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hinduism_in_nepal

"Vrndavan Parker" <vrnparker >

Mon, 22 Jan 2007 06:43:20 -0000

[hinduism_in_nepal] Re: THE TRUTH ABOUT MAOISM

 

BRILLIANT! I WILL SHARE IT WIDELY!

 

hinduism_in_nepal, "krantimarg"

wrote:

>

> Brothers,

>

> The alliances against us which we are supposed to be avoiding are

> already there. We cannot avoid what is accomplished fact. So let's

> get back to reality.

>

> There are two things that we must understand: (1) that according to

> the Shastras, the Himsa that is done in accordance with Dharma must

> be regarded as Ahimsa. Righteous War (Dharma Yuddha) against

Adharma

> is enshrined in our Hindu Shastras and does not qualify as Himsa;

> and (2) that it is imperative to understand the nature of the

Maoist

> enemy.

>

> The Maoists are saying that the Capitalists are a confused lot. But

> the truth of the matter is that the Maoists themselves are an even

> more confused lot than the Capitalists. In fact, they don't even

> know what they are talking about.

>

> Mao said: "If you have not investigated a certain problem, you will

> lose your right to speak on it." If this is the case, let us

> investigate this myth called Communism.

>

> Communism says it wants to create a society where all people are

> equal. All right, so let's take a look at Russia and China. Are all

> Russians and Chinese equal? No. Some are billionaires and others

> have nothing to eat, just as in Capitalism.

>

> Communism says it wants to create a society without money, where

> people get what they need and nobody lacks anything. Is there such

a

> society in Russia and China? No. Money in Russia and China is as

> important as in the Capitalist world.

>

> Communism says that land is taken away from rich landowners and

> given to the landless peasants. Mao himself promised this to the

> masses. This is why the peasants supported his revolution in the

> first place. But this is a typical Communist lie. The truth is that

> Communism aims at abolishing all private property. Mao did indeed

> imprison and execute millions of landowners and gave the land to

the

> poor. This made him popular with the masses. But as soon as he came

> to power, he started implementing the true Communist policies.

>

> First, he got groups of five or six families to join their farms

> into a co-operative where land was worked collectively and the

> income was shared. Second, he got a whole village to join a larger

> co-operative. Third, he got several villages to join an even larger

> co-operative. From there to State-owned land it was not far.

>

> Before the peasants even understood what was happening, their land

> was regarded as belonging not to each family as promised by Mao but

> as property of the co-operative! The State-controlled co-operative,

> of course, would keep most of the income for itself and invest it

in

> properties for the leadership and in industrialisation projects

> outside the countryside. Instead of the peasants' hard-earned money

> being put back into the villages, it invariably ended up elsewhere,

> just as in pre-revolutionary times.

>

> So, once again, farmers were reduced to poverty, this time not by

> Feudalists, not by Capitalists but by Maoists themselves. Their

> children were forced to go and work for peanut-wages in factories

in

> the town. By 1962, 30 million people died of starvation! It was

only

> in 1979 that the Maoist leadership began to dismantle co-operatives

> and give some of the land back to the peasants.

>

> Communism says that the more a society advances on the path of

> Communism, the less power the State holds, the aim being to abolish

> the State completely. Is there such a society in Russia or China or

> any other Communist country? No. On the contrary, the more

Communist

> a country becomes, the more powerful the State becomes. In the end,

> the State holds all the power and the people hold no power at all.

> The State in Communist countries holds even more power than in

> Capitalist ones. So it is all fantasy. It is all lies.

>

> The fact is that Russia and China are giving up Communism, indeed,

> they have given it up already because Communism, in practice, does

> not work out and never will. Communism is not a progression from

> Capitalism. It is just a scam. It is a delusional experiment by mad

> intellectuals at the cost of the people.

>

> All the countries that have tried out Communism are now reverting

> back to Capitalism. Why? Because Capitalism may be cruel, unfair

and

> unjust, but at least it works better than Communism. Capitalism is

a

> failure in the sense that it has failed to provide justice and

> equality for all people. But Communism is an even bigger failure.

>

> The truth is that ordinary Maoists are very confused people. They

> think that their lives are better under Communism. But they have

> never lived in a Communist country, so how can they know? They

don't

> understand that their leaders promise them all kinds of things now.

> But when the leaders come to power, then everything will change.

The

> people will demand what was promised to them and the leaders will

> not be able to deliver. Then the deportations and the mass murders

> and the genocides will begin. The Maoist leaders will become the

new

> oppressors because they will not let go of power. So they will

> ruthlessly put the people down.

