Survivors of Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution say they are experiencing post-traumatic stress as they witness history repeating itself on college campuses as “hordes of Marxists” occupy anti-American and anti-Israel demonstrations. talk.
Lily Tan Williams, who is currently running as a Republican candidate for the House of Representatives in New Hampshire’s 2nd District, said in an interview with Fox News Digital that she doesn’t want the country she left to come back to haunt her. He said he was concerned about this.
“Sometimes I get nervous and when I see them playing drums and us singing, I feel like I have a bit of PTSD and I can’t sleep well.”[ing] slogan, [are] It humiliates the people, and huge numbers of young people are shouting not only “Death to Israel” but also “Death to America.” “Oh my god…I feel like the Red Guards are active again,” she said.
The Red Guards were a large student-led paramilitary social movement in China mobilized by Chairman Mao Zedong in 1966.
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Lily Tan Williams survived the Cultural Revolution, China’s violent political purges by Mao Zedong. (Fox News Digital)
One of the most effective tools Mao used to promote the revolution was the youth, Tan Williams said. Most of the young people currently protesting on university campuses are “naive” and therefore ripe for manipulation by malicious actors, she added.
“Many students who were protesting on university campuses [are]…Confused…Because Mao Zedong said so, the minds of young people are blank sheets of paper on which you can paint the most beautiful pictures,” she said, adding that they are “naive and easily manipulated. He added that he was thinking, [for] revolution”
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Tan Williams was born in western China’s Sichuan province during the height of Mao Zedong’s horrific terrorist campaign, the Cultural Revolution. She experienced extremely poor living conditions, food rationing, social chaos, and communist brainwashing.
She came to the U.S. in 1988 for graduate studies, but it took her 20 years of travel in the U.S. to rid herself of all the communist propaganda.

Lily Tan Williams grew up during Mao’s Cultural Revolution. (Courtesy of Lily Tan Williams)
of China’s Cultural Revolution was a political purge The persecution of millions of suspected counter-revolutionaries orchestrated by Mao Zedong, President of the People’s Republic of China from 1949 to 1976. This violent movement violently opposed the “four olds”: old ideas, old culture, old customs, and old things. We featured customs and the destruction of cultural artifacts.
Tan Williams shares the Chinese revolution, which is class-based, and the neo-Marxist cultural revolution, which she believes is based on identity groups that have formed coalitions based on a matrix of oppression, viewing Palestinians as an oppressed group. I drew parallels with.
“This is classic Marxism: oppressor versus oppressed. It doesn’t matter how many subcategories you put under each category,” she said. “And that’s the challenge of this movement. It’s well-funded. And students on college campuses are leading the way.”
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“They are taking advantage of this international conflict and chanting ‘from the river to the sea’ before Israel even has a chance to mount a defense and go after Hamas. [the protesters] It was during their time that they first called for the genocide of Israel. [protesting right after Oct. 7]’ added Tan Williams.

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Mao Zedong’s economic policy “Great Leap Forward”, up to 45 million people died. Adhering to communist ideals, the state assumed control of production. Private farmland was confiscated and food distribution was placed under government control. As a result, Chinese people died from starvation, forced labor, suicide, and torture.
The five black categories of oppressors included right-wingers, wealthy peasants, landowners, counter-revolutionaries, and negative influencers. On the other side were the red category, the poor working class, the Revolutionary Guards, and active members of the Chinese Communist Party.





