Chiang Kai-shek’s Memory from the Trump Encounter

The spectacular election fraud displayed in the U.S. 2020 presidential election, and the performance of the media and deep state government that covered up the fraud, give the impression that socialist communist forces are hiding around them. The use of democratic freedoms to overthrow them is neither a joke nor a conspiracy theory, but a reality played out in an electoral coup. Trump was systematically discredited, slandered, attacked, kneaded and squeezed in the four-sided struggle created by the mainstream media, and I admire his tenacity to stand up and fight. From what he suffered, I thought of Chiang Kai-shek Chiang Kai-shek, a Chinese presidential figure seventy years ago.

When I was young, Chiang Kai-shek was the worst person in my heart. In addition to the Communist propaganda in textbooks and movies on the mainland, I also read Spring Dreams of the Golden Lotus, a book that scandalized Chiang Kai-shek in the extreme and made him out to be a despicable and vile man. Since the author was a Hong Kong Tang, I believed him. Later, when the Tang died with the Communist Party flag over his body, people found out that he was a Communist Party official who worked as a united front agent in Hong Kong. The Jinling Spring Dreams made many people spit on Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang and support the Chinese Communist Party. Killing with pen and ink is the best tactic of the Communist Party because they do not care about human morality and morality, and shamelessly lie and smear and obfuscate for their own doctrine and power, which is the most common and common tactic for them.

It took me a long time, as I learned more and more about history, to discard my evil ideas and gradually realize that Chiang was really a great man of patriotism, loyalty, courage and sharp vision. However, not many people on both sides of the Taiwan Strait have been able to dispel the fog and look at Chiang Kai-shek fairly. As a matter of fact, what is happening to Trump today can be called the 2.0 version of what happened to Chiang Kai-shek back then. The situation that Chiang encountered was far more complicated and difficult than that of Trump.

According to the history of the Chinese Communist Party, Chiang Kai-shek staged the “April 12” counter-revolutionary coup and undermined Sun Yat-sen’s three major policies of “United Russia, United Communist Party, and support for the peasants and workers”, leading to the first civil war between the Communist Party and the Chinese government. This pseudo-history not only deceived millions of Chinese people, but was also included in the China section of the history textbooks used by students in California. The truth is: Sun Yat-sen did not “cooperate” with the CCP, and the three policies were stated by Soviet China’s representative Borodin. It was Chiang Kai-shek’s purge of the Communists that preserved Sun’s principles and legacy of alliance with Russia.

Why, then, did Sun Yat-sen want to unite Russia with China? It all started with Lenin’s “October Revolution”.

The far-reaching lies of the “October Revolution

In 1917, the Russian people spontaneously rose up in a democratic revolution to overthrow the Tsarist dictatorship. After the victory of the “February Revolution,” the Constitutional Democratic Party became the provisional government. Lenin’s Bolsheviks and Mensheviks and the Social Revolutionary Party formed the Soviets. Lenin was good at winning the hearts and minds of people with beautiful slogans. He originally supported the election of a Constituent Assembly, but since he received less than a quarter of the votes, he seized power by force and took over the Provisional Government before anyone else could. This was the truth of the October Revolution, which was a coup d’état to steal the fruits of the revolution, not a revolution, and almost no blood was shed [1]. Afterwards, Lenin began a one-party dictatorship, restricting freedom of the press, imposing state ownership of private property, failing to deliver on his promise of democratic freedoms, and suppressing the Mon and Social parties and other rebellious people. The Red Terror intensified. The famine in Russia and the forced requisition of surplus grain led to peasant revolts in Siberia and elsewhere. The working class also opposed the Communist Party, and strikes broke out in factories. More than 26,000 Kronstadt sailors, who had helped Lenin seize power, also revolted. The protesters demanded the return of the freedom of the press, the freedom of the market, etc. All were called “rebellions”. All were firmly suppressed in the name of “rebellion. The Soviet regime was also plunged into an unprecedented crisis of internal and external difficulties.

Lenin wanted to rediscover the world through the communist movement and founded the Third Communist International. In 1919 and 1920, he issued two declarations on China, announcing that he would abrogate all historical unequal treaties between the Russian and Chinese governments, and renounce land acquired by aggression, railroad privileges in the Middle East, etc. The declarations greatly increased the number of Chinese intellectuals. The declarations increased the goodwill and trust of the Chinese intelligentsia, the Marxist-Leninist communist ideology spread rapidly in China, and the Chinese Communist Party was founded. Because of Lenin’s suppression of freedom of the press, the Chinese people were hardly aware of the brutal truth of Communist tyranny.

