Saturday, May 8, 2010

Civil War-World war III



Maoism

THIS IS WAR BETWEEN DEVELOPED  AND UNDER DEVELOPED COUNTRIES WITH IN COUNTRIES SOCIETY IS DIVIDED IN TWO CLASS POOR AND CIVILISED CAPITALIST WHICH IS NAMED AS SOCIETY POOR ARE BECOMING MORE POOR CAPITALIST ARE GROWING FASTER THEN WHAT THEY ARE TODAY MAOISM IS NOTHING BUT THE PEOPLE IN SOCIETY NOT GETTING THE SATISFACTION FROM LIFE MONETARILY AND LIVELIHOOD THEY BECOME IN GROUP CALLED MAOIST WE HAVE TO GIVE THEIR RIGTHS AND SOCIAL SATISFACTION JOIN US TO FINISH THE UNCIVILISED CULTURE

THANKS 

RUDRRA DEV

    Maoism, variably and officially known as Mao Zedong Thought (simplified Chinese毛泽东思想traditional Chinese毛澤東思想pinyinMáo Zédōng Sīxiǎng), is a variant of Marxism derived from the teachings of the late Chinese leader Mao Zedong (Wade-Giles Romanization: "Mao Tse-tung"), widely applied as the political and military guiding ideology in the Communist Party of China (CPC) from Mao's ascendancy to its leadership until the inception of Deng Xiaoping Theory and Chinese economic reforms in 1978. It is also applied internationally in contemporary times. Maoist parties and groups exist throughout the world, with notable groups in Peru,India, and Nepal. Notably, in Nepal they won the elections in 2008.

The basic tenets of Maoism include revolutionary struggle of the vast majority of people against the exploiting classes and their state structures, termed a People's War. Usually involving peasants, its military strategies have involved guerrilla war tactics focused on surrounding the cities from the countryside, with a heavy emphasis on political transformation through the mass involvement of the lower classes of society.

Maoism departs from conventional European-inspired Marxism in that its focus is on the agrarian countryside, rather than the industrial urban forces. This is known as Agrarian socialism. Notably, Maoist parties in Peru, Nepal and Philippines have adopted equal stresses on urban and rural areas, depending on the country's focus of economic activity. Maoism broke with the state capitalist framework of the Soviet Union under Nikita Khrushchev and dismisses it as modern revisionism, a traditional pejorative term among communists referring to those who fight for capitalism in the name of socialism.

In its post-revolutionary period, Mao Zedong Thought is defined in the CPC's Constitution as "Marxism-Leninism applied in a Chinese context", synthesized by Mao Zedong and China's "first-generation leaders". It asserts that class struggle continues even if the proletariat has already overthrown the bourgeoisie, and there are capitalist restorationist elements within the Communist Party itself. Maoism provided the CPC's first comprehensive theoretical guideline with regards to how to continue socialist revolution, the creation of a socialist society, socialist military construction, and highlights various contradictions in society to be addressed by what is termed "socialist construction". While it continues to be lauded to be the major force that defeated "imperialism and feudalism" and created a "New China" by the Communist Party of China, the ideology survives only in name on the Communist Party's Constitution; Deng Xiaoping abolished most Maoist practices in 1978, advancing a guiding ideology called "Socialism with Chinese characteristics.

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