaBOOK: Forbidden Cityhttps://bookshop.org/books/forbidden-city-9780399178818/9780399178818Vanessa Hua is an award-winning, best-selling author and columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle. For over two decades, she has been researching and writing about Asia and the diaspora. Her books, which integrate many of the themes she covers, are critically acclaimed. Vanessa Hua's forthcoming book, Forbidden City, has already been hailed “magnificent” by Publisher's Weekly, and is getting rave reviews. http://www.vanessahua.com/Wendy Taccettaverizon.com/smallbusinessWendy is Senior Vice President for Nationwide Small Business and Channel Chief for Verizon Business. As such, she is responsible for driving results in several strategic areas of the business. Wendy's focus is on developing a customer-centric Partner Program at Verizon. Channel Partners has called their strategic focus "a historic revamping" of Verizon's channel program. Their ambition is to make it easier than ever before to partner with Verizon. https://www.verizon.com/about/our-company/who-we-are
90 Day Fiance: The Single Life, Tell-All pt.1 "Sometimes democracy must be bathed in blood... and topped with a beret!" Conveniently located at 1831 Tears Tr., right in between KristallCuts and Zedong's Bongs
Parte 1 di 2 che traccia la storia contemporanea della Cina Comunista, dalla guerra civile al regime di Mao. Nell'episodio successivo approfondiremo la figura di Xi Jinping (quella di Deng Xiaoping è già stata trattata nell'episodio dedicato al seguente link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5vIhOA60TM&t=43s)Fonti: Un ringraziamento speciale all'aiuto di Paolo Arigotti, laureato in Storia Contemporanea, per l'ottimizzazione delle fonti, lo script e il fact checking. Per altre info su Paolo: Facebook.com/paoloarigottiIstagram paolo_arigotti_writerYoutube https://bit.ly/3adusljFONTIhttp://www.cscc.it/ (Centro studi Cina Contemporanea, TO)https://www.ispionline.it/ (Istituto studi di Politica Internazionale, MI)Tiziano Terzani, La porta proibita, Longanesi, 1998Pro e contro Mao Tse Tung, Dossier Mondadori, 1971Gennaro Sangiuliano, Il nuovo Mao, Mondadori, 2019Scipione Guarracino, Storia degli ultimi sessant'anni, Bruno Mondari, 2004 Alberto M. Banti, L'età contemporanea, Laterza, 2018Fernando Mezzetti, Da Mao a Macdonald's, Tea, 2006---Un grazie a Sebastiano Benatti in arte Jouzu Music, per la realizzazione della colonna sonora della sigla: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jouzumusic/ email: jouzumusic@gmail.comUn grazie a Luca Orlando, in arte Shudew, per la realizzazione dello speakeraggio della sigla: Spotify: bit.ly/SpotyShudewInstagram: bit.ly/InstaShudew
As the Chinese Communist Party marks its 100th anniversary, its leaders are using history to explain where the nation has been and where it intends to go. President Xi Jinping, eager to consolidate his authoritarian power, is paying his respects to Mao, conveniently ignoring the decades of violent chaos Mao instigated during his terrible reign. But Chinese youth are also looking to Chairman Mao for guidance -- for different reasons. They feel alienated in a society that is leaving them behind, where economic inequality is rampant and political freedoms scarce. Mercatus Center analyst Weifeng Zhong, an expert on Chinese domestic policy, joins the podcast to discuss China's contradictions and complexities.
This week Mal guests on and we discuss the importance of mangos during the Chinese cultural revolution. We catch up on a lot of emails too and hey its the four year anniversary. Here's to another great year on its way. Thanks for listening and remember to like, rate, review, and email us at: cultscrytpidsconspiracies@gmail.com or tweet us at @C3Podcast. Also check out our Patreon: www.patreon.com/cultscryptidsconspiracies. Thank you to T.J. Shirley for our theme.
Taiping-oprøret, der varede fra 1851-64,var en skelsættende begivenhed i moderne kinesisk historie. På mange måder var det startskuddet til det, vi i dag kender som Folkerepublikken Kina. Oprøret havde sin rod i, at bønderne var trætte af at blive undertrykt af den magtfulde landadel, som i århundreder med tilladelse fra Qing-dynastiet i Beijing havde trællebundet mange kinesere. Oprøret blev anført af den excentriske og karismatiske mystiker, Hong Xiuquan, der sammen med bønderne fik opbygget en slagkraftig styrke, som det kejserlige Qing-dynasti måtte tage meget alvorligt.