>

> Like in Russia and China, the Communist leaders will take all the

> power and the people will have no power at all. They will have no

> money, they will have no land, they will have no work, they will

> have no food. Like in Russia and China, people will have to stand

in

> line all day waiting to buy bread or rice if they are lucky.

>

> People will be completely powerless. They will have no guns to

> defend themselves against the oppressive leaders. Their guns will

be

> taken away from them as soon as the leaders have come to power. The

> leaders do not want any competition or challenge to their

authority.

> So they will demand complete submission to their rule.

>

> This is very important to understand. When a Maoist has a gun, he

> feels that he is somebody. He feels that he has power over other

> people. This is a new experience for him. He gets high on power. He

> goes around shooting landlords and officials and raping their

wives,

> daughters and sisters. This makes him feel important. He thinks

> Maoism is the real thing, the real life for a man.

>

> The Maoist thinks that when the revolution is over, he will keep

his

> Kalashnikov or his Enfield and retire on his State-provided farm.

> That is what every Maoist dreams of. But he is only deluding

> himself. In reality he is only a "useful idiot" (as the Communist

> saying goes) in the power games of the Maoist leadership.

>

> When the revolution is over and the "Feudalists" and "Capitalists"

> have been liquidated, and his gun has been taken away from him,

then

> the Maoist revolutionary is powerless. He is like a dog people

throw

> stones and sticks at and there is absolutely nothing he can do

about

> it. This is the true story of the Maoist. He is born like a dog, he

> will have power for a few days or a few years and then he will live

> and die like a dog again. When Mao's wife was arrested and put on

> trial by the Communist Party, she said: "I was Mao's dog. I bit

> whoever he asked me to bite". This is the truth.

>

> Mao was a great revolutionary. He was a great fighter. He was a

> great guerrilla leader. We must respect him for that. We can learn

a

> lot from him in this regard. But at the same time we must clearly

> understand that he was a lousy economist. He didn't know what an

> economy needs in order to work. He didn't understand what a country

> needs to prosper.

>

> In fact, apart from history, politics and revolutionary warfare,

Mao

> didn't know much at all. And after the Revolution, he knew even

> less. In the end, he was completely cut off from the people and

from

> the country. He was living in a big house with plenty of food and

> everything he wanted. He married three or four times. Young village

> girls were brought to him every day to keep him young. He lived

like

> a God on Earth. He had no idea what life was like for the people.

> When he visited a village, the streets were repaired, the houses

> were redecorated, people had new clothes and there was food

> everywhere. After his visit, poverty and misery came back to the

> same village.

>

> Chin Peng, a Communist guerrilla leader in the 1940s, fought for

> over twenty years to establish Communism in Malaya. He first fought

> against the Japanese. When the Japanese were defeated, he fought

> against the British. When the British were defeated, he didn't know

> what to do. He said: "I have great experience of struggle, but not

> how to build Socialism". He went back to the jungle.

>

> The same applies to Mao, to Lenin, to Castro and to all Communist

> revolutionaries. They are great fighters and great military

leaders.

> But when the fighting is over, they all fail. Why? Because

> Communism was invented by Karl Marx, a German/Dutch Jew, who was a

> philosopher and a fantasist. He never had any experience of

> Communism. He made it all up in his own mind.

>

> Yes, there was poverty. Yes, there was suffering. Yes, there was

> exploitation. Yes, there was injustice in European Capitalism as

> there was in Russian and Chinese "Feudalism". And yes, something

had

> to be done about it. But the answer was not Communism. The answer

> could not have been Communism simply because nobody knew what

> Communism was. Karl Marx saw the German and French Revolutions of

> 1848 and 1871 and he thought that a Communist Revolution would

solve

> all the problems. But he only thought so.

>

> Marx had no time to see Communism being put into practice. The

> German and French Revolutions failed and he died in 1883, in

London,

> the centre of the Capitalist and Imperialist world. What practical

> experience of his own theories could he have had?

>

> The first Communist Revolution where Communists actually took and

> held power was in Russia, long after the death of Marx. When Lenin

> himself staged his Russian Revolution in 1917, he had no idea what

> he was doing. He was merely hoping that Marx's Communist theories

> would work. The same happened to Mao who copied Lenin. Mao was an

> intellectual kept by his hard-working peasant father. He had no

> practical experience of Communism. The only experience he had was

of

> guerrilla warfare.

