SS-18 ICBM
Oscillator
I was told in my astronomy class that if the Tunguska meteor hit 5 hours later, it would have flattened St. Petersburg. What kind of effects on 20th century history would that have had?
http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=288001&highlight=tunguskaI was told in my astronomy class that if the Tunguska meteor hit 5 hours later, it would have flattened St. Petersburg. What kind of effects on 20th century history would that have had?
I never know what you're on about. China and Vietnam were always at loggerheads, and the Sino-Soviet rift ensured Vietnam's participation in any Sino-Soviet confrontation, whether they wanted it or not.
How is that even an argument against Ho being a Communist?
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I have read biographies of him. All of them agree with me. Ho was a Communist and had been one from the 1920s.
Presumably if he were a moderate he would have to have had moderate policies? Also what kind of moderate was he?
Your words, not mine.
... he wrote for L'Humanité from 1922 onwards. Contributing to the Party newspaper is surely the mark of an active member, no? And if that isn't good enough there's the aforementioned visit to the Soviet Union complete with attendance at the Fifth Comintern Congress? And if that isn't good enough he superintended the foundation of the Vietnamese Communist Party at the instigation of the Comintern in 1930. But I guess I'm supposed to believe that Ho had a huge hand in forming a Communist Party and at the askance of the Comintern because of reasons wholly unrelated to him being a Communist.![]()
Seems like the common sense interpretation here is that Ho Chi Minh was always an ideological Marxist and that the burden of proof is on JELEEN to demonstrate that this was not the case.
Instead, we'll get insinuations that Masada and PCH don't know what they're talking about and aren't up to date on the literature without actually mentioning any specific literature, and airy dismissals of facts as circumstantial or irrelevant without any compelling stated reason to do so.
Again, nobody argued that he wasn't [A hardline communist prior to the 1940s].
JEELEN said:And that's all circumstantial. The reality is that he didn't pursue a hardline Communist course in Vietnam until after his hopes of American support for Vietnamese independence were consistently rebuffed. Already after WW I he wanted to appeal to Woodrow Wilson for support of a Vietnamese independence. You should check a recent biography on him on that. So my conclusion stands: the US created their own 'Communist threat' in Vietnam.
So your theory is that after being rebuffed by Wilson, Ho became a communist, and was disappointed in their lack of interest but stayed with them for 25 years while actively contributing to their efforts, before betraying his true colors in trying to appeal again to Truman, only to go back to them?1922: so after he failed to get an audience with Wilson on support for an independent Vietnam. 1930: ditto. (What does 'superintended' even mean in this context?) All this doesn't counter the fact that in the aftermath of WW II Ho again sought support from the US.
Ho's policies,I repeat, were always intended to create an independent Vietnam - both before and after he joined the Communist Party. That same Communist party showed as little interest in the affairs of Vietnam as the US did (until they detected 'a Communist threat' there; big surprise).
Again, nobody argued that he wasn't.
*Fun fact: Ho Chi Minh actually wanted the US to support his independence movement, but got blown off; it was only after this that he turned Commy. So in the end the US produced their own Communist threat in Vietnam.
JEELEN said:'Ho was most assuredly a Communist' only represents US opinion on him.
JEELEN said:And that's all circumstantial. The reality is that he didn't pursue a hardline Communist course in Vietnam until after his hopes of American support for Vietnamese independence were consistently rebuffed. Already after WW I he wanted to appeal to Woodrow Wilson for support of a Vietnamese independence. You should check a recent biography on him on that. So my conclusion stands: the US created their own 'Communist threat' in Vietnam.
1922: so after he failed to get an audience with Wilson on support for an independent Vietnam. 1930: ditto. (What does 'superintended' even mean in this context?) All this doesn't counter the fact that in the aftermath of WW II Ho again sought support from the US.
Ho's policies,I repeat, were always intended to create an independent Vietnam - both before and after he joined the Communist Party. That same Communist party showed as little interest in the affairs of Vietnam as the US did (until they detected 'a Communist threat' there; big surprise).
Sounds pretty much like an insinuation to me, unsubstantiated at that.
So he wasn't a hardline communist (1919), then he was (1922), then he wasn't again (1947), and then he was again (1950)? Sounds legit.
JEELEN said:The reality is that he didn't pursue a hardline Communist course in Vietnam until after his hopes of American support for Vietnamese independence were consistently rebuffed.
Dachs said:Instead, we'll get insinuations that Masada and PCH don't know what they're talking about and aren't up to date on the literature without actually mentioning any specific literature, and airy dismissals of facts as circumstantial or irrelevant without any compelling stated reason to do so.
JEELEN said:Sounds pretty much like an insinuation to me, unsubstantiated at that.
Ho's policies,I repeat, were always intended to create an independent Vietnam - both before and after he joined the Communist Party. That same Communist party showed as little interest in the affairs of Vietnam as the US did (until they detected 'a Communist threat' there; big surprise).
lolwut.
So your theory is that after being rebuffed by Wilson, Ho became a communist, and was disappointed in their lack of interest but stayed with them for 25 years while actively contributing to their efforts, before betraying his true colors in trying to appeal again to Truman, only to go back to them?
So he wasn't a hardline communist (1919), then he was (1922), then he wasn't again (1947), and then he was again (1950)? Sounds legit.
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So let me get this straight. Wilson turns Ho down and Ho immediately turns hardcore commie and starts writing in commie newspapers?
This represents a significant backtracking from your previous point. Even if it were true, this is by no means what you originally argued with actual, y'know, words.
Because communist countries (and thus communists) have never, ever viewed capitalist nations (like the US) as levers which they can manipulate and use to achieve their policy agendas, either foreign or domestic, right?Now if Ho would have been pursueing a hardline Communist policy in Vietnam from the start, there would have been little point in trying to get US support for it - either after WW I or WW II.
JEELEN said:As Masada should know (since he read all Ho's biographies)...
JEELEN said:Nice misquote. I said: Nobody argued he wasn't a Communist [period].
JEELEN said:Y'know. it would really help if people, y'know, could read a little better. As you quoted yourself: Ho didn't pursue a hardline Commmunist line in Vietnam until after it was clear to him that the US weren't going to support an independent Vietnam.
Because communist countries (and thus communists) have never, ever viewed capitalist nations (like the US) as levers which they can manipulate and use to achieve their policy agendas, either foreign or domestic, right?
Because communists are just totally ideologically incapable of engaging in realpolitik with capitalists to achieve their aims, like the Stalinist USSR did with the Allies in WWII, or the Maoist PRC did with the US following the Sino-Soviet split, among many other examples.
Oops, wait, I ruined the joke.
Nice troll. But let's end this, cite something. Wait wouldn't that require a coherent line of argumentation? I suppose so. Heh. Guess its hard having to find a citation that jumps along a timeline that dates Ho's adoption Communism all across history.
You, ah, did. To be precise, you argued that it was only after American blew him off that he 'become a Commie'. The common sense reading of that claim was that his conversion to Communist occurred after the Second World War. I followed this up with evidence that Ho had been a Communist in the 1920s, which you dismissed as 'circumstantial'. This served to confirm the common sense reading of your claim. In that same post, you also restated the original claim that it was only after he was consistently rebuffed that he became a hardline Communist. This also supports the notion that you were referring to events that occurred after the Second World War. You've now backtracked and claimed that the 'consistent' rebuff was Ho's anonymous submission to Woodrow Wilson but the evidence to support my initial reading is still there and plain to see.
Brilliant argument.