My child is colonizing my "saved for later" list.
Not even born and she's seriously upping my reading game here. Its a big step to go from The Very Hungry Caterpillar to Essential Juche Works
akshually sweaty, my grandma from Russia said that it was actually Stalin who was the very hungry one, why do you think he had such a large spoon?
Stalin suck in at night with his spoon and ate 40 bales of grain, that's 4 10's and that's terrible
Yes, I have. Its fine, but you should also note that it is essentially just excerpts of speeches Xi gave over the years. It will give you some insight to the CPC's goals and vision, but its very similar to Mao's Quotations in that you're not gonna have a fully laid out treatise or in-depth analysis of anything.
I still liked it, but I didn't look into it at all before buying it, so I was slightly disappointed. Still gonna buy 2 and 3 though
you’re not gonna have a fully laid out treatise or in-depth analysis of anything.
Is there another work that does do this for xi jinping thought?
Most practical leaders don't have a manifesto or theory in the same way revolutionary ones do. They're too busy with actually governing to write books constantly. Stalin and Kim Il Sung were pretty unique in this way.
Even Lenin didn't write much after the October revolution.
claims to be general secretary
doesn't actually write anything
:thonk:
I've been looking for some myself, but I'm sure someone around here knows.
In my bookshelf I have a pamphlet from the North Korean pavilion at the World's Fair 2012. It's called "Sea of Fire".
Really. It's a conversation starter for sure.
Unlike you libs I read real theory *thumbing through mr. Tiger goes wild *
Mr.tiger went wild on the capitalists and led to a near even redistribution of idk the jungle or something
but he allowed liberal reforms that lead to the buergiouse decadence of daniel tiger's neighborhood.
Can we talk about how "if you give a mouse a cookie" is literal Malthusian propaganda and advocacy for austerity?
Thank you! just did. My list is like 400$ worth of communist propaganda and baby books now and this is something that I did not foresee.
Click Clack Moo has quickly become a favorite of ours. I get a kick out of reading the one star reviews for the books I read my kid.
Since everyone here is libs I can only assume your kid is the one reading Xi and Juche
She's not even born yet, and is further left than I ever will be.
The kids are alright.