Sun Yat-sen’s Russian Federation was founded on the premise that

In order to break his international isolation, Lenin repeatedly contacted Sun Yat-sen, who was engaged in the Dharma Protector movement in southern China, and asked for cooperation with the Soviet Union and the Chinese Communist Party, but was refused. Eventually, the Soviet Union offered to “abolish the Communist Party” and allow it to join the Kuomintang [2]. Sun Yat-sen accepted this, but on the condition that no communist organizations or even the Soviet system be introduced into China, and that the Soviet Union would not advocate the independence of Outer Mongolia or the stationing of troops in Outer Mongolia. These prerequisites for union with Russia were included in the Sun-Wen-Yueh-Fei Joint Declaration published in 1923. As for the Communist Party joining the Kuomintang, Sun’s conditions were: “Communists who join the Kuomintang, who participate in the National Revolution, must submit to the Three Principles of the People, obey the program of the Kuomintang, and abide by the discipline of the Kuomintang. This was a policy of “United Russia and Tolerance of Communism” rather than cooperation with the Chinese Communist Party.

In January 1924, Sun convened the First National Congress of the Kuomintang in Guangzhou and agreed that members of the Communist Party could join the KMT as individuals. The Whampoa Military Academy was founded with Chiang Kai-shek as its principal. Zhou Enlai, who joined the KMT as a Communist, became director of the Political Department of the Whampoa Military Academy. Mao Zedong and others enter and occupy the propaganda and organization departments of the KMT.

The Communists betrayed their trust and turned red; Chiang Kai-shek defended the law and purged the Communists.

After Sun Yat-sen’s death in 1925, the Communists began to openly violate KMT discipline, propagandized for the development of Communist Party members, and secretly formed a Communist Party armed force, and at the end of 1926, the Soviet Communists demanded that the CPC carry out land reform in the countryside, so the CPC instigated and led the so-called rural revolutions in Guangdong, Hunan, and other parts of the countryside among the poor landlords. In the area, they fought against landlords, smashed ancestral halls, and looted. The Kuomintang, as well as Communist Party leader Chen Duxiu, condemned this anarchic “excess” that undermined the Northern Expedition revolution. Mao Zedong, who implemented the policy of peasant riots, praised it as “very good” and encouraged “the young ladies of the landed gentry to roll on their gums. ……”3. (The Chinese Communist Party was instigated to kill the so-called rich landlords and farmers in China, and to rape, kill, and abuse their wives and daughters.

In March 1927, at the 3rd Plenum of the 2nd KMT Central Committee, the Wuhan government was completely taken over by the Communists and leftists of the KMT, who stripped Chiang Kai-shek of his military chairmanship during his northern expedition and issued a secret order to arrest him. Chiang issued a letter to his Huangpu classmates in Nanchang, stating that he did not accept the resolution and vowed to complete the Northern Expedition. Workers in Shanghai rioted under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, attacking and looting foreign consulates, churches, hospitals, schools, etc., killing and wounding many. The Communist tyranny made the Northern Expedition generals, businessmen and industrialists very angry, and even Chen Duxiu, the leader of the Communist Party, criticized the riots. But Communist extremists were not dissuaded. A group of KMT members strongly advocated purging the party and protecting it. On April 12, Chiang Kai-shek joined forces with anti-communist groups and sent his troops to disband the Shanghai Federation of Trade Unions picket line, purge the Communist Party, arrest it, and execute the most vicious communist activists. At the same time, another government was established in Nanjing.

The “April 12” revolution of the Communist Party was a rallying cry, to which all major cities in the country responded. The Kuomintang purged the party, and the Communists also purged and executed right-wing Kuomintang members who opposed them. On July 15, 1927, the Wang Jingwei government in Wuhan learned of the Soviet Union’s attempts to use the Communist Party to invade China and began banning the Communist Party. The Communist Party called it the “July 15 Counter-Revolutionary Coup”. Chiang Kai-shek resigned for the greater good, and the Wuhan government moved to Nanjing.