>

> What most people don't realise is that Mao's authority did not come

> from his successful establishment of Communism in China but from

his

> guerrilla war against Japan. In this respect, he was just like Chin

> Peng. Like Chin Peng, Lenin, and other Communist leaders, once the

> war was over, the great Chairman Mao had no idea what to do.

>

> The Chinese, of course, were not stupid. They soon realised that

> Communism wasn't working as expected and tried to introduce

> Capitalist measures to repair the damage Communism had done to the

> economy. But with Mao and his wife in charge, this was not

possible.

> And because Mao was a powerful symbol of the Revolution and people

> worshipped him like a God, no one dared touch him. As a result, the

> people suffered for decades. The suffering of the Chinese, Tibetan

> and other people affected by Maoism is beyond description.

>

> When Mao finally died in 1976, he left China one of the poorest and

> most backward countries on Earth, with a big Communist Party, a big

> Communist Army, but no food to feed its people. Tens of millions of

> people had died of starvation and Maoist China was importing food

> from its Capitalist enemies. Mao's powerful wife was arrested and

> tried for treason just a few weeks later. In the end she committed

> suicide.

>

> In 1979, three years after his death, China began to abolish the

> Communist co-operative system. Peasants got some of their land

back.

> In 1981, the Chinese Communist Party publicly criticised Mao for

his

> policies. This was the end of Maoism in China. Ever since then, the

> leadership has slowly introduced more and more Capitalist methods

> back into the Chinese system and the semi-Capitalist Chinese

economy

> is now enjoying unprecedented strength.

>

> In "On Guerrilla Warfare", Lenin said: "It is unconditionally

> requisite that history be investigated in order to discover the

> conditions of environment, the state of the economic progress, the

> political ideas that obtained, the national characteristics,

customs

> and degree of civilisation." If this is so, why can not the Maoists

> of today study the historical failure of Maoism in China before

they

> even start their revolution elsewhere?

>

> Unlike the Maoists, we have followed Lenin's advice and studied

> history thoroughly. We have studied the teachings of Communism and

> we have studied the results of these teachings on the ground. As a

> result, we can now look at the Maoists of Nepal, India, South

> America and other places and clearly understand what a confused lot

> they are. They deliberately ignore history and desperately cling on

> to the dreams of Karl Marx, Lenin, Mao and a string of other

deluded

> political fantasists. A dream that cannot and never will find

> fulfilment on this Earth.

>

> Mao said that people should not read too many books. But he himself

> read – and wrote – many books. Did he not want people to read his

> books? Was he afraid that people would find out the truth? At any

> rate, the books he read and believed in were books written by

> fantasists who themselves believed the fantasies of others before

> them. This is how Adharma works. It is a self-perpetuating,

> destructive force that does not rest from doing evil until it is

> defeated. Therefore, it is the duty of all right-believing people

to

> wipe Adharma off the face of the Earth. The destruction of Maoism

is

> a good start.

>

> UNITE HINDUS!

> ARISE AND FIGHT!

> DESTROY ALL ADHARMA ON EARTH!

>

> Anand

>

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Share on other sites

hinduism_in_nepal

"Vrndavan Parker" <vrnparker >

Mon, 22 Jan 2007 06:43:20 -0000

[hinduism_in_nepal] Re: THE TRUTH ABOUT MAOISM

 

BRILLIANT! I WILL SHARE IT WIDELY!

 

hinduism_in_nepal, "krantimarg"

wrote:

>

> Brothers,

>

> The alliances against us which we are supposed to be avoiding are

> already there. We cannot avoid what is accomplished fact. So let's

> get back to reality.

>

> There are two things that we must understand: (1) that according to

> the Shastras, the Himsa that is done in accordance with Dharma must

> be regarded as Ahimsa. Righteous War (Dharma Yuddha) against

Adharma

> is enshrined in our Hindu Shastras and does not qualify as Himsa;

> and (2) that it is imperative to understand the nature of the

Maoist

> enemy.

>

> The Maoists are saying that the Capitalists are a confused lot. But

> the truth of the matter is that the Maoists themselves are an even

> more confused lot than the Capitalists. In fact, they don't even

> know what they are talking about.

>

> Mao said: "If you have not investigated a certain problem, you will

> lose your right to speak on it." If this is the case, let us

> investigate this myth called Communism.

>

> Communism says it wants to create a society where all people are

> equal. All right, so let's take a look at Russia and China. Are all

> Russians and Chinese equal? No. Some are billionaires and others

> have nothing to eat, just as in Capitalism.

