Communist Party of India

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    started October 16, 1934, and ended October 20, 1935(Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica). Communists paid for peasants’ goods and did not damage crops. This is what attracted many young Chinese to join the Communists (Clayton 653). The Nationalist leader in China, Chiang Kai-Shek, surrounded communist base areas in an attempt to annihilate them. These were called military encirclement campaigns. The Communists were surrounded with no way out(Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica). They hit the…

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    Xia was born into a horrible breeding facility in the Himalayas along side her beloved brother Xiu. The two were nothing special really, they didn't come from notable bloodlines like some of the other hounds being housed there but they were beautiful little fluff balls. They never knew their sire and only knew their mother until they were old enough to be plucked from her to start their training. Right from the start little Xia had a strong dependency on her brother finding it hard to be…

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    Little Chinese Seamstress

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    The “loathing” that the narrator feels applies to the government, specially Mao, for keeping books from them and suppressing their knowledge and ability to think. The fact that the narrator wants to be free-spirited and self-thinking rather than a communist drone adds to the plethoric miseries reeducation engenders. Further into the novel, Luo and the narrator meet a woman known as the little seamstress. She is the prettiest girl on the…

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    Red Scarf Girl Sparknotes

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    Memoir Essay: Red Scarf Girl Out with the old and in the New! Red Scarf Girl is about a girl named Ji-Li Jiang and her experience during the Cultural Revolution. In 1966, she was twelve years old and in the sixth grade. That was the year the Cultural Revolution started. Chairman Mao led the revolution and went with the model of get rid of the “Four Olds”: old ideas, old culture, old customs, and old habits. Ji-Li Jiang illustrates how the Cultural Revolution caused wide spread fear leading to…

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    emotions, however, his argument lacks research. Instead, he uses prior knowledge of historical events while presenting a personal point of view. His appeals to pathos, logos, and ethos creates an effective argument for a need for independence in a communist society. Cunxin uses pathos that connects to his argument throughout his book to appeal to our emotions. Predominately he refers back to times when his family was struggling with poverty. “But no begging words were ever spoken because we…

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    China Threat Analysis

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    People’s Liberation Army of China has transformed from a mass army to one that is capable of winning fierce conflicts against highly capable opponents . The Chinese Communist Party who maintains power monopolizes China’s political system. The viability of China’s current system is questioned by political analysts due to its structure of party above the law and its constraints on civil society and rights such as freedom of speech . However, the growth of one of the biggest countries in the world…

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    ideas communism. China developed the Chinese Communist Party, in 1921, to unify the nation to stop poverty and become an independent country. China was divided by sectionalism, the Peoples Republic of China (Guomindang) and The Chinese Communist Party of China. The Peoples Republic of China was led by Chiang Kai Shek, a Nationalist leader whose goal is to have a fascist china. The Chinese…

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    Xi Jinping Case Study

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    the Chinese Communist Party celebrated over sixty-seven years in power. Founded in 1949, the People’s Republic of China has been able to survive terrible human tragedies and political upheavals. Examples include the Great Famine and Mao’s Cultural Revolution of 1966-76. While China modeled its system after the Soviet Union, the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party has been unique in overcoming its tragedies, and China has emerged as a powerful and dynamic superpower under the Party. In…

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    The economic development in Taiwan and China between the 1980s and 1990s steps up the sequence of events that leads to either the rise of democracy in one country or the survival of the one party system based on the wealth of everyone. In this paper, I will argue that between the 1980s and 1990s in Taiwan, there was economic development that leads to the rise of fluid democracy based on the power theory while in China during the same time period, the rise in economic development doesn’t lead to…

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    northern wall above the table. But this tradition was now considered a threat to communist beliefs. Any family doing this would be regarded as counter-revolutionary, for which there were heavy penalties, including jail” (39). The practice of traditional ceremonies or the suggestion of any Western influence in the home would have resulted in the punishment and rehabilitation of citizens who did not abide by the Communist way of life. Li convincingly documents his family’s fear of persecution and…

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