Borg were some of the most feared enemies of the Star Trek crew. They had no individual souls, instead they were part of a collective soul belonging to a mother much like a beehive. The Borg collected people from all over the universe and implanted the slaves with mechanical parts to augment and control them. The Borg are a symbol of the idea of collectivism. This is the idea that the individual gives up power or control to the needs or wants of the greater group, the collective. This presentation is meant to ask you as the listener some questions: Do we live in a collectivist society? What are the dangers of collectivism? Do you want to live in a collectivist society? How to live in an individualistic society? History.com "8 Things You Should Know about WW2 Eastern Front" Learn about the Fabian society at MHP Learn about "None Dare Call it Conspiracy" at News Of Interest.TV New World Order visual at WorldTruth.TV The Corbett Report- Event 201 Tragedy and Hope 101- Joseph Plummer Find More of Chris Jantzen's work and other Truth and Freedom activists Here: One Great Work NetworkDownload.
In this filler episode of Verbal Laxative I begin a miniseries called Discount History, which is just me babbling about history casually with 0 fact checks. In honor of Chinese National Day upcoming on October 1, the first episode of this series is Mao Zedong vs Chiang Kai Shek, where I answer the initial question of what would it be like if Chiang won the civil war (he can't lol), which then turns into a 3 hour 28 minute episode telling of history on one question. Enjoy Intro Song: 义勇军进行曲 Outro Song: 钢铁洪流进行曲 by 李旭昊
Todos somos capaces del nivel de maldad que tuvo Hitler, Stalin o Robespierre. En cada uno de nosotros está la capacidad de ser un héroe o un monstruo. Pero ¿Cómo sabemos que elegir?
On October 1, the Chinese Communist Party marks 70 years in power. Much has changed since the founding of the People's Republic of China, but the legacy of its founder, the revolutionary Mao Zedong, still looms large today over Xi Jinping’s leadership and Beijing’s foreign policy. Julia Lovell, author of Maoism: A Global History, joins Deep Dish to discuss.
This week, due to popular demand, Christopher reads another of his papers from 2017. A paper entitled: Was the Cultural Revolution Mao's personal power struggle? All about Moa's power struggle to retain his reign over the People's Republic of China. Please note that this was written as an academic exercise, and is entirely based on fact, there is no opinion included in this podcast or paper. Bibliography Baum, Richard. Burying Mao: Chinese politics in the age of Deng Xiaoping. Princeton University Press, 1996. Bridgham, Philip. "Mao's Cultural Revolution in 1967: the struggle to seize power." Intelligence Report, CIA, 24 may 1968 Chan, Anita. Children of Mao: Personality development and political activism in the Red Guard generation. Springer, 1985. Chan, Anita, Stanley Rosen, and Jonathan Unger, Students and class warfare: the social roots of the Red Guard conflict in Guangzhou (Canton), China Quarterly (1980): 397-446. Clark, Paul, Youth culture in China: From red guards to netizens, Cambridge University Press, 2012. Cohen, Paul A. "Remembering and forgetting national humiliation in twentieth-century China." Twentieth-Century China 27.2, 2002,1-39. Deng, Zhong, and Donald J. Treiman. "The impact of the cultural revolution on trends in educational attainment in the people's republic of china 1." American journal of sociology 103.2 (1997): 391-428. Domes, Jürgen, and Marie-Luise Näth. China After the Cultural Revolution: Politics Between Two Party Congresses. Univ of California Press, 1977. Gao, Mobo CF. Gao village: a portrait of rural life in modern China. University of Hawaii Press, 1999. Gao, Mobo. The battle for China's past: Mao and the Cultural Revolution. Pluto press, 2008. Jian, Guo, Yongyi Song, and Yuan Zhou. Historical Dictionary of the Chinese Cultural Revolution. Rowman & Littlefield, 2015. Jiang, Ji-li. Red scarf girl. HarperCollins World, 1999. Kleinman, Arthur, and Joan Kleinman. "How bodies remember: Social memory and bodily experience of criticism, resistance, and delegitimation following China's cultural revolution." New Literary History 25.3 (1994): 707-723. Lifton, Robert Jay. Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of" brainwashing" in China. UNC Press Books, 1989. Lu, Xing. Rhetoric of the Chinese cultural revolution: The impact on Chinese thought, culture, and communication. Univ of South Carolina Press, 2004. MacFarquhar, Roderick, and Michael Schoenhals. Mao's last revolution. Harvard University Press, 2009. Mao, Tsetung, Quotations from Chairman Mao Tsetung, Foreign Languages Press, Peking, 1976 Mao, Zedong, Six Essays on Military Affairs, Foreign Languages Press, Peking, 1972 Ning, Zhang. "The political origins of death penalty exceptionalism Mao Zedong and the practice of capital punishment in contemporary China." Punishment & Society 10.2 (2008): 117-136. Schoenhals, Michael, and Roderick MacFarquhar. "Mao's Last Revolution." (2006). Schram, Stuart Reynolds, Mao Zedong, Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1998 Spence, Jonathan. The Search for Modern China. 2nd ed. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1999. p575 Walder, Andrew G., and Yang Su. "The cultural revolution in the countryside: Scope, timing and human impact." The China Quarterly 173 (2003): 74-99. White III, Lynn T. Policies of chaos: the organizational causes of violence in China's Cultural Revolution. Princeton University Press, 2014. Zhou, Xueguang, and Liren Hou. "Children of the Cultural Revolution: The state and the life course in the People's Republic of China." American Sociological Review (1999): 12-36.