>

> Communism says it wants to create a society without money, where

> people get what they need and nobody lacks anything. Is there such

a

> society in Russia and China? No. Money in Russia and China is as

> important as in the Capitalist world.

>

> Communism says that land is taken away from rich landowners and

> given to the landless peasants. Mao himself promised this to the

> masses. This is why the peasants supported his revolution in the

> first place. But this is a typical Communist lie. The truth is that

> Communism aims at abolishing all private property. Mao did indeed

> imprison and execute millions of landowners and gave the land to

the

> poor. This made him popular with the masses. But as soon as he came

> to power, he started implementing the true Communist policies.

>

> First, he got groups of five or six families to join their farms

> into a co-operative where land was worked collectively and the

> income was shared. Second, he got a whole village to join a larger

> co-operative. Third, he got several villages to join an even larger

> co-operative. From there to State-owned land it was not far.

>

> Before the peasants even understood what was happening, their land

> was regarded as belonging not to each family as promised by Mao but

> as property of the co-operative! The State-controlled co-operative,

> of course, would keep most of the income for itself and invest it

in

> properties for the leadership and in industrialisation projects

> outside the countryside. Instead of the peasants' hard-earned money

> being put back into the villages, it invariably ended up elsewhere,

> just as in pre-revolutionary times.

>

> So, once again, farmers were reduced to poverty, this time not by

> Feudalists, not by Capitalists but by Maoists themselves. Their

> children were forced to go and work for peanut-wages in factories

in

> the town. By 1962, 30 million people died of starvation! It was

only

> in 1979 that the Maoist leadership began to dismantle co-operatives

> and give some of the land back to the peasants.

>

> Communism says that the more a society advances on the path of

> Communism, the less power the State holds, the aim being to abolish

> the State completely. Is there such a society in Russia or China or

> any other Communist country? No. On the contrary, the more

Communist

> a country becomes, the more powerful the State becomes. In the end,

> the State holds all the power and the people hold no power at all.

> The State in Communist countries holds even more power than in

> Capitalist ones. So it is all fantasy. It is all lies.

>

> The fact is that Russia and China are giving up Communism, indeed,

> they have given it up already because Communism, in practice, does

> not work out and never will. Communism is not a progression from

> Capitalism. It is just a scam. It is a delusional experiment by mad

> intellectuals at the cost of the people.

>

> All the countries that have tried out Communism are now reverting

> back to Capitalism. Why? Because Capitalism may be cruel, unfair

and

> unjust, but at least it works better than Communism. Capitalism is

a

> failure in the sense that it has failed to provide justice and

> equality for all people. But Communism is an even bigger failure.

>

> The truth is that ordinary Maoists are very confused people. They

> think that their lives are better under Communism. But they have

> never lived in a Communist country, so how can they know? They

don't

> understand that their leaders promise them all kinds of things now.

> But when the leaders come to power, then everything will change.

The

> people will demand what was promised to them and the leaders will

> not be able to deliver. Then the deportations and the mass murders

> and the genocides will begin. The Maoist leaders will become the

new

> oppressors because they will not let go of power. So they will

> ruthlessly put the people down.

>

> Like in Russia and China, the Communist leaders will take all the

> power and the people will have no power at all. They will have no

> money, they will have no land, they will have no work, they will

> have no food. Like in Russia and China, people will have to stand

in

> line all day waiting to buy bread or rice if they are lucky.

>

> People will be completely powerless. They will have no guns to

> defend themselves against the oppressive leaders. Their guns will

be

> taken away from them as soon as the leaders have come to power. The

> leaders do not want any competition or challenge to their

authority.

> So they will demand complete submission to their rule.

>

> This is very important to understand. When a Maoist has a gun, he

> feels that he is somebody. He feels that he has power over other

> people. This is a new experience for him. He gets high on power. He

> goes around shooting landlords and officials and raping their

wives,

> daughters and sisters. This makes him feel important. He thinks

> Maoism is the real thing, the real life for a man.

>

> The Maoist thinks that when the revolution is over, he will keep

his

> Kalashnikov or his Enfield and retire on his State-provided farm.

> That is what every Maoist dreams of. But he is only deluding

> himself. In reality he is only a "useful idiot" (as the Communist

> saying goes) in the power games of the Maoist leadership.

>

> When the revolution is over and the "Feudalists" and "Capitalists"

> have been liquidated, and his gun has been taken away from him,

then

> the Maoist revolutionary is powerless. He is like a dog people

throw

> stones and sticks at and there is absolutely nothing he can do

about

> it. This is the true story of the Maoist. He is born like a dog, he

> will have power for a few days or a few years and then he will live

> and die like a dog again. When Mao's wife was arrested and put on

> trial by the Communist Party, she said: "I was Mao's dog. I bit

> whoever he asked me to bite". This is the truth.

