User talk:Majin Takeru
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[edit] Mao
Just a note to say thank you for the compliments you payed me concerning my works in the discussion page of Mao Zedong, although I really felt I hardly deserved them- not just for courtsey's sake. I'm very glad you show such great interest in a character around whose history my previous life in China has evolved around, although I am of a latter generation, and hope you will continue this interest by carrying on producing fresh and rewarding comments concerning this infinitely complex character, as you have already so perceptively. If you can manage this without interrupting busy schedules etc., can you possibly write a paragraph or two on my page reviewing your knowledge and views on Mao, which I shall be greatly interested since I am doing an essay on modern Dictators, and wish to hear as much from resourceful elders such as yourself as possible. A few sentences or two would greatly enlighten me on the paths ahead, since I am now struggling with short biography of Mao between the controversial sources. Again, many thanks for your undeserved compliments again and also for your insight and patience. Luthinya 23:56, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ABSOLUTELY WONDERFUL INSIGHTS! You have expressed many things I have always felt but was never able to put into words, and a good deal besides with your wonderfully resourceful mind. Penetrating and expressive perceptions are what I have looked for for ages, and I am very glad to be able to hear from one so unbelievably resourceful and intellectual of perception. The length above all is what I praise- you must have spent a very long time and tried your own patience! I have not yet finished reading and may be able to come back with more discussions- but many thanks again for so many wondrous interpretations!
As far as Communism goes, I suppose I am a weak supporter- because I have doubts concerning whether human nature would do so much. Again, thank you VERY much for so many insights. I could not imagine a luckier chance. Handsome is as handsome does, as they say in the Shire. Luthinya 10:34, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
I'm sorry, I could not resist coming back again to congratulate you, for I had no idea of your ethnic background. To be Japanese and still support the CCP, despite our traumas during the Second World War, must be a marvellous feat of the mind, and not least of the human heart. While it is too early to comment on the wisdom of this decision, and certainly I am not in a good position to comment at all, nonetheless I must say you make me marvel at your intellectual prestige. Many congratulations. Luthinya 15:52, 24 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Welcome
I noticed nobody has yet welcomed you to Wikipedia. Well, Welcome!
Hello, Majin Takeru, and welcome to Wikipedia! Thank you for your contributions. I hope you like the place and decide to stay. Here are a few good links for newcomers:
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on your talk page and someone will show up shortly to answer your questions. Again, welcome! -- Миборовский U|T|C|M|E|Chugoku Banzai! 21:12, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
PS. A Japanese Maoist? Now I've seen everything. -- Миборовский U|T|C|M|E|Chugoku Banzai! 21:12, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Nationality
Sorry for the ignorance of a long period concerning your post, but currently I am much beleageared with revision and did not have much time for Wikipedia any more, quite apart from the fact I am also trying to produce an analytical essay on The Waste Land.
Nonetheless I must say it was very pleasant to hear from you again, and I must first congratulate your standards in Chinese- did you learn the language specifically? Can you produce calligraphy also? But indeed I was positively astounded concerning your nationality- are you American? Curioser and curioser! to quote Lewis Carroll. Although there was a slight disappointment concerning the erroneous Japanese nationality, I must congratulate you once more upon your rather Eastern-orientated projects, despite having been more familliar in a Western environment. It makes me extremely glad to know that those born in capitalist countries may still be recommended towards another quasi-religious political policy- despite certain negative government recommendations!
Finally I would like to return once more to Mao- the source of yours, and mine, great interest. Yes, indeed objective observation would suggest that Mao was very much an excellent leader of stratagems for China, at least during the periods of foreign war. I doubt whether many possessing twice as much the interest in classical Chinese literature and tactical practice may even achieve half of what he has, and from his rich material of knowledge and strategic brilliance even under ordinary circumstances he would certainly have been canonized the national hero, which was also much aided by his charismatic oratory (slightly unpleasant connotation). However, I would hesitate upon whether China could not have had a better leader during peacetime. Although I do not really want the clock backward and should think my nation lucky even to have survived the Cultural Revolution at all, I believed that in latterly peacetime Mao fell into the weakness of every powerful man- to become embalmed by power. Though he retained still much of his consciousness- as in your enlightened despot, there could be no doubt that this defect brought many of the worst sides out of him. However, as Gandhi said, we want to change their minds, not punish them for weaknesses we all possess. Trouble was, there was no one around who dared to change Mao's mind.
