by radon1 » Fri 03 Jan 2014, 06:19:45
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', 't')he iron oppression of the People's Army as expressed in the Tiananmen Square Massacre.
Well, this one was not a communist massacre, this was a capitalist massacre. The Chinese have been the most capitalistic capitalists in the world over the course of the past several decades. When did you last hear the word "Marx" from their officials? I don't have a recollection. There is hardly anything relevant to marxism in China these days.
There is a general confusion between elitological implications and socio-economical ones. Again, when the elites are endangered, or need to promote their interest, they tend to act quite similarly regardless of their real or proclaimed socio-economic paradigm.
The Tiananmen events is the case in the point. The Chinese elites sensed a danger in what was a plot by the western elites to undermine the Chinese elites and dissolve them. From the point of view of the western elites, the Chinese elites were an obstacle, because the western elites would rather milk the Chinese cheap labour pool directly without sharing the profits with the "communist bosses". The "communist bosses" reacted accordingly.