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History of Communism
Documenting Communism's Crimes
Against Humanity
In October 1917, the Bolshevik Revolution
-- the murderous Russian coup-d'etat -- birthed the deadliest mass killing
force ever visited upon the human race: Communism. In less than 100 years,
Communism has claimed more than 100 million lives. Today, it continues to
enslave one-fifth of the world's people.
And yet the United States, Communism's
greatest challenger and a symbol of freedom to the world, has no memorial
to commemorate these victims. We have no enduring reminder of the murderous
legacy of totalitarianism. We have no place to teach current and future
generations why America
fought to end what President Kennedy called the "long twilight
struggle" against Communist oppression.
Never Forget
This must change. A free people cannot
afford to forget the evils of Communism. We cannot allow the atrocities of
Lenin, Stalin, Mao, and Castro to fade into the background of history. We
must not forget the trail of blood and tears this utopian deception always
leaves behind:
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When the Bolsheviks murdered their way into power...
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When Lenin destroyed hundreds of thousands of
Cossacks...
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When the Kremlin starved more than six million in Ukraine...
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When Mao murdered tens of millions of Chinese peasants
during his "land reforms"...
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When Ho Chi Minh sent 850,000
Vietnamese to their graves in "education camps"...
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When Castro buried dissenters in the infamous Isle of Pines...
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When the student voices of freedom were silenced at Tiananmen Square...
A Moral Blind Spot
It is a great moral failing for a free
society to misunderstand the extent of Communism's atrocities. While the
horrors of Nazism are well known, who knows that the Soviet
Union murdered 20 million people? Who knows that China's
dictators have slaughtered an estimated 60 million? Who knows that the
Communist holocaust has exacted a death toll surpassing that of all of the
wars of the 20th century combined?
Just as we must grasp Communism's
brutality, we must understand the true cause of this era's most significant
event: the fall of the Soviet Union. As Vaclav
Havel said, "The fall of the Communist empire is an event on the same
scale of historical importance as the fall of the Roman
Empire." The West's triumph over the "evil
empire" was no accident of history. It was the result of a calculated
strategy by a grand alliance of political, military, religious, business
and labor leaders. These leaders deserve credit for the victory over
Communism many thought impossible.
The Battle Continues
Sadly, the specter of Communism still
haunts the world. In Russia,
one-third of the people believe that Stalin "did more good than bad
for the country," according to a recent poll. In China,
thousands of dissidents are imprisoned in the slave labor camps known as
the laogai. In North
Korea, masses starve as the leadership
threatens to unleash nuclear war. In Cuba, dissidents are routinely
imprisoned for peacefully petitioning for democratic reform.
Because of this, the Cold War victory
remains incomplete. A free society must not allow itself to be content
until everyone recognizes Communism is a road to terror and oppression.
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