In peacetime, I think, China would have done better perhaps with a man like Gandhi. But such men as he was are rare as men like Mao, and what was was strong and invulnerable must ultimately fall by the hands of the weak, thus fulfilling the cycles of the world- to know all and all in vain. Plato spoke in his Utopia that a perfection nation cannot be fulfilled until philosophers become rulers or rulers philosophers... well, I think Mao was one such example of an idealistic personality becoming something quite akin to Plato's ruler. I will not make the ultimate judgements of his times of political control, quite specifically because I shall forever be far too ignorant, but while I insist that while Mao was not the best in all possible worlds, he may yet still influence upon our lives as the shadow of Vainamoinen. Luthinya 16:00, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Mao article
No problem. What were you refering to when you said "Better have good reason and proof to edit this, or it is going right back."? John Smith's 11:51, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
- Yes, it was actually far too long. John Smith's 19:17, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Communism Stateless
Hi there, you need to convince me why communism is stateless. Communism exists among several countries, each of which has their own sovereignty and leadership. Communist countries are allies, but they are not necessarily belong to one state, pratically and theoretically. Critik 18:27, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
I think you're talking Marxism not communism. Critik 18:52, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
Your kidding, right? (Majin Takeru 19:04, 13 August 2006 (UTC))
[edit] Interested 'Cult of Mao' manifestations in Modern China
Regretfully or otherwise, it appears that from concurrent news established by government- run newspapers that flag raised upon the Cultural Revolution concerning the Cult of Mao, under whose flapping shadow all Chinese still repressedly-or blindly- reside, has not drawn the least of its venomous and benevolent warnings through the jaws of time. In papers such as Old Citizens Daily, whose reputation I may certify for appropriate reasons, articles have begun to appear that bear seemingly unconnected title such as 'Chairman Mao Drifted Slowly Past me.' This ardent Communist supporter from the elder generation was apparently so entranced at the rememberance of Chairman Mao having once walked past him within 10 metres in a visit to Zhou Enlai, that he retained this memory even more than 4 decades later, and has now decided to publicise the wondrous thrill he experienced upon the occaision in reply to certain unorthodox arguments that have lately filtered through the Communist party, which had you been in China you would doubtlessly have been aware. This elderly gentleman's argument basically ran thus- a man who can inspire such pure adoration in the people cannot be all that bad. It is perhaps significant that this gentleman has never been a truly active Communist member.
Other memoires too I have seen, some bearing such intimate anecdotes that those residing in Western Society would have believed the newspapers offending a private status to allow them to be printed at all- one for instance, was simply termed 'Chairman Mao in Love'. Admirers would go to such lengths to fill in their own minor anecdotes that if our history was to be pieced among them, I would have confirmed- as a Buddhist- that Mao was truly a reincarnation of the Buddha. The newspapers that published such stories are highly respected, I may confirm, and considered this the height of orthodoxy. Tentative criticisms have been put forward, the tone of speech, however, seemed to mark all the difference as in Paradise lost, where Milton spoke with such curtail of God and so little fetters of Satan.
This culture stings, because it reveals clearly still how few people have been encouraged to ever explore the Party's more mirky past- my friends in secondary school, even when they are reading essays relating directly onto the Cultural Revolution, expressed that their teachers usually explained that just as 'some bad thing which happened for ten years in the 1970s. '
Sorry for running on again- I merely thought you might be interested in this information, or perhaps consider it a worthy addition to the 'Cult of Mao' section in the Wiki article, which if you agree to I might try and edit again, for better or worse- I wanted someone's opinion because I hate writing stuff and then get deleted straight away. And by the way- you might need to expand your opinion to the prior post I gave you: sorry if this takes up too much time, but I truly would appreciate any help onto the prior project on Dictatorial rule I mentioned earlier, that has now turned into the appeal for a Scholarship. Also had a good laugh on the vandal who abused my page slightly- expensive, but amusing. Luthinya 12:06, 26 September 2006 (UTC)