>

> Mao was a great revolutionary. He was a great fighter. He was a

> great guerrilla leader. We must respect him for that. We can learn

a

> lot from him in this regard. But at the same time we must clearly

> understand that he was a lousy economist. He didn't know what an

> economy needs in order to work. He didn't understand what a country

> needs to prosper.

>

> In fact, apart from history, politics and revolutionary warfare,

Mao

> didn't know much at all. And after the Revolution, he knew even

> less. In the end, he was completely cut off from the people and

from

> the country. He was living in a big house with plenty of food and

> everything he wanted. He married three or four times. Young village

> girls were brought to him every day to keep him young. He lived

like

> a God on Earth. He had no idea what life was like for the people.

> When he visited a village, the streets were repaired, the houses

> were redecorated, people had new clothes and there was food

> everywhere. After his visit, poverty and misery came back to the

> same village.

>

> Chin Peng, a Communist guerrilla leader in the 1940s, fought for

> over twenty years to establish Communism in Malaya. He first fought

> against the Japanese. When the Japanese were defeated, he fought

> against the British. When the British were defeated, he didn't know

> what to do. He said: "I have great experience of struggle, but not

> how to build Socialism". He went back to the jungle.

>

> The same applies to Mao, to Lenin, to Castro and to all Communist

> revolutionaries. They are great fighters and great military

leaders.

> But when the fighting is over, they all fail. Why? Because

> Communism was invented by Karl Marx, a German/Dutch Jew, who was a

> philosopher and a fantasist. He never had any experience of

> Communism. He made it all up in his own mind.

>

> Yes, there was poverty. Yes, there was suffering. Yes, there was

> exploitation. Yes, there was injustice in European Capitalism as

> there was in Russian and Chinese "Feudalism". And yes, something

had

> to be done about it. But the answer was not Communism. The answer

> could not have been Communism simply because nobody knew what

> Communism was. Karl Marx saw the German and French Revolutions of

> 1848 and 1871 and he thought that a Communist Revolution would

solve

> all the problems. But he only thought so.

>

> Marx had no time to see Communism being put into practice. The

> German and French Revolutions failed and he died in 1883, in

London,

> the centre of the Capitalist and Imperialist world. What practical

> experience of his own theories could he have had?

>

> The first Communist Revolution where Communists actually took and

> held power was in Russia, long after the death of Marx. When Lenin

> himself staged his Russian Revolution in 1917, he had no idea what

> he was doing. He was merely hoping that Marx's Communist theories

> would work. The same happened to Mao who copied Lenin. Mao was an

> intellectual kept by his hard-working peasant father. He had no

> practical experience of Communism. The only experience he had was

of

> guerrilla warfare.

>

> What most people don't realise is that Mao's authority did not come

> from his successful establishment of Communism in China but from

his

> guerrilla war against Japan. In this respect, he was just like Chin

> Peng. Like Chin Peng, Lenin, and other Communist leaders, once the

> war was over, the great Chairman Mao had no idea what to do.

>

> The Chinese, of course, were not stupid. They soon realised that

> Communism wasn't working as expected and tried to introduce

> Capitalist measures to repair the damage Communism had done to the

> economy. But with Mao and his wife in charge, this was not

possible.

> And because Mao was a powerful symbol of the Revolution and people

> worshipped him like a God, no one dared touch him. As a result, the

> people suffered for decades. The suffering of the Chinese, Tibetan

> and other people affected by Maoism is beyond description.

>

> When Mao finally died in 1976, he left China one of the poorest and

> most backward countries on Earth, with a big Communist Party, a big

> Communist Army, but no food to feed its people. Tens of millions of

> people had died of starvation and Maoist China was importing food

> from its Capitalist enemies. Mao's powerful wife was arrested and

> tried for treason just a few weeks later. In the end she committed

> suicide.

>

> In 1979, three years after his death, China began to abolish the

> Communist co-operative system. Peasants got some of their land

back.

> In 1981, the Chinese Communist Party publicly criticised Mao for

his

> policies. This was the end of Maoism in China. Ever since then, the

> leadership has slowly introduced more and more Capitalist methods

> back into the Chinese system and the semi-Capitalist Chinese

economy

> is now enjoying unprecedented strength.

