It is now possible to freely express all the racism, bloodthirst and misogyny you have in your heart as long as you direct it against (possibly invented) "Russians"
Alternate universe post 1989 Eastern Europe where you have Trotskyist boomers going on about the permanent revolution and complaining the youths are conservative Stalinists
@JPKivisto@k4l4shn1k0v34 I am also a Marxist-Leninist (ish) with a confirmed IQ of 151 (with standard deviation of 15) 😁
not that I believe it to be a very accurate metric mind you, but if one were to accept the premise.
🇨🇳 | The last believed survivor of the “Long March” during the Chinese Civil War celebrated her 105th birthday.
Her name is Wang Quanying, she joined the Red Army as a medic when she was only 14 years old.
Born into a Tibetan family in 1921, Sichuan province, she lost both parents by age one. From age five, she was forced into harsh labor.
When the Red Army entered her hometown, Wang was attracted by their policy of protecting the poor and joined the Women's Independent Regiment.
The one-year-long march starting in 1934 under the leadership of Mao Zedong is viewed as one of the most daring military manoeuvres in modern history.
The Chinese Communist Party defied all odds, including total defeat, by what is often described as sheer revolutionary willpower.
Starting with about 100,000 people, only around 8,000 survivors eventually made it to their destination in Yan'an.
During battles with the Nationalist forces led by Chiang Kai-shek, Wang Quanying was cut off from her unit and went into hiding in 1936. Authorities verified her as a veteran in 1984.