Part 6c

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 6b, we heard that by the standards of traditional culture, acts perpetrated by the CCP would be considered to be the most heinous of crimes against heaven and the Tao. As long as traditional culture existed, it would be an obstacle to CCP domination. Therefore, in order to seize, maintain and consolidate its tyranny, the CCP had to destroy the root of traditional culture. And owing to the fact that Chinese traditional culture is rooted in the three religions of Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism, the CPP’s first step was to destroy each one. During various historical time periods, all three of the major religions encountered moments of tribulation, but the CCP is the only regime to extinguish all three religions simultaneously.

Part 6c: The CCP used its utmost capacity to destroy people’s spiritual identity formed by faith and culture. In an attempt to destroy religion, the CCP sent underground communist party members to infiltrate the Buddhist and Taoist religions directly, subvert them from within and transform them into secular organizations.

Part 6d

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 6c, we heard that Lenin once said, “the easiest way to take a fortress is from within.” The CCP sent underground communist party members to infiltrate the Buddhist and Taoist religions directly, subvert them from within and transform them into secular organizations. In the 1950′s The Chinese Buddhist and the Taoist associations were founded. During that time, Buddhist spiritual precepts were abolished, and the religious associations declared that they would be under the leadership of the people’s government and implement government policies. Those remaining true Buddhist and Taoist monks who upheld the spiritual precepts were labeled as counter-revolutionaries, and classified as members of superstitious sects and secret societies. And, under the revolutionary slogan of “purifying the Buddhist and Taoists” they were imprisoned, forced to labor and even executed.Part 6d: Elimination of belief can often be more effective and long lasting than physical destruction alone. The thought reform movement initiated in 1951, Targeted intellectuals. The CCP required that college students and all teachers in every level of education confess their history so as to cleanse out any counter revolutionary elements. In 1957 Mao Zedong and the CCP called upon intellectuals to voice their criticism and offer suggestions to the party, promising no retaliation. But once people stepped forward to voice their views, they were labeled as rightists and the CCP began to humiliate, terrorize and murder them. Mao Zedong said, “what can Emperor Huang brag about? He killed 460 Confucian scholars, but we killed 46,000 intellectuals.”

Mao did more than just kill intellectuals, he destroyed their hearts and minds. In this way the traditional “scholarly class” – the exemplars of social morality – was obliterated.

Part 6e

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 6d, we heard that after the CCP adopted economic reforms, it renovated many churches as well as Buddhist and Taoist Temples. Where the essence of a culture is its inner moral meaning, the superficial forms have only entertainment value.

The CCP restored the superficial elements of Chinese culture, putting on a pretty face for the sole purpose of maintaining power. Regardless of how many festivals with lion and dragon dances or how much classic architecture is built, the Party only maintains the entertainment aspects of Chinese culture while the inner meanings of these traditions are destroyed. This is a tactic the CCP has taken to fool and confuse both the people of China and the world.

Part 6e: the CCP party culture is that of despotism and dictatorship. It is this nature, which serves the CCP in its political and class struggles.

Part 6f

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 6e, we heard that the CCP party culture is that of despotism and dictatorship. It is this nature, which serves the CCP in its political and class struggles. One may understand how it forms the Party’s environment of terror from four aspects – The Aspect of Domination and Control, the Aspect of Propaganda, the Aspect of Interpersonal Relations which spurs jealously and encourages a culture of squealing on ones family and associates. And the Aspect of subtly influencing the internal psyche and external behavior, turns people into machines, confounds the principles of right and wrong and creates a culture of self imposed brainwashing and unconditional obedience.

Part 6f: The CCP has supplanted traditional Chinese moral culture by substituting it with a false culture full of pseudo beliefs, which is forced upon the people of China for the sole use of fostering the survival of and perpetuating the self aggrandizement of the CCP. Traditional principles such as faith have been supplanted with “faithfulness to the party”. Even arts and literature from children’s songs to modern opera, are used by the CCP to act as an arm of its propaganda, always churning out the Party message into the hapless eyes and ears of the people, diminishing their will and rendering many ignorant of the true essence of Chinese traditional culture.

Part 7a

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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This poster shows how to deal with a so-called .enemy of the people. during the Cultural Revolution.In part 6f, we heard that the destruction of the Chinese traditional culture was also the process of establishing the CCP Party culture.With human conscience and moral judgment subverted, people turned their backs on traditional values. In additional to the decay of morality, unforeseen consequences to the natural environment have manifested in diseases to land, water and people. It is not surprising that the CCP’s joy of battling with heaven and earth would result in the destruction of natural resources, the proliferation of fake and poisonous products in the markets and the devaluation of all life.

