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Elites and Tyrants
by Walter Williams
Rep. Diane Watson
said, in praising Cuba's health care system, "You
can think whatever you want to about Fidel Castro,
but he was one of the brightest leaders I have ever
met." W.E.B. Dubois, writing in the National
Guardian (1953) said, "Joseph Stalin was a great
man; few other men of the 20th century approach his
stature. ... But also -- and this was the highest
proof of his greatness -- he knew the common man,
felt his problems, followed his fate." Walter
Duranty called Stalin "the greatest living statesman
. . . a quiet, unobtrusive man." George Bernard Shaw
expressed admiration for Mussolini, Hitler and
Stalin.
John Kenneth Galbraith visited Mao's China and
praised Mao and the Chinese economic system. Gunther
Stein of the Christian Science Monitor admired Mao
Tsetung and declared ecstatically that "the men and
women pioneers of Yenan are truly new humans in
spirit, thought and action," and that Yenan itself
constituted "a brand new well integrated society,
that has never been seen before anywhere." Michel
Oksenberg, President Carter's China expert,
complained that "America (is) doomed to decay until
radical, even revolutionary, change fundamentally
alters the institutions and values," and urged us to
"borrow ideas and solutions" from China.
Even Harvard's late Professor John K. Fairbank,
by no means the worst tyrant worshipper, believed
that America could learn much from the Cultural
Revolution, saying, "Americans may find in China's
collective life today an ingredient of personal
moral concern for one's neighbor that has a lesson
for us all." Keep in mind that estimates of the
number of Chinese deaths during China's Cultural
Revolution range from 2 to 7 million people.
Mao Tsetung was admired by many academics and
leftists across our country.
Just think back to the campus demonstrations of
the '60s and '70s when campus radicals, often
accompanied by their professors, marched around
singing the praises of Mao and waving Mao's little
red book, "Quotations from Chairman Mao Tsetung."
Forty years later some of these campus radicals are
tenured professors and administrators at today's
universities and colleges, as well as schoolteachers
and principals indoctrinating our youth.
The most authoritative tally of history's most
murderous regimes is in a book by University of
Hawaii's Professor Rudolph J. Rummel, "Death by
Government." Statistics are provided at his website:
( http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/welcome.html).
The Nazis murdered 20 million of their own people
and those in nations they captured. Between 1917 and
1987, Stalin and his successors murdered, or were
otherwise responsible for the deaths of, 62 million
of their own people. Between 1949 and 1987, Mao
Tsetung and his successors were responsible for the
deaths of 76 million Chinese.
Today's leftists, socialists and progressives
would bristle at the suggestion that their agenda
differs little from Nazism. However, there's little
or no distinction between Nazism and socialism. Even
the word Nazi is short for National Socialist German
Workers Party. The origins of the unspeakable
horrors of Nazism, Stalinism and Maoism did not
begin in the '20s, '30s and '40s. Those horrors were
simply the end result of long evolution of ideas
leading to consolidation of power in central
government in the quest for "social justice." It was
decent but misguided earlier generations of Germans,
like many of today's Americans, who would have
cringed at the thought of genocide, who built the
Trojan horse for Hitler to take over.
Few Americans have the stomach or ruthlessness to
do what is necessary to make their governmental
wishes come true. They are willing to abandon
constitutional principles and rule of law so that
the nation's elite, who believe they are morally and
intellectually superior to the rest of us, can have
the tools to implement "social justice." Those tools
are massive centralized government power. It just
turns out last century's notables in acquiring
powerful central government, in the name of social
justice, were Hitler, Stalin, Mao, but the struggle
for social justice isn't over yet, and other suitors
of this dubious distinction are waiting in the
wings.
COPYRIGHT 2009
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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