>

> In "On Guerrilla Warfare", Lenin said: "It is unconditionally

> requisite that history be investigated in order to discover the

> conditions of environment, the state of the economic progress, the

> political ideas that obtained, the national characteristics,

customs

> and degree of civilisation." If this is so, why can not the Maoists

> of today study the historical failure of Maoism in China before

they

> even start their revolution elsewhere?

>

> Unlike the Maoists, we have followed Lenin's advice and studied

> history thoroughly. We have studied the teachings of Communism and

> we have studied the results of these teachings on the ground. As a

> result, we can now look at the Maoists of Nepal, India, South

> America and other places and clearly understand what a confused lot

> they are. They deliberately ignore history and desperately cling on

> to the dreams of Karl Marx, Lenin, Mao and a string of other

deluded

> political fantasists. A dream that cannot and never will find

> fulfilment on this Earth.

>

> Mao said that people should not read too many books. But he himself

> read – and wrote – many books. Did he not want people to read his

> books? Was he afraid that people would find out the truth? At any

> rate, the books he read and believed in were books written by

> fantasists who themselves believed the fantasies of others before

> them. This is how Adharma works. It is a self-perpetuating,

> destructive force that does not rest from doing evil until it is

> defeated. Therefore, it is the duty of all right-believing people

to

> wipe Adharma off the face of the Earth. The destruction of Maoism

is

> a good start.

>

> UNITE HINDUS!

> ARISE AND FIGHT!

> DESTROY ALL ADHARMA ON EARTH!

>

> Anand

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

hinduism_in_nepal

"Vrndavan Parker" <vrnparker >

Mon, 22 Jan 2007 06:43:20 -0000

[hinduism_in_nepal] Re: THE TRUTH ABOUT MAOISM

 

BRILLIANT! I WILL SHARE IT WIDELY!

 

hinduism_in_nepal, "krantimarg"

wrote:

>

> Brothers,

>

> The alliances against us which we are supposed to be avoiding are

> already there. We cannot avoid what is accomplished fact. So let's

> get back to reality.

>

> There are two things that we must understand: (1) that according to

> the Shastras, the Himsa that is done in accordance with Dharma must

> be regarded as Ahimsa. Righteous War (Dharma Yuddha) against

Adharma

> is enshrined in our Hindu Shastras and does not qualify as Himsa;

> and (2) that it is imperative to understand the nature of the

Maoist

> enemy.

>

> The Maoists are saying that the Capitalists are a confused lot. But

> the truth of the matter is that the Maoists themselves are an even

> more confused lot than the Capitalists. In fact, they don't even

> know what they are talking about.

>

> Mao said: "If you have not investigated a certain problem, you will

> lose your right to speak on it." If this is the case, let us

> investigate this myth called Communism.

>

> Communism says it wants to create a society where all people are

> equal. All right, so let's take a look at Russia and China. Are all

> Russians and Chinese equal? No. Some are billionaires and others

> have nothing to eat, just as in Capitalism.

>

> Communism says it wants to create a society without money, where

> people get what they need and nobody lacks anything. Is there such

a

> society in Russia and China? No. Money in Russia and China is as

> important as in the Capitalist world.

>

> Communism says that land is taken away from rich landowners and

> given to the landless peasants. Mao himself promised this to the

> masses. This is why the peasants supported his revolution in the

> first place. But this is a typical Communist lie. The truth is that

> Communism aims at abolishing all private property. Mao did indeed

> imprison and execute millions of landowners and gave the land to

the

> poor. This made him popular with the masses. But as soon as he came

> to power, he started implementing the true Communist policies.

>

> First, he got groups of five or six families to join their farms

> into a co-operative where land was worked collectively and the

> income was shared. Second, he got a whole village to join a larger

> co-operative. Third, he got several villages to join an even larger

> co-operative. From there to State-owned land it was not far.

>

> Before the peasants even understood what was happening, their land

> was regarded as belonging not to each family as promised by Mao but

> as property of the co-operative! The State-controlled co-operative,

> of course, would keep most of the income for itself and invest it

in

> properties for the leadership and in industrialisation projects

> outside the countryside. Instead of the peasants' hard-earned money

> being put back into the villages, it invariably ended up elsewhere,

> just as in pre-revolutionary times.

>

> So, once again, farmers were reduced to poverty, this time not by

> Feudalists, not by Capitalists but by Maoists themselves. Their

> children were forced to go and work for peanut-wages in factories

in

> the town. By 1962, 30 million people died of starvation! It was

only

> in 1979 that the Maoist leadership began to dismantle co-operatives

> and give some of the land back to the peasants.

