I don't think I've ever gotten so angry over any single thread then this one. Not only the selective use of education to exclude details that would affect natinal allies and paint a nation's rival as a victim.
I will say this again: The Chinese people have been a victim of the century, and yet their suffering is being scoured from history for the mear fact that they have not been friends of America? How many of our generation would even know that the Japanese killed millions of innocents for the sake of killing, because they felt like it and because of raw brutality? Who even gives that a passing mention? The Japanese? Hell no. The Americans? Yeah, and the Earth is flat.
Yet in the very same vein, the massacres of Mao are painted as black as Hitler and Stalin. No, I am not defending Mao, for he was an evil man, but I find it repulsive that for the mear purposes of propaganda, our history has been erased, and that two equally bad masacres and epitaphs of human suffering, that one is knocked over and forgotten, while the other remains as a symbol of the rightousness of pursuing a crusade against a certain nation.
If you ask any Chinese person who experienced the second world war, they can litterally tell you stories of brutality from that period that could make anyone shiver up in fear, and thank God/any deity that you did not live in that period. In the same straw, those who survived Mao can tell similar tales. The generations after us must be taught these stories and this dark piece of history for they must know. The needless deaths of hundreds of millions throughout the century from cruel masters who had no more compassion thenone would have for termites in their house. They must know this, for we must never allow the mistakes of the past to be repeated in the future. We cannot edit the truth to fit our needs, not pretend that such events never happened, for they did, but instead, the tale must be taught and generations to come horrified by them enough never to do so again.
I will say this again: The Chinese people have been a victim of the century, and yet their suffering is being scoured from history for the mear fact that they have not been friends of America? How many of our generation would even know that the Japanese killed millions of innocents for the sake of killing, because they felt like it and because of raw brutality? Who even gives that a passing mention? The Japanese? Hell no. The Americans? Yeah, and the Earth is flat.
Yet in the very same vein, the massacres of Mao are painted as black as Hitler and Stalin. No, I am not defending Mao, for he was an evil man, but I find it repulsive that for the mear purposes of propaganda, our history has been erased, and that two equally bad masacres and epitaphs of human suffering, that one is knocked over and forgotten, while the other remains as a symbol of the rightousness of pursuing a crusade against a certain nation.
If you ask any Chinese person who experienced the second world war, they can litterally tell you stories of brutality from that period that could make anyone shiver up in fear, and thank God/any deity that you did not live in that period. In the same straw, those who survived Mao can tell similar tales. The generations after us must be taught these stories and this dark piece of history for they must know. The needless deaths of hundreds of millions throughout the century from cruel masters who had no more compassion thenone would have for termites in their house. They must know this, for we must never allow the mistakes of the past to be repeated in the future. We cannot edit the truth to fit our needs, not pretend that such events never happened, for they did, but instead, the tale must be taught and generations to come horrified by them enough never to do so again.
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