Traditional culture which respects life and values the unity of heaven and humans, would allow for the restoration of a harmonious co-existence between mankind and nature as well as the recovery of humility toward heaven, and awe before God.

We continue now with the beginning of Part 7 of the 9 Commentaries – “On the Chinese Communist Party’s History of Killing.”

Part 7b

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 7a, we heard that the 55 years China has been under CCP rule, 60-80 million innocent Chinese people have been killed. Killing has become one of the most essential ways the CCP maintains its power. In every political movement the CCP has used the strategy of genocide. Mao Zedong declared, “after the chaos the world reaches peace, but in 7 or 8 years, chaos needs to happen again.” This suggests that for the CCP mass murder is a planned periodic event. Today, Mao’s words still act as a plague upon China as the world must bear witness to yet another genocide enacted by the CCP, – the current and ongoing persecution of Falun Gong.

Part 7b: China’s Great Famine killed 40 million people between 1959-1961. This famine was caused entirely by the CCP action of forcing farmers to work in steel factories, leaving their crops to rot in the fields. To cover up the losses of food production, the CCP exaggerated claims of high yields and then accused farmers and peasants of hiding food. Rations were confiscated, people were forbidden from cooking. Starving people who tried to snatch cereal from grain depots were shot. Even those who tried to escape the famine-stricken areas were prevented from leaving because the CCP blocked the roadways.

Part 7c

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 7b, we heard that the Cultural Revolution, which ended in 1979, resulted in the deaths of 7.73 million people. Another 7.03 million became disabled from armed attacks and 4.2 million people were detained and investigated.

During the Cultural Revolution, cruel and brutal methods of killing became a competitive way to prove ones revolutionary standing. In 1989 the world witnessed the massacre at Tiananmen Square as college students were crushed by CCP tanks. 1999 marked the beginning of the CCP’s cruel and ongoing persecution of Falun Gong practitioners. By 2002, 7000 deaths were confirmed by government sources within China. This number continues to grow. The CCP has never given up murdering innocent Chinese people, but today the CCP spares no expense to cover up the bloody evidence.

Part 7c: Killing is a very important tool for the CCP to maintain its power.

Part 7d

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 7c, we heard that killing is a very important tool for the CCP to maintain its power. Cruel torturous killings done in public, and even in front of children, have been a perpetual source of terror to the Chinese people from before the Sino-Japanese war and continues right up to the present day.

In the mid 1960′s cannibalism was widespread. Killers would cut open a living victim and then eat the internal organs and flesh. During the peak of this madness, even the cafeteria of the highest government organization, the Wuxuan County Revolutionary Committee, offered human dishes.

Today the CCP continues to torture and kill practitioners of Falun Gong. 100 cruel torture methods have been recorded by those who have survived. Although the CCP may appear ready to connect with the civilized world, the world should not be fooled by a benign facade; the CCP, who has cruelly killed more than 10,000 Falun Gong practitioners and continues to inflict torture behind the walls of labor camps, is nothing short of monstrous.

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Part 7e

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In Part 7d, we heard that amidst all the killing committed by the CCP, it is difficult to discern the numbers of families damaged by the CCP. In some cases an individual was killed and a family broken. In others, the entire family was killed. Even if no murders occurred, many families were forced to divorce, betray or renounce relationships.

As the family is the basic unit of traditional Chinese culture, it is the last defense against the CCP party culture. Therefore for the CCP party culture to prevail, the destruction of the family is required. Because of this, those who are labeled as counterrevolutionary – innocent and wrongly accused, loose the last safe haven left after losing livelihood and dignity.

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Part 7f

Posted by Michael Anderson on Thursday, October 4th, 2007
 
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In part 7e, we heard that the CCP invented a complete theory and framework of “Revolution” and “Continuous Revolution” under the dictatorship of the Proletariat. This framework was used to change Chinese society and ensure the party dictatorship. This theory has two parts – economic base and superstructure.

In order to strengthen the superstructure, especially CCP power, revolution must start at the economic base. This included – killing landowners to solve production in the countryside and killing capitalists to solve production in the cities.

Killing is intrinsic to the superstructure and is repeatedly carried out to ensure the CCP’s absolute control. Killing is strategically applied in various ways to create desired effect. For example, intellectuals are killed to eliminate principled thinking and traditional thought.

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