| On Mao Tze-dong (4) |
| 送交者: WishUBest 2007年08月21日00:00:00 于 [史地人物] 发送悄悄话 |
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Confucius said: "The problems of man is that he tends to instruct others to do this and that" (Ren2 zi1 Huang4 Zai4 Hao4 Wei2 Ren2 Shi1). Mao is exactly the kind. He is a talkative man and has the tendency to instruct others. That is why he has so many instructions (Mao Yu3 Lu4 or others). Mao is a man good at talking rather than acting. Mao spent most of his time at home writing on either those abstractive Shi1 Qi2 Ge1 Fu4 or political instructions to people. Seldom he visit his troops during a war. And he even doesn't want to touched any firearma during his life-long "Revoluation". There is a proverb in the Western countries: "Never believe what a politician talk but watch to see what he does". Mao's personal characters matched exactly the above criticism. If we forget about his talks but watch his deeds, we will find Mao is absolutely a failed politician because he talked much more than he has done speakless of his erotic personal life. In talking about private life, no person of the western countries is allowed to assume high government positions like the presidenship and the prime minister if he or she had been divorced or had sex scandals. Mao is really a lucky man because he was born in China, a country that could neglected all the wrongdoings of its political leader. I don't know what could Mao do if he was born in America or Canada? For such a man of "More Talk Than Done" he may be only good as a "Washroom Cleaner". |
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