Posted on 06/26/2020 7:35:44 PM PDT by Borges
Some Bolshevic trying to use Russian to English dictionary.
This looks familiar. The old black guy with the cap was the same as the one in the Jack Posobiec Twitter video showing him being attacked. I also see the red goggles idiot too, who is in the Posobiec video. Only this time he wasn’t wearing the goggles.
So the spoiled twenty-something white brats are telling the old black man that he doesnt know whats like to be black?
a fatherless child thinking she can talk to elders like she screams at her mother
That pic was the WWII memorial in North Carolina defaced by Marxists.
Yes, they were at the same monument as he was.
Ah, thanks, I was wondering what communist event was associated with that date.
That slogan is a Sendero Luminaso a/k/a Shining Path slogan about the deaths of more than 250 people in a prison riot in Peru... that were agitated to riot by SL communists. As I recall, SL is Maoist.
From wikipedia:
When it [Communist Party of Peru a/k/a Sendero Luminoso] first launched during the internal conflict in Peru in 1980, its goal was to overthrow the state by guerrilla warfare and replace it with a New Democracy. The Communist Party of Peru believed that by establishing a dictatorship of the proletariat, inducing a cultural revolution, and eventually sparking a world revolution, they could arrive at full communism. Their representatives stated that the then-existing socialist countries were revisionist, and the Shining Path was the vanguard of the world communist movement. The Communist Party of Peru’s ideology and tactics have influenced other Maoist insurgent groups such as the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist Centre) and other Revolutionary Internationalist Movement-affiliated organizations.[1] The Peruvian guerrillas were peculiar in that they had a high proportion of women. 50 per cent of the combatants and 40 per cent of the commanders were women.[2]
The Shining Path has been widely condemned for its brutality,[3][4] including violence deployed against peasants, trade union organizers, elected officials and the general public.[5] The Shining Path is regarded as a terrorist organization by Peru, Japan, the United States, the European Union, and Canada, which consequently prohibit funding and other financial support for the group.[6][7][8][9] Since the capture of its leader Abimael Guzmán in 1992, the Shining Path has declined in activity.[10]——— wikipedia
Since they weakened in 1992 Peru I would not be surprised if Clinton imported them here...
China, China, the gift that keeps on giving....
The Shining Path was founded in 1969 by Abimael Guzmán, a former university philosophy professor (his followers referred to him by his nom de guerre Presidente Gonzalo), and a group of 11 others.[11] His teachings created the foundation of its militant Maoist doctrine. It was an offshoot of the Communist Party of Peru Bandera Roja (red flag), which in turn split from the original Peruvian Communist Party, a derivation of the Peruvian Socialist Party founded by José Carlos Mariátegui in 1928.[12]
Antonio Díaz Martínez was an agronomist who became a leader of the Sendero Luminoso. His books, Ayacucho, Hambre y Esperanza (1969) and China, La Revolución Agraria (1978) expressed his own conviction of the necessity that revolutionary activity in Peru follow strictly the teachings of Mao Zedong. This was his important contribution to the ideology of Sendero Luminoso.[13][14]
Throughout the 1980s, the Shining Path grew, both in terms of the territory it controlled and in the number of militants in its organization, particularly in the Andean highlands. It gained support from local peasants by filling the political void left by the central government and providing what they called “popular justice”, public trials that disregard any legal and human rights that deliver swift and brutal sentences, including public executions. This caused the peasantry of some Peruvian villages to express some sympathy for the Shining Path, especially in the impoverished and neglected regions of Ayacucho, Apurímac, and Huancavelica. At times, the civilian population of small, neglected towns participated in popular trials, especially when the victims of the trials were widely disliked.[21]
Poster of Abimael Guzmán celebrating five years of people’s war
The Shining Path’s credibility was helped by the government’s initially tepid response to the insurgency. For over a year, the government refused to declare a state of emergency in the region where the Shining Path was operating. The Interior Minister, José María de la Jara, believed the group could be easily defeated through police actions.[22] Additionally, the president, Fernando Belaúnde Terry, who returned to power in 1980, was reluctant to cede authority to the armed forces since his first government had ended in a military coup. The result was that the peasants in the areas where the Shining Path was active thought the state was either impotent or not interested in their issues.[citation needed]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shining_Path
At Arequipa, Guzmán completed bachelor’s degrees in philosophy and law. His dissertations were entitled The Kantian Theory of Space and The Bourgeois Democratic State. In 1962, Guzmán was recruited as a professor of philosophy by the rector of San Cristóbal of Huamanga University in Ayacucho, a city in the central Peruvian Andes. The rector was Dr. Efraín Morote Best, an anthropologist who some believe later became the true intellectual leader of the “Shining Path movement.” Encouraged by Morote, Guzmán studied Quechua, the language spoken by Peru’s indigenous population, and became increasingly active in left-wing political circles. He attracted several like-minded young academics committed to bringing about revolution in Peru. Guzmán was arrested twice during the 1970s because of his participation in violent riots in the city of Arequipa against the government of presidents Velasco Alvarado and Belaunde Terry. He visited the People’s Republic of China with his wife Augusta La Torre for the first time in 1965. After serving as the head of personnel for San Cristóbal of Huamanga University, Guzmán left the institution in the mid-1970s and went underground. -— —— https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abimael_Guzm%C3%A1n
Bitter Lying Marxists
Was there a Shining Path connection to the video in the original post or was that a separate topic based on post #9? I didn’t notice anything in the video.
separate topic based on the date sprayed on the monument ...i didn’t realize SL was disproportionately female [and more vicious]. I wonder what in their recruitment style made them appeal to young females like BLM does?
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