Lance of Llanwy
King
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2006
- Messages
- 710
Would you care NOT to throw around childish accusations of myopism? Please? Thank you. Is it really so hard to have a civilized debate without calling your opponent's intelligence into question? I make no such charge against you.Lance, when one has done 6 years of college-level research into modern Chinese history, one is entitled to their opinion regarding Mao. Waving complicating variables away as "commie propaganda" because it doesn't fit a simplistic worldview is more than a little ridiculous. The Great Leap was a colossal failure, but the regionally self-contained (rather than nationalized, as the Soviets did) industrialization of the Mao period set the foundations for China's current economic growth. Mao also provided over a booming Chinese population, an increased standard of living, vastly increased literacy, the (actual) end of concubineage and foot-binding, and increased status for women altogether. That's not a bad record, all things considered. Sure, he could've stood to have been democratic, but he did amazingly well with what he was given to work with. Another thing completely lacking from modern discussions of Mao is whether a pre-modern society could be expected to behave democratically anyways. The western world had theadvantage of legal traditions, industrialization, state-building, and widespread literacy campaigns to set a strong foundation for what would be a democratic tradition. Most of the rest of the world did not have this yet, and as such their leaders and government styles reflect that. Is it fair to hold countries that were incapable of supporting a democratic government in contempt for not being democratic? In this regard, I think Maoist China gets a pass, but post-Mao China is sorely lacking.
China loved pushing its vassals around, it's true. But they rarely bothered conquering them. How many times has China conquered Korea? Or Japan? It's gotten into Northern Vietnam, but that's about as far as it goes. It may have discovered America, but never really considered expanding into it. Pre-modern China is renowned for its wall-building (not just the Great Wall, but walls around cities, houses, everywhere) and heavy reliance on missile units in war (with a repeating crossbow, I cannot blame them). This is represented by the protective trait. I don't think it fits modern China (Mao-led) at all, and I don't think it particularly fits Qin's personality, but he's the only representative of "classical" China that we've got.
Suffice to say, I am well-read on the subject myself. Everything you said is true...if you ignore the peasants, who, need I remind you, constitute the majority of the population even today. That China is still largely agrarian and that most peasants are still without basic services and there is little room or jobs in the cities to house them speaks for the CCP more loudly than any numbers they may produce. Numbers you shouldn't trust, Though they are true often enough, they are often slanted and bent to appear better than they actually are, because the CCP often finds the truth unpalatable. At least, I wouldn't trust a government with zero accountability to report the truth. Democratic governments often engage in a good deal of obfuscations, white lies, and straight-out falsehoods, and they have to worry about elections. It is true there is anti-CCP bias, but the fact there're people with an anti-CCP agenda doesn't make the CCP any good. Their programs are marked with massive waste, and this is constant throughout their existence. As for Mao, I think his record speaks for itself. It is entirely undeniable that he was a cruel megalomaniac who was obsessed with power. Absolute and total power, over every single person under his rule.
Oh...and the second part of your argument seems to operate on the assumption that modern China has existed from the dawn of time. Which, I am sure you well know, is complete garbage. The fact of the matter is that what we know as China was forged through blood and conquest, and it was forged by Qin. As for why China never bothered to wage a war of conquest: why? Why would China want more land? If China was the size of....say....France, then I have no doubt there would, at the very least, be no Koreans today. But China is massive, and many dynasties couldn't even bring everything their predecessors ruled as China under their control. China is large and unwieldly to govern: why govern more? China never really required more land, and thus waged wars of pacification(and they waged many) and only conquered seldomly, for geopolitical reasons(such as conquering Turfan in the Yellow River basin to keep the local horses from falling into the hands of hostile steppe peoples), and, of course, bullying their neighbors. This isn't quite as aggressive as European politics, but it is hardly isolationist or anywhere approaching peaceful. The Han even launched military campaigns against the Parthians, in part because they desired to meet the Romans for themselves.
Lastly, I do not see very many other leaders being statted to represent an era. Vicky maybe, but that's all she ever really was, the symbol of an era. As far as I can tell, the leaders in most other civs are traited on their own merits, not some "profile" of an "age." It leads us back to the whole point of the thread: Firaxis takes short-cuts when it comes to non-Europeans, and this is most blatant in East Asia where ample historical data(not counting untranslated sources) exists to evaluate them the same way as every other leader.