“Mao killed 80 million of his own people” is often repeated, used as “proof” of the evils of communism. Regarding this claim, here is a collection of facts omitted by the framing of mainstream Western/global narratives, a very brief historical account towards objective reassessment.

By 20th Century, monarchic rot, foreign domination, and many wars had reduced a millennia-old center of world economy and culture to a land of poverty, misery, and death. In 1921 Sun Yat-sen famously remarked that the fate of the Chinese people will likely be the same as that of the native Americans.

In 1950, when the Communist Party took the helm after the liberation of China from its many slavers, average life span was 35 years; 20% of population was addicted to opium; and literacy rate was around14%.

In 1976, at the end of Maoist era, merely 26 years later, average life span had doubled to 70; the opium problem was eradicated; and literacy levels had gone up to around 80%.

This was a man, a revolutionary, a socialist, who worked day and night, and dedicated his life to the freedom and health of his country from dynastic corruption, genocidal colonial rule, brutal capitalist oppression, and the resultant social diseases. What possible motive did Mao Ze Dong have for “killing 80 million of his own people”?

In 1960, 10 years after the successful revolution and victory against the rightists, the communist party was wildly popular. And then the famine occurred, caused by many factors:

Droughts, which have always been periodically rampant in China, a country with difficult geographic conditions for farming. Much of agriculture under colonial rule had been focused on cash crops for export, such as tobacco. It took a lot of effort and time to switch back to growing rice, vegetables, and food production. Ancient agricultural and transport systems which had been constructed for thousands of years for famine prevention and relief were destroyed or fell to ruin through colonial process, and could not be repaired in less than 10 years of independence. Infrastructure and life support system of the entire country was further devastated by wars against the British, Germans, Japanese, and the reactionary KMT in the previous decades. Capitalist economic violence in the form of crippling sanctions and severe limits on agricultural trade with other nations, political violence in the form of enforced isolationism, and constant threat of military invasion which made industrialisation a desperate necessity. The desperate push for industrialisation and modernisation in a country of 600 million extremely poor and under-educated farmers, in which many decisions were made to prioritise steel making and other technological advancement over agriculture. The split with Soviet Union ended the assistance they had been providing China since the revolution, during those extremely difficult years of national reconstruction. Terrible policy mistakes of the CCP, in the context of nationwide over-enthusiasm and over-optimism about independence, new-found freedom, reconstruction, industrialisation, and the future, during the “Great Leap Forward”. These included the campaigns to eliminate pests which backfired by causing locust populations to rise, gross miscalculations of agricultural productivity and food requirements, etc. Mao of course did have some personal responsibility as well, which can only be microscopic in relation to all of the above. To say that he alone, and intentionally, “murdered” anyone, much less 80 million, is nothing but a ludicrous and vile anti-communist lie.

35–42 million is the accepted figure In serious scholarship for victims of the “Great Chinese Famine”. But this also includes the 24 million natural deaths during those 3.5 years (7million per year), as well as 4 million deaths directly caused by weather, floods, droughts, etc. So the higher realistic estimates of victims of famine is around 7–14 million, and the lower estimate, which new scholarship seems to favour, is 3.5 million, which is not at all worse than the toll of the previous famine of 1907, or those during the 19th Century and earlier.

Even if we use the highest exaggerated and very inaccurate count of 35–42 million, that was around 5–6% of China’s then total population of 654 million.

• US invasion and carpet bombing of North Korea in 1950 killed 20% of population.

• French colonialists in Vietnam caused two million or 7% of the population to starve to death in 1945 during an episode of drought.

• The United States massacred 7% of the Filipinos, starting in 1898, when it colonised that island country.

• Ireland lost 25% of its population during the British-legislated Great Potato Famine Genocide 1845–1853.

• European settler colonists mass slaughtered something like 99% of native Australian populations.

• Murder, war, and disease from colonisation caused the deaths of 80–90% of native American populations.

• Countless massacres and genocide in Australia, Oceania, Middle East, India, Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Europe during the last 500 years often killed much higher percentages of populations.

“The point is, in historical perspective, yes, 5–6% of the Chinese population lost during the Great Leap Forward period was a tragedy, which Beijing officially accepts. But it is by no means unusual, as an event nor in its magnitude.” — Jeff J. Brown

At this time the citizens of China was hard and embattled, who had just finished fighting a series of long lasting wars. There were grenade launchers and machine guns in every village. But during or after the famine not a single revolt against the Communist Party occurred. Why?

Because the people understood very clearly that the bulk of blame for the suffering that they experienced could not be placed on the Communist Party. And because there was immediate government response in the form of massive nation wide relief programs and rescue missions.

And some years later, Mao was already bed-ridden and very ill, when revolutionary passion had tipped overboard into zealotry and witch hunts during the Cultural Revolution, largely engineered by the infamous Gang of Four. While the ordeal likely did have some positive effects on society in the long run, in eliminating residual decadent, bourgeois, classist, sexist, etc., mentality, most of the Chinese population is more critical than approving of that episode, as is the CCP. But that is maybe subject for another time.

How ever, today, it is crucial to understand that none of the recent epic and amazing strides of modern China would be possible without the liberation won and foundations built by the communist party under the leadership of Mao Ze dong.

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This is all well documented information from serious historians, but remains unaccessible, and replaced with wild exaggerations, gross distortions, and utter falsehoods. Those born into capitalist centers and its spheres of influence, the global majority, grew up breathing such fictions about communism and communist leaders like air.

It saddens and pains me to see good people, whose hearts are in the right place, through no fault of their own, believing and repeating these insidious lies.

Merely some years ago, I was one of them.

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Thanks to Ramin Mazaheri, Jeff J. Brown, Mike Davis, Andrew Cobb, and many others.

Partial sources and further reading:

https://gwydionwilliams.com/2015/03/14/mao-and-china/

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/40366985-china-is-communist-dammit

https://www.greanvillepost.com/beijing-dispatch/

https://jacobinmag.com/2018/10/mike-davis-late-victorian-holocausts-famine-mao-stalin

https://blog.hiddenharmonies.org/2013/01/17/another-look-at-the-great-leap-forward/

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/995469.China_Shakes_the_World

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On Chinese socialism today:

https://medium.com/@leohezhao/the-long-game-and-its-contradictions-8ff92823cf68

On China and Africa:

https://medium.com/@leohezhao/china-africa-a-new-accord-e375a6ffe535