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3/25/2025

Exposing Western Lies About China: The Truth About Chinese Socialism By: Jonathan Brown

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Introduction

For decades, Western media and politicians have told us that China is an authoritarian dictatorship, a menace to the free world. But what if everything we’ve been told about China is a lie? What if China’s development is not the story of authoritarianism, but rather a case study in socialism’s ability to lift hundreds of millions out of poverty, defy imperialist domination, and create an alternative path to Western neoliberal decay?

China’s trajectory is one of the most misunderstood—and deliberately misrepresented—stories of our time. The U.S. ruling class fears China, not because it is authoritarian, but because it represents a model of socialist development that challenges Western capitalism. This essay will break down China’s revolutionary history, its socialist construction, and the lessons we can apply to our own struggle for socialism in the United States.

From Humiliation to Revolution: China’s Anti-Colonial Struggle

Before 1949, China was a semi-feudal, agrarian society devastated by foreign imperialism. The British Opium Wars (1839-1860s) forced China into submission, flooding its people with narcotics and extracting wealth through exploitative trade policies. The country was carved up by Western powers and Japan, forced into humiliating treaties that stripped away its sovereignty. Meanwhile, local Chinese warlords ruled over a fractured nation, keeping peasants in extreme poverty.

Revolution was inevitable. The Communist Party of China (CPC), founded in 1921, organized the working class and peasantry, leading a decades-long struggle against both feudalism and foreign domination. In 1949, under Mao Zedong’s leadership, the People’s Republic of China was proclaimed, ending over a century of humiliation and beginning the socialist transformation of the country.

Mao Zedong’s Socialist Construction

Mao’s government immediately took radical steps to build socialism. Landlords and capitalists were expropriated, industry was nationalized, and collectivization of agriculture ensured that the peasantry—who made up the majority of the population—could finally control their own destinies. Massive infrastructure projects propelled China from a feudal backwater into an emerging industrial power.

However, socialist construction was not without challenges. The Great Leap Forward, a push for rapid industrialization, faced serious obstacles, including food shortages and economic mismanagement. The Cultural Revolution, meant to prevent capitalist restoration, unleashed intense political struggle and instability. Despite these setbacks, Mao’s leadership laid the foundation for China’s rise, proving that a poor, colonized nation could defy imperialism and take its fate into its own hands.

Deng Xiaoping’s Market Reforms: Socialism Adapts

After Mao’s death, China faced a choice: stagnate in economic isolation like the Soviet Union, or find a way to modernize while maintaining socialism. Deng Xiaoping introduced Reform and Opening-Up, allowing controlled market mechanisms while keeping state control over key industries. This was not a surrender to capitalism, but rather a tactical adaptation of socialism to China’s specific historical characteristics, rather than surrendering to the neoliberal model of the West.

Unlike in the West, where the market is a tool for private capitalists to extract profit at the expense of the working class, China’s market economy remains firmly under the control of the Communist Party. The CPC subordinates market forces to socialist planning, ensuring that economic growth benefits the majority rather than a handful of oligarchs. Private enterprise exists, but it is constrained by strict state oversight and must serve the broader socialist development goals of the nation. In China, the market is a tool to meet human needs; in the U.S., it is a mechanism for private tyranny.

China’s Greatest Achievement: The Elimination of Extreme Poverty

Marxism teaches that poverty eradication and material prosperity are core socialist goals. Under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party, China has eliminated extreme poverty, lifting 800 million people out of destitution—the greatest anti-poverty campaign in history.

Compare this to the U.S., where homelessness, medical bankruptcies, and wage stagnation worsen every year under capitalism. While China invests in infrastructure, social welfare, and economic planning, the U.S. pours its wealth into endless wars, corporate bailouts, and tax cuts for billionaires. The contrast could not be clearer: socialism delivers material results while capitalism falters.

Xi Jinping: Leading China to Common Prosperity

President Xi Jinping represents a new era of socialist leadership. Under his governance, China has:
  • Reined in excessive wealth accumulation, cracking down on billionaires.
  • Expanded social welfare, pushing for Common Prosperity—a policy that ensures economic fairness.
  • Strengthened anti-corruption efforts, purging over 1.5 million corrupt officials to maintain party discipline.
  • Challenged Western imperialism with the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), building infrastructure worldwide without resorting to colonial exploitation.

Xi’s leadership demonstrates that China is not simply "riding the wave" of past success—it continues to refine and adapt socialism for the 21st century.

Why the U.S. Fears China: The New Cold War

The U.S. ruling class sees China’s rise as an existential threat—not to democracy, but to U.S. hegemony. China challenges the global dominance of Western finance capital, proving that an alternative to neoliberalism is possible.

