• ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmygrad.mlOP
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    6 hours ago

    Incidentally, I’m reading a book about this right at this very moment. Deng reforms were never meant to liberalize China or make it capitalist. It was a measure that was meant to allow China to catch up to the west. This has been accomplished now, and we’re seeing a push from the party to wind down the role of private sector in the economy.

    Again, what I described above isn’t some drastic reeducation campaign, but rather firming up of the socialist ideological line within the intellectual sphere. Meanwhile, the notion that people aren’t studying Marxism in China is frankly absurd. In fact, there’s plenty of evidence that the opposite is the case.

    https://field-journal.com/issue-26/the-interwining-of-knowledge-affect-life-and-mentality-chinese-youths-turn-to-marxist-leninist-maoist-in-contemporary-china/

    https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202108/1230909.shtml

    • GarbageShoot [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 hours ago

      This has been accomplished now, and we’re seeing a push from the party to wind down the role of private sector in the economy.

      Wake me up when Xi or that Shanghai liberal who is going to replace him actually call for struggle against the domestic bourgeoisie.

      the notion that people aren’t studying Marxism in China is frankly absurd.

      Reread what I said. You read a lot, I’m sure you can manage my straightforward statements.

      That first article – aside from being a novella – is a really strange thing to link in this context. You can read countless articles, mostly from neoliberal sources, wherein Maoist student protestors, union organizers, etc. get violently repressed by the state. I know that Maoism exists among segments of the people in China, these stories are even used by neoliberals to delegitimize China’s ideological claims. This is a much better argument against Deng’s legacy, taken at face value (though I am not just going to take neoliberal reporting on China at face value, I’m not a Trot). Also, just read through the footnotes to get a good handle of the authorial perspective there.

      The second one is a collection of anecdotes, and they are nice anecdotes, but the fact remains. I’ll definitely check out Awakening Age, though.