Page 119 - Communism in Ambush
P. 119

Adnan Oktar (Harun Yahya)
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                 Maoism influenced not only China but later passed to Cambodia
             (in the time of the Khmer Rouge), North Korea, and even Albania.
             Maoism gained power with Stalin's help, and Soviet-Chinese relations
             were very good in Stalin's day. But this relationship fell apart in the
             1960s, and the two countries became enemies. Sino-Soviet rivalry di-
             vided the Communist world, separating allies of China from those allied
             with the Soviet Union.
                 What Maoism brought upon China, and those Communist coun-
             tries that followed China, was as dark and bloody as the Russia of Lenin
             and Stalin. But as the "worst of the worst," Maoism created much more
             terrible regimes.
                 In the following pages, we'll examine the red savagery that em-
             braced Asia.


                 Darwin's Visit to China

                 Communism is really a European ideology, first proposed by
             European philosophers and put into effect for the first time by European
             activists. It's really nothing more than the result of the materialist hostil-
             ity towards religion that took root in Europe. It is curious that this ideol-
             ogy reached and took root in an isolated country like China, so distant
             from Europe in every way. But if we look at China's recent history, a fa-
             miliar pattern emerges: Communism came to China right after atheism
             spread in the country. And atheism is equivalent to Darwinism.
                 Until the end of the 18th century, China was an inward- looking so-
             ciety, isolated from Western culture. The coming of English merchants
             in the 19th century, brought many changes to the country. With them,
             these merchants brought a substance called opium, unknown in China
             before. Consumption of opium spread like an epidemic in Chinese soci-
             ety and was the cause of two wars between England and China. Finally,
             England preponderated over China. Hong Kong and other important
             Chinese cities fell under English influence.
                 In this way, English imperialism entered China and with it, came
             Darwinism that gave imperialism scientific support. In the 19th century,
             the materialist and Darwinist ideas that had dominated Europe began
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