To manufacture consent for conflict, U.S. media bombards the public with propaganda, demonizing China over Hong Kong, Xinjiang, and Taiwan. In reality:
  • Hong Kong’s protests were fueled by Western-backed separatists.
  • Xinjiang’s “genocide” claims are baseless fabrications meant to justify economic warfare.
  • The U.S. arms Taiwan separatists to provoke war, just as it does in Ukraine.

This Cold War is different from the last. China is not economically isolated like the USSR was — it is a global trade powerhouse with cutting-edge technology. Sanctions and economic blackmail will not break China, and the U.S. empire is panicking.

Lessons for U.S. Socialists: Building Socialism with American Characteristics

China’s experience offers concrete lessons for socialist organizing in the United States:
  1. Economic Planning Works – Infrastructure, jobs, and technology must be publicly owned and oriented towards shared human needs, rather than private corporate profit.
  2. A Socialist Movement Must Address Material Needs – The U.S. working class will not be won over by abstract ideology alone. They need concrete solutions—healthcare, housing, jobs, wages.
  3. Reject Bourgeois Electoralism – The Democratic Party will never bring socialism. Real change comes from mass movements and working-class power.
  4. Adapt Socialism to American Conditions – China’s model cannot simply be copied, but state planning, economic prosperity, and anti-imperialism are universal socialist principles.

Conclusion: The Struggle Ahead

China’s rise proves that socialism is not a relic of the past—it is the future. From Mao’s revolutionary leadership to Xi Jinping’s modernization efforts, the People’s Republic of China has shown that a working-class state can break free from imperialism and thrive.

​The challenge for us is to take these lessons and apply them to our struggle in America. The U.S. empire is crumbling under its own contradictions—our task is to organize a socialist movement that prioritizes economic prosperity, working-class leadership, and anti-imperialism.

The world is shifting. The future belongs to socialism. It’s time to fight for it.

Republished from the Praxis Report.

Author
​

Jonathan Brown teaches high school social studies in Athens, Georgia, where he inspires students with his deep passion for exploring society and history. He also teaches sociology as an adjunct professor at Athens Technical College. Jonathan holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Georgia and a master’s degree from California State University, Northridge, where he studied culture and politics from a Marxist perspective. Outside the classroom, Jonathan plays guitar in a punk rock band and is an active member of the Jewish anti-Zionist community. He is a committed member of the American Communist Party. Jonathan is the co-host of the Praxis Report, a podcast focusing on revolutionary theory and political analysis.

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1 Comment
Siden04
3/26/2025 09:10:31 pm

'Mao Zedong’s Socialist Construction'

In his Report of an Investigation into the Peasant Movement in Hunan (1927), Mao admitted that the coming revolution would not be socialist: ‘To overthrow these feudal forces is the real objective of the revolution.’ Writing four years earlier Sylvia Pankhurst stated: ‘Socialism means plenty for all. We do not preach a gospel of want and scarcity, but of abundance. Our desire is not to make poor those who today are rich, in order to put the poor in the place where the rich now are. Our desire is not to pull down the present rulers to put other rulers in their places’ (Socialism, Workers’ Dreadnought, 28 July 1923). Does this sound familar? What follows is almost prophetic: '...We do not call for limitation of births..'

Mao stated in 1949 'China must utilize all the factors of urban and rural capitalism that are beneficial and not harmful to the national economy and the people's livelihood, and we must unite with the national bourgeoisie in common struggle. Our present policy is to regulate capitalism, not to destroy it.'

Pepe Escobar: ‘…the Deng drive produced a de facto capitalist economy presided by a bureaucratic bourgeoisie: “As has been true of the histories of all capitalist economies, the power of the state was very much involved in establishing China’s labor market. Indeed, in China a highly repressive state apparatus played a particularly direct and coercive role in the commodification of labor, a process that has proceeded with a rapidity and on a scale that is historically unprecedented.”’ (ICH, 13/1/24)

Indeed. Capitalist hallmarks, such as class society, commodity production, profit motive, exploitation of wage labour, markets, etc., exist there as they do worldwide.
The estimated net worth of the 153 members of China's Parliament and its advisory body amounts to $650 billion! (Consortium News, 28 July 2020). Sure, the standard of poverty has been raised (a normal feature of capitalist development) but according to a Peking University report from 2016, the income disparity is getting worse with the top 1 percent owning a third of the country’s wealth and the bottom 25 percent of the population just 1 percent. The 99% never voted for this!

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