>

> Communism says that the more a society advances on the path of

> Communism, the less power the State holds, the aim being to abolish

> the State completely. Is there such a society in Russia or China or

> any other Communist country? No. On the contrary, the more

Communist

> a country becomes, the more powerful the State becomes. In the end,

> the State holds all the power and the people hold no power at all.

> The State in Communist countries holds even more power than in

> Capitalist ones. So it is all fantasy. It is all lies.

>

> The fact is that Russia and China are giving up Communism, indeed,

> they have given it up already because Communism, in practice, does

> not work out and never will. Communism is not a progression from

> Capitalism. It is just a scam. It is a delusional experiment by mad

> intellectuals at the cost of the people.

>

> All the countries that have tried out Communism are now reverting

> back to Capitalism. Why? Because Capitalism may be cruel, unfair

and

> unjust, but at least it works better than Communism. Capitalism is

a

> failure in the sense that it has failed to provide justice and

> equality for all people. But Communism is an even bigger failure.

>

> The truth is that ordinary Maoists are very confused people. They

> think that their lives are better under Communism. But they have

> never lived in a Communist country, so how can they know? They

don't

> understand that their leaders promise them all kinds of things now.

> But when the leaders come to power, then everything will change.

The

> people will demand what was promised to them and the leaders will

> not be able to deliver. Then the deportations and the mass murders

> and the genocides will begin. The Maoist leaders will become the

new

> oppressors because they will not let go of power. So they will

> ruthlessly put the people down.

>

> Like in Russia and China, the Communist leaders will take all the

> power and the people will have no power at all. They will have no

> money, they will have no land, they will have no work, they will

> have no food. Like in Russia and China, people will have to stand

in

> line all day waiting to buy bread or rice if they are lucky.

>

> People will be completely powerless. They will have no guns to

> defend themselves against the oppressive leaders. Their guns will

be

> taken away from them as soon as the leaders have come to power. The

> leaders do not want any competition or challenge to their

authority.

> So they will demand complete submission to their rule.

>

> This is very important to understand. When a Maoist has a gun, he

> feels that he is somebody. He feels that he has power over other

> people. This is a new experience for him. He gets high on power. He

> goes around shooting landlords and officials and raping their

wives,

> daughters and sisters. This makes him feel important. He thinks

> Maoism is the real thing, the real life for a man.

>

> The Maoist thinks that when the revolution is over, he will keep

his

> Kalashnikov or his Enfield and retire on his State-provided farm.

> That is what every Maoist dreams of. But he is only deluding

> himself. In reality he is only a "useful idiot" (as the Communist

> saying goes) in the power games of the Maoist leadership.

>

> When the revolution is over and the "Feudalists" and "Capitalists"

> have been liquidated, and his gun has been taken away from him,

then

> the Maoist revolutionary is powerless. He is like a dog people

throw

> stones and sticks at and there is absolutely nothing he can do

about

> it. This is the true story of the Maoist. He is born like a dog, he

> will have power for a few days or a few years and then he will live

> and die like a dog again. When Mao's wife was arrested and put on

> trial by the Communist Party, she said: "I was Mao's dog. I bit

> whoever he asked me to bite". This is the truth.

>

> Mao was a great revolutionary. He was a great fighter. He was a

> great guerrilla leader. We must respect him for that. We can learn

a

> lot from him in this regard. But at the same time we must clearly

> understand that he was a lousy economist. He didn't know what an

> economy needs in order to work. He didn't understand what a country

> needs to prosper.

>

> In fact, apart from history, politics and revolutionary warfare,

Mao

> didn't know much at all. And after the Revolution, he knew even

> less. In the end, he was completely cut off from the people and

from

> the country. He was living in a big house with plenty of food and

> everything he wanted. He married three or four times. Young village

> girls were brought to him every day to keep him young. He lived

like

> a God on Earth. He had no idea what life was like for the people.

> When he visited a village, the streets were repaired, the houses

> were redecorated, people had new clothes and there was food

> everywhere. After his visit, poverty and misery came back to the

> same village.

>

> Chin Peng, a Communist guerrilla leader in the 1940s, fought for

> over twenty years to establish Communism in Malaya. He first fought

> against the Japanese. When the Japanese were defeated, he fought

> against the British. When the British were defeated, he didn't know

> what to do. He said: "I have great experience of struggle, but not

> how to build Socialism". He went back to the jungle.

