On the 12th of april in 1927, Nationalist forces led by Chiang Kai-Shek carried out the Shanghai Massacre, attacking and disarming workers' militias by force, resulting in more than 300 people being killed or wounded.

This incident marked the beginning of a campaign of violent suppression of Chinese communists by conservative factions in the Kuomintang, killing 300,000 people over the course of three years.

The Shanghai Massacre began before dawn, when nationalist troops began to attack district offices controlled by the union workers. Under an emergency decree, Chiang then ordered the 26th Army to disarm the workers' militias.

The union workers organized a mass meeting denouncing Chiang Kai-shek the next day, and thousands of workers and students went to the headquarters of the 2nd Division of the 26th Army to protest. Soldiers opened fire, killing 100 and wounding many more.

This incident marked the beginning of a prolonged purge of communists from the Wuhan province, and the ensuing violence killed over 300,000 people in less than three years. Stalin offered his support, sending a telegram to the Chinese communists on June 1st, urging them to organize militarily against the state.

The events of April 1927 prompted the Comintern in Moscow to break ties with the Guomindang. It also triggered in-fighting between communists and left-wing nationalists in Wuhan that contributed to the collapse of Wang Jingwei’s government there. By late summer 1927, right-wing nationalists were ascendant in the Guomindang and Chiang Kai-Shek had emerged as the dominant republican leader of China.

Thousands of communists were forced underground in the cities or dispersed to rural areas. Some attempted to fight back. In response to the Shanghai massacre, on August 1st, 1927, the Communist Party launched an uprising in Nanchang against the Nationalist Wuhan government, which had previously been sympathetic to the Communists. The conflict meant that the Wuhan government and Chiang were once again aligned to crush the CCP.

This period is also acknowledged to have seen the emergence of the CCP’s “Red Army,” comprised of armed peasants and former nationalist soldiers. Despite KMT efforts to suppress the CCP forces, the communists successfully established control over many areas in southern China after attacks on cities such as Changsha, Shantou, and Guangzhou. In September, the leader of the Wuhan government, Wang Jingwei, was forced into exile.

By this point, three capitals were in effect across China: internationally-recognized Beijing, the KMT regime in Nanjing, and CCP-held Wuhan. This marked the start of a decade-long struggle known as the Ten-Year Civil War.

A large group in southern China led by Mao Zedong established a base in the remote Jinggang Mountains. A Kuomintang counterinsurgency campaign forced Mao and his group to relocate once again, and they moved into the border region between Jiangxi and Fujian provinces.

In order to rebuild the party's strength, the 6th National Congress ordered these rural cadres to organize soviet governments. Mao's group founded the Jiangxi Soviet, which became the largest and best administered soviet thanks to the number of Communist cadres from across the country that took refuge there. Although the Central Committee of the Communist Party was still underground in Shanghai during this period, the center of political gravity had begun to shift to Mao in Jiangxi.

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  • GunslingerSky [she/her]
    ·
    6 months ago

    For a while I didn't understand why nobody here liked chapo trap house but noe that I've listened to like 10 episodes I now understand why.

    Typing too much about podcast I don't like

    The episodes are somehow simultaneously not polically engaged and when they cover meaningless drama they aren't even funny. Like let's tame the recent episode where they talked about Kanye. They were talking about him and his mental health stuff and one of them chimed in and said that sometimes in situations like this there's actually too much mental health help and that's why Kanye is like this. Its just like what? Aren't you supposed to be communists? Medical care in the USA is fucking dogshit. He's like this because in combination with his mental health issues, he sees the problems brought on by capitalism, but then thinks "no capitalism can't possibly be the problem. Me being a billionaire is a good thing actually". He ignores class dynamics and uses antisemitism to justify the fact he's a billionaire and to seperste himself from any of the problems he contributes to

    Also was chapo good before Matt had his stroke? Heard good things about him and have seen a couple finny bits on YouTube so idk if its a thing where having him gone brings the podcast down a lot

    • YearOfTheCommieDesktop [they/them]
      ·
      6 months ago

      Matt is good but admittedly I mostly remember him on regular chapo as just riffing with the boys and the occasional matt-jokerfied rant. his solo stuff and side projects were when he was really cooking more

    • Kaplya
      ·
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      The podcast was at least interesting in between 2016-2020 between the two Bernie runs (it exploded in popularity after Clinton lost to Trump) but these days it can’t seem to find a direction that works, other than serving as a parasocial substitution for a few friends who joke around politics and read new articles for you to get angry with together.

      Trueanon’s model, on the other hand, has a much more sustainable trajectory. Most episodes, you feel like you’re learning something new, even though while the hosts may not be the most knowledgeable, they at least put in the effort to research a topic. It’s like someone already did the research for you and presenting the topic in an entertaining fashion.

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
        ·
        6 months ago

        CTH's whole shtick made a lot more sense back when we (well, I) still thought we could maybe improve anything through electoral politics.

    • GinAndJuche
      ·
      6 months ago

      I only started listening during the primary and binged the backlog. Stopped listening around late 19 early 20.

      there are many factors I could speculate about being the final nail in their quality, but as a rule I think that once a podcast becomes comfortable in a formula the quality plummets. The moments of quality that stand out afterwards are when they find something that actually sparks joy. Like the Brooklyn tunnel incident, riffing on that felt like the old podcast.

      Losing Virgil (personal conspiracy theory is he cancelled himself, very sus once you dig into it) Amber becoming a no show, and then losing Matt all hurt the quality. To be fair, they’ve had some really good guests lately to fill in for Matt, but not as good as solid history rant. Got me to tune in a few times if nothing else.

      Back to the formula point, you can see it in Trashfuture to an extreme degree. Same for all the shows that share that producer, possibly an op given his background and the rampant anti-AES sentiment within all of them.

      • bleepbloopbop [they/them]
        ·
        6 months ago

        I kinda like a show with a solid formula tbh, but eventually they run out of material, or the hosts clearly get bored of it, or both. But maybe I just like slop. The nate bathea cinematic universe is all a little sus but there's at least entertainment to be found, if not amazing political takes, in the few I listen to (Trashfuture, formerly WTYP, will probably pick it back up again). I think the anti-AES stuff is more easily explained by them all being westerners and public figures than anything the producers are doing but idk

        Also if virgil put out fake plausibly deniable assault allegations against himself that would be pretty fucked up ngl. Not as bad as actually assaulting someone, but bad.

        Losing amber and matt really sucked tho. I hope Matt is alright, amber being back honestly hasn't changed a lot for me but it doesn't hurt either

    • bigboopballs [he/him]
      ·
      6 months ago

      eh, the quality of each episode varies a lot. and the show was best in its first few years.