Historian Frank Dikotter of the University of Hong Kong and author of Mao's Great Famine talks about the book with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Dikotter chronicles the strategies Mao and Chinese leadership implemented to increase grain and steel production in the late 1950s leading to a collapse in agricultural output and the deaths of millions by starvation.
Sarina interviews Medical QiGong educator and White Tiger QiGong School master instructor, Tevia Feng, about the history of Medical QiGong. Don’t miss this fascinating friend of Master Mantak Chia’s. Tevia discussed Mao Zedong, Tao Yin, Falun Gong, Baduanjin, Demystifying QiGong in relation to Medical QiGong. Download Transcript Here For more information on the White Tiger QiGong School, please visit: https://www.whitetigerqigong.com/ For more information on Master Mantak Chia, please visit: https://MantakChia.com For advanced learning materials, books, videos, and more, please visit: https://SarinaStone.com For more information on The Healing Tao, please visit: https://www.universal-tao.com/
In 1994, a movie came along about a man of low intelligence who happens to hit a few lucky breaks, weaving himself in and out of the timeline of American history, and into the hearts of millions of movie-goers. That man is Forrest. Forrest Gump. For the month of February, I'll be focusing episode topics on historical and pop culture references in the movie. Ones you may have missed when watching the film because of the overwhelming emotion attached to every scene, or ones you may only be familiar with on the surface. In this episode, we'll be talking about the popular victorian parlor sport and how it led to the first Americans visiting China in 20 years, breaking what was known as the bamboo curtain. I'm your host, Emily Prokop, and this is The Story Behind Ping-Pong. The role of Premier Zhou En-lai was played by Fear from Fearcast and FYFCast. Follow The Story Behind: Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | Website Check out #PodernFamily on Twitter to find other great indie podcasts like this one. If you enjoy podcasts about history, literature, archeology, and the arts, check out the hashtag #HumanitiesPodcasts on Twitter to find more podcasts like this one. Click here to support this podcast on Patreon. Media: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvJ4wh1kwR8 Music for Makers Sources: https://www.killerspin.com/blog/table-tennis-through-time-a-brief-history-of-ping-pong/ https://www.killerspin.com/the-history-of-table-tennis http://www.athleticscholarships.net/history-of-table-tennis.htm https://www.olympic.org/table-tennis-equipment-and-history http://www.pongworld.com/more/history.shtml http://www.businessinsider.com/dartmouth-beer-pong-guide-2013-11 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/02/26/drinking-games-beer-pong_n_4855917.html http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/china/peopleevents/pande07.html http://www.history.com/news/ping-pong-diplomacy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUOiJOqrHlI http://www.avclub.com/article/tom-hanks-had-some-cgi-help-his-forrest-gump-ping--235793 http://articles.latimes.com/1994-07-10/entertainment/ca-14048_1_gary-sinise https://storify.com/kendrakahn/how-cgi-technology-allowed-forrest-gump-meet-john
May 18, 2016 at the Boston Athenæum. Paper is one of the simplest and most essential forms of human technology. For the past two millennia, the ability to produce it in ever more efficient ways has supported the proliferation of literacy, media, religion, education, commerce, and art. It has created civilizations, fostered revolutions, and stabilized regimes. Consider, for example, history’s greatest press run, which produced 6.5 billion copies of Máo zhuxí yulu Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung (Zedong), or the fact that Leonardo da Vinci left behind only 15 paintings but 4,000 works on paper. Now, on the cusp of “going paperless” – and amid rampant speculation about the effects of a digitally dependent society – we’ve come to a world-historic juncture and must examine what paper means to civilization. By tracing paper’s evolution, Mark Kurlansky challenges common assumptions about technology’s influence, affirming that paper is here to stay.
