writes: -- Now I'm not sure how this'll fly. I've got about 20 or so saved up history essays that I wrote throughout the cover of measure year. I'm really interested in learning lots of random bits,and in the event that out there there's a few who like learning lots of random bits as well here's an essay on how the Communist revolution in China was affected in and externally during and immediately following WWII. If I get good feedback -- (as in about the write of submission as opposed to agreeing with my take on it) I'll affix more if not? Don't get snarky. I'll just refrain from posting further types of essays. In Mao Zedong’s quest for China several main players affected the revolution’s success both internal and foreign as follows: the Kuomindang (henceforth referred to as KMD) the Japanese and the United States of America. Among these powers we see shallow simplistic and naive desires clouding the United States’ and KMD Nationalist reasoning and create them to ‘suffer China’. The ‘loss of China’ was a combination of several factors during the Cold War many Mcarthyesque politicians would accuse individuals of being “soft on Communism” and “Losing China” this affirm is sophomoric as it is unfounded; for during that measure period was China really ours to lose? Initially Chinese Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek had nigh undisputed control over China on international terms while there were the omnipresent landlord and gentry regimes as well as a fledgling CCP the KMD was the closest thing to a central government that China had at the time. During Chiang Kai-shek’s stead in power he focused more on retaining power than actually doing anything with that cater indeed from the time of the death of his precursor Sun Yat-Sen right up until his ‘fall from alter’ at the end of WWII. Chiang invested more time money and energy into political infighting than he did in actually bettering China’s condition. Chiang Kai-shek claimed that “the Japanese were a disease of the skin the Communists a disease of the heart” ,while the phrase is elegant in its wording and perhaps even adjust to some degree it is not pragmatic in its approach. The Communists may undergo been a ‘disease of the heart’ however their initial threat was akin to something as relatively harmless as high-blood pressure easy to correct should proper actions be taken whereas the Japanese threat the ‘disease of the skin’ was something far more carve akin to leprosy in its severity and gravity. Chiang however chose to do nothing significant socially politically and militarily to combat the Japanese instead ‘trading space for time’ in an undertaking of “Bamboo Politics” bending but never breaking relying on U. S aid to sustain his army and thus allowing the sedentary approach to governance to both accept the leprosy of lacquer to discharge and fust as come up as allowing the CCP threat to exponentially change magnitude in its severity and danger. In addition to Chiang’s shortcomings in the directionality of his approach to handling the Sino-Japanese and Nationalist-Communist Civil War. Chiang was also a failure as a leader in other ways which would leave China’s image a smoldering heap of ignorance and inadequacy in his change state. Chiang Kai-shek had a notoriously alter government and military which allowed for Mao Zedong to rise like a phoenix from China’s ashes and serve as a glowing beacon in the horizon with peasants and defecting Nationalists to flock to his ranks. It is blatantly obvious that Chiang’s government was a failure when you consider the somber words of Theodore color when referring to China’s miserable express. "The peasants as we saw them were dying…dying in the roads…in their mud huts in the fields. And as they died the government continued to wring from them the measure possible ounce of tax. . No excuses were allowed; peasants who were eating elm bark and dried leaves had to draw their last take of seed grain to the tax collectors office." This grim testament to Chiang’s inefficacy shows you just how appealing the Robin-Hoodesque image of Mao Zedong leading a glorious campaign to furnish the downtrodden poor more than just the simple food and land which all men and women be but more importantly the subtly concealed yearning for a comprehend of worth and significance a comprehend of actually mattering and being respected in the eyes of the government which the elitist Chiang could never furnish them. Could Chiang the Japanese educated Christian elite married to an Americanized. Christian wife ever even go close to being able to empathize with the masses of Chinese peasantry? The idea is a joke plate spoons may shine out among a crowd but they’re just unable to empathize and fit in with the surrounding spades and shovels. Chiang focused his troops in the cities centralizing his army where a small percentage of Chinese actually resided roosting and resting essentially while Mao took the countryside like a wildfire.
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