>

> The same applies to Mao, to Lenin, to Castro and to all Communist

> revolutionaries. They are great fighters and great military

leaders.

> But when the fighting is over, they all fail. Why? Because

> Communism was invented by Karl Marx, a German/Dutch Jew, who was a

> philosopher and a fantasist. He never had any experience of

> Communism. He made it all up in his own mind.

>

> Yes, there was poverty. Yes, there was suffering. Yes, there was

> exploitation. Yes, there was injustice in European Capitalism as

> there was in Russian and Chinese "Feudalism". And yes, something

had

> to be done about it. But the answer was not Communism. The answer

> could not have been Communism simply because nobody knew what

> Communism was. Karl Marx saw the German and French Revolutions of

> 1848 and 1871 and he thought that a Communist Revolution would

solve

> all the problems. But he only thought so.

>

> Marx had no time to see Communism being put into practice. The

> German and French Revolutions failed and he died in 1883, in

London,

> the centre of the Capitalist and Imperialist world. What practical

> experience of his own theories could he have had?

>

> The first Communist Revolution where Communists actually took and

> held power was in Russia, long after the death of Marx. When Lenin

> himself staged his Russian Revolution in 1917, he had no idea what

> he was doing. He was merely hoping that Marx's Communist theories

> would work. The same happened to Mao who copied Lenin. Mao was an

> intellectual kept by his hard-working peasant father. He had no

> practical experience of Communism. The only experience he had was

of

> guerrilla warfare.

>

> What most people don't realise is that Mao's authority did not come

> from his successful establishment of Communism in China but from

his

> guerrilla war against Japan. In this respect, he was just like Chin

> Peng. Like Chin Peng, Lenin, and other Communist leaders, once the

> war was over, the great Chairman Mao had no idea what to do.

>

> The Chinese, of course, were not stupid. They soon realised that

> Communism wasn't working as expected and tried to introduce

> Capitalist measures to repair the damage Communism had done to the

> economy. But with Mao and his wife in charge, this was not

possible.

> And because Mao was a powerful symbol of the Revolution and people

> worshipped him like a God, no one dared touch him. As a result, the

> people suffered for decades. The suffering of the Chinese, Tibetan

> and other people affected by Maoism is beyond description.

>

> When Mao finally died in 1976, he left China one of the poorest and

> most backward countries on Earth, with a big Communist Party, a big

> Communist Army, but no food to feed its people. Tens of millions of

> people had died of starvation and Maoist China was importing food

> from its Capitalist enemies. Mao's powerful wife was arrested and

> tried for treason just a few weeks later. In the end she committed

> suicide.

>

> In 1979, three years after his death, China began to abolish the

> Communist co-operative system. Peasants got some of their land

back.

> In 1981, the Chinese Communist Party publicly criticised Mao for

his

> policies. This was the end of Maoism in China. Ever since then, the

> leadership has slowly introduced more and more Capitalist methods

> back into the Chinese system and the semi-Capitalist Chinese

economy

> is now enjoying unprecedented strength.

>

> In "On Guerrilla Warfare", Lenin said: "It is unconditionally

> requisite that history be investigated in order to discover the

> conditions of environment, the state of the economic progress, the

> political ideas that obtained, the national characteristics,

customs

> and degree of civilisation." If this is so, why can not the Maoists

> of today study the historical failure of Maoism in China before

they

> even start their revolution elsewhere?

>

> Unlike the Maoists, we have followed Lenin's advice and studied

> history thoroughly. We have studied the teachings of Communism and

> we have studied the results of these teachings on the ground. As a

> result, we can now look at the Maoists of Nepal, India, South

> America and other places and clearly understand what a confused lot

> they are. They deliberately ignore history and desperately cling on

> to the dreams of Karl Marx, Lenin, Mao and a string of other

deluded

> political fantasists. A dream that cannot and never will find

> fulfilment on this Earth.

>

> Mao said that people should not read too many books. But he himself

> read – and wrote – many books. Did he not want people to read his

> books? Was he afraid that people would find out the truth? At any

> rate, the books he read and believed in were books written by

> fantasists who themselves believed the fantasies of others before

> them. This is how Adharma works. It is a self-perpetuating,

> destructive force that does not rest from doing evil until it is

> defeated. Therefore, it is the duty of all right-believing people

to

> wipe Adharma off the face of the Earth. The destruction of Maoism

is

> a good start.

>

> UNITE HINDUS!

> ARISE AND FIGHT!

> DESTROY ALL ADHARMA ON EARTH!

>

> Anand

>

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