As I was reading Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-Tung (aka The Little Red Book), I came across a particularly stunning quote in Chapter 2: Classes and Class Struggle:
In the final analysis, national struggle is a matter of class struggle. Among the whites in the United States, it is only the reactionary ruling circles that oppress the black people. They can in no way represent the workers, farmers, revolutionary intellectuals and other enlightened persons who comprise the overwhelming majority of the white people.
"Statement Supporting the American Negroes in Their Just Struggle Against Racial Discrimination by U.S. Imperialism" (August 8, 1963), People of the World, Unite and Defeat the U.S. Aggressors and All Their Lackeys, 2nd ed., pp. 3-4.
Wow. So the "overwhelming majority of white people" are not racist? And that's according to Chairman Mao!
Yet his statement contradicts what today is a familiar accusation from the Left. Search the phrase "all whites are racist" on the internet. You'll come up with much. For instance, an article by Elena Guthrie on Huff Post, "Are All White People Racist?" [February 10, 2017], in which she concludes:
		  "All white people are racist, 
		  because all white people exist in a racist power structure that we 
		  aren't actively fighting to dismantle. Racists don't just wear white 
		  pointy hats and say the 'n' word, by doing nothing, any and every 
		  white person is still taking advantage of a power structure that 
		  favours us. Don't be more upset with being called racist than actual 
		  racism."
		  
		  
		  
		  
It seems today's Left has moved so far to the Left that the late 
		  Communist dictator of Red China now stands on "the wrong side of 
		  history."
		  
		  Yet back in his heyday, Mao was as radical as you could get. He was an 
		  icon for Leftists who thought the Soviet Union under Khrushchev and 
		  Brezhnev had turned soft and compromised. Mao was unlike the "tired, 
		  old white men" of the USSR. Mao was cool. He was authentic. His face 
		  adorned the walls of college dorms. Women wanted to sleep with him and 
		  guys wanted to be him.
		  
		  But how does The Great Helmsman measure up to the woke standards of 
		  today's intersectional Left?
		  
		  Well, in his Little Red Book, Mao talks a lot about economic class 
		  struggle. He denounces imperialism and advocates for "national 
		  liberation movements." But he never makes it about race. And although 
		  it's not a term he uses, he might justifiably be described as "color 
		  blind." That makes him old-fashioned. A dinosaur among today's Left. 
		  Perhaps even a running dog reactionary!
		  
		  I'm no Maoist. The man was a monster, as were and are all Communist 
		  dictators. More innocent people died under Mao's regime than even 
		  under Stalin or Hitler. Which is why Mao's above quote should give libertarians pause for thought.
		  
		  When even a man of Mao's Communist street cred is guilty of such a 
		  cancel-worthy statement, it shows just how far leftward our 
		  own 
		  culture has moved.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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1 comment:
Mao was prolly right on that one, provided you understand that "racism" is oversimplified shorthand for "racial collectivism," a popular attitude in Asian circles since the 1830s or earlier. There really is a lot of racial collectivism evident in Southern KKKlannishness, but less visibly, in the "race suicide" letters and rants of TR and bis pal the Kaiser. Americans raised in South America are typically shocked to encounter entrenched racial collectivism on arrival in These States as teens or adults. I know of nothing but individualism that can counter it.
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