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  • Hi, I’m John Green

  • and this is Crash Course World History

  • and today were going to returnsadly for the last time on Crash Course

  • to China.

  • By the way, Stan brought cupcakes.

  • That’s good.

  • I wish I could draw some parallel between this and China,

  • but I got nothing.

  • It’s just delicious.

  • I’ll sure miss you, piece of felt Danica cut out in the shape of China

  • using blue because we felt red would be cliché.

  • Mr. Green, Mr. Green, Mr Green!

  • You don’t get to talk until you shave the mustache, Me From The Past.

  • So the 20th century was pretty big for China because it saw

  • not one but two revolutions.

  • China’s 1911 revolution might be a bigger deal from a world historical perspective

  • than the more famous communist revolution of 1949,

  • but you wouldn’t know it because

  • 1. china’s communism became a really big deal during the cold war,

  • and 2. Mao Zedong, the father of communist China,

  • was really good at self-promotion.

  • Like, you know his famous book of sayings?

  • Pretty much everyone in China just had to own it.

  • And I mean, HAD TO. [makes sense; staff only allowed to read John Green books]

  • [best]

  • [intro music]

  • [intro music]

  • [intro music]

  • [intro music]

  • [intro music]

  • [ever]

  • So as you know doubt recall from past episodes of Crash Course,

  • China lost the Opium wars in the 19th century,

  • resulting in European domination, spheres of influence, et cetera,

  • all of which was deeply embarrassing to the Qing dynasty

  • and led to calls for reform.

  • One strand of reform that called for China to adopt

  • European military technology and education systems

  • was called self strengthening,

  • and it was probably would have been a great idea,

  • considering how well that worked for Japan.

  • But it never happened in China--

  • well, at least not until recently.

  • Instead,

  • China experienced the disastrous anti-Western Boxer Rebellion of 1900,

  • which helped spur some young liberals, including one named Sun Yat Sen,

  • to plot the overthrow of the dynasty.

  • Oh,

  • it’s already time for the Open Letter... [unscoffingly skids across unscoured set]

  • An open letter to Sun Yat Sen.

  • Oh, but first,

  • let’s see what’s in the secret compartment today.

  • Oh, more champagne poppers? [seriously, more champagne poppers?]

  • Stan, at this point aren’t we sort of belaboring the fact

  • that China invented fireworks?

  • Wow!

  • That is innovation at work right there.

  • We used to not be able to fire off one of these,

  • and now we can fire off six at a time if you count the two secret ones

  • from behind me. [strangest. job. ever.]

  • Dear Sun Yat Sen,

  • you were amazing!

  • I mean the Republic of China calls you the father of the nation,

  • the People’s Republic of China calls you

  • the forerunner of the democratic revolution.

  • Youre the only thing they can agree on.

  • You lived in China, Japan, the United States,

  • you converted to Christianity, you were a doctor, you were the godfather of

  • an important science fiction writer.

  • [not important enough to help "Cordwainer" catch on as a popular baby name, however]

  • But the infuriating thing is that

  • you never actually got much of a chance to rule China,

  • and you would have been great at it.

  • I mean,

  • your three principles of the people,

  • Nationalism, Democracy, and the People’s Livelihood,

  • are three really great principles.

  • I mean the problem, aside from you not living long enough

  • is that you just didn’t have a face for Warhol portraits.

  • [Warhol thought anyone who had $25k had a face for his portraits, but point taken]

  • Huh, it’s too bad.

  • Best wishes, John Green.

  • So the 1911 revolution that led to the end of the Qing started when a bomb

  • accidentally exploded, at which point the revolutionaries were like,

  • were probably going to be outed, so we should just start the uprising now.”

  • The uprising probably wouldve been quelled like many before it except

  • this time the army joined the rebellion, because they wanted to become more modern.

  • The Qing emperor abdicated,

  • and the rebels chose a general, Yuan Shikai, as leader,

  • while Sun Yat Sen was declared president of a provisional republic on Jan 1, 1912.

  • A new government was created with a Senate and a Lower House,

  • and it was supposed to write a new constitution.

  • And after the first elections,

  • Sun Yat Sen’s party, the Guomindang

  • were the largest, but they weren’t the majority.

  • So Sun Yat Sen deferred to Yuan,

  • which turned out to be a huge mistake because he then outlawed the

  • Guomindang party and ruled as dictator.

  • But when Yuan Shikai died in 1916,

  • China’s first non-dynastic government in over 3000 years completely fell apart.

  • Localism reasserted itself with large-scale landlords

  • with small-scale armies ruling all the parts of China

  • that weren’t controlled by foreigners.

  • You might remember this phenomenon from earlier in Chinese history,

  • first during the Warring States period and then again for three hundred years

  • between the end of the Han and the rise of the Sui.

  • So the period in Chinese history between 1912 and 1949

  • is sometimes called the Chinese Republic