The leftists, led by Soong Ching Ling, strongly opposed the Qing Party and issued a statement condemning Chiang for violating Sun Yat-sen’s revolutionary principles and policies and embarking on a counter-revolutionary course. The Communist Party called Chiang Kai-shek an “enemy of the revolution” and an “executioner” who massacred the revolutionary masses of workers and peasants. With the support of the Soviet Union, the Chinese Communist Party began to seize power through riots, and after its failure, it took its troops into the Jiangxi Jinggangshan and other rural areas to become bandits.

Chiang Kai-shek’s patriotism was scandalized.

Chiang Kai-shek led the Northern Expedition to victory and restored the Nationalist government. Chiang’s attempts to nationalize the military were met with suspicion and slander. He was impeached several times and resigned several times to quell disputes. His successor, however, was unable to manage the complexities of the situation, and in the end left the intractable and cursed mess to Chiang to sort out.

As a result, Chiang became the object of hatred from many quarters, especially from the Communist Party, which launched leftist proxies and formed left-wing alliances to smear and attack Chiang Kai-shek. For example, Zhang Xueliang did not resist the Japanese during the September 18 Incident, which led to the fall of the Northeast and the Japanese invasion of China, and the Chinese Communist Party widely spread rumors and slandered Chiang Kai-shek by sending a telegram of non-resistance to Zhang Xueliang. Although Zhang Xueliang made clarifications later in life, the CCP still writes lies in the history books today. In order to rally the hearts and minds of the people and the military to resist the Japanese and Soviet ambitions of annexing China, Chiang Kai-shek proposed that in order to destroy the enemy, it was necessary to have one party, one leader, and one faith. This effective strategy to control the enemy was naturally scolded by the CCP and the superficial democrats under its command, and the label “fascist” became the best excuse to attack Chiang Kai-shek. When the war ended, Chiang Kai-shek made good on his promise to end the single-party dictatorship and start a constitutional government and establish the Republic of China. The Communist Party did not honor its agreement to nationalize the Communist army and continued to seize power in various regions. Chiang’s legitimate act of sending the national army to annihilate the Communists was slandered by the Communists as provoking civil war.

The Communist Party’s opportunistic war of public opinion and espionage infiltrated the national army, causing it to be separated from the rest of the country. After Chiang Kai-shek’s defeat and retreat to Taiwan, he engaged in authoritarian rule to prevent Communist subversion, and as a result, he continued to be scolded by misguided people with ulterior motives. If not for Chiang’s strict defense, the people of Taiwan would undoubtedly have been hanged by the communist machine, and would not have achieved their present cultural and livelihood achievements.

Today’s history is strikingly similar

The history of the communist movement shows that during the weak period when communist groups were trying to steal the country, they always made allies under the fascinating banner of anti-oppression and anti-dictatorship. As soon as victory was in sight and they felt that they could not be dictated to by their own consensual elections, they immediately turned against each other, and they would fight to the death. Lenin seized power in this way, and so did the CCP. The Chinese Communist Party (CCP), too, seized power in the same way, and succeeded repeatedly with viciousness and shamelessness that ordinary people dare not imagine.

Since taking office, President Donald Trump has been subjected to slander and impeachment by the left gum, especially since the election fraud involved unprecedented corruption in every aspect, and the encounter with Chiang Kai-shek is just a different version. Both men were trying to use the ideas of their founding fathers to strengthen the country and protect the people, and they were attacked by the left media for their enemies who had long-term foreign funding and operations.

What Kawakami encountered was the comeback of the late communist forces. It is easier for people of conscience to distinguish between right and wrong, good and evil, in a world alliance of degenerate leftist gums, because the great suffering caused by communism to the world has been revealed to the world. Chiang Kai-shek, on the other hand, was in the pre-evil communist phase, when people were more easily confused by the utopian lies of the Communist Party. The pressures and difficulties Chiang had to endure were far greater than those of Trump. When I look at how difficult it was for Trump to oppose the Communists and prevent the left, I realize that it was not easy for Chiang Kai-shek, and I admire him more and more for his heroic courage to endure humiliation.

I forgot who said, “A hero with flaws is a hero after all, and a perfect fly is a fly no matter how perfect he is. In this season of thanksgiving, I would like to express my deepest gratitude to President Chiang Kai-shek, who unified China, defeated foreign invasion, and fought relentlessly against Communism. In 2020, the Red Devil’s madness will mirror the glory of the heroes who fought against the devil.

[1] He Fang, “Review and Reflections on the October Revolution in Russia”.

[2] Research by historian Mr. Xin Hao Nian

[3] Report on the Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan Province