In this episode we remember Gough Whitlam’s visits to China – the People’s Republic of China - in 1971 and 1973. The 1971 visit, when Whitlam was Opposition Leader, paved the way for the diplomatic recognition of China and sowed the seeds for a thriving cultural and economic relationship. In 1973 Whitlam became the first Australian Prime Minister to travel to China. Visit the Whitlam Institute website – where much of the material for this episode was sourced: http://www.whitlam.org/ Also check out the It’s Time TV commercial from the 1972 election campaign. Whitlam shakes hands with Premier Zhou at around the 1 minute 15 second mark: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqMCZBjvmD4 Music courtesy of Dan-O at: http://www.danosongs.com/ Thanks to Ken Dampier for post-production.
In 1945 France returned to its former colony in Indochina, determined to re-assert control after humiliation by Japan. The nationalist Vietminh were determined to fight for their independence and nine years later inflicted a catastrophic defeat on France at the long battle of Dien Bien Phu. How was France brought to her knees in Indochina and what were the consequences for France? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Stung by the enormous failure of the Great Leap Forward, Chairman Mao Zedong, discredited leader of Communist China, institutes a plan to regain his former popularity and erradicate his critics. The revolution's outward aim was to reinvigorate Marxist-Leninist ideology in the Chinese people. It's less publicized goal was to restore Mao's Cult of Personality--his unquestioned authority over the government and his adoration by the people. It resulted in the persecution of millions and the deaths of hundreds of thousands.
By 1971, Zhuang Zedong had already won three world men’s singles table tennis championships. He was a leading sports figure and was with the Chinese national team in Japan when he reached out to members of the American team. This gesture helped lead to the April 1971 visit to China by the American table tennis team. “Ping Pong Diplomacy” partially paved the way for U.S. President Richard M. Nixon’s 1972 visit to China. Zhuang Zedong’s Chinese national team visited the U.S. in April 1972. Mr. Zhuang became a member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party during the last years of the Cultural Revolution. After his patron, Jiang Qing was toppled in October 1976 along with the other members of the Gang of Four, Mr. Zhuang was jailed. He was subsequently cleared and took on coaching duties. During his visit to USC, Mr. Zhuang will discuss his experiences as an athlete-diplomat and offer a table tennis demonstration.
By 1971, Zhuang Zedong had already won three world men’s singles table tennis championships. He was a leading sports figure and was with the Chinese national team in Japan when he reached out to members of the American team. This gesture helped lead to the April 1971 visit to China by the American table tennis team. “Ping Pong Diplomacy” partially paved the way for U.S. President Richard M. Nixon’s 1972 visit to China. Zhuang Zedong’s Chinese national team visited the U.S. in April 1972. Mr. Zhuang became a member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party during the last years of the Cultural Revolution. After his patron, Jiang Qing was toppled in October 1976 along with the other members of the Gang of Four, Mr. Zhuang was jailed. He was subsequently cleared and took on coaching duties. During his visit to USC, Mr. Zhuang will discuss his experiences as an athlete-diplomat and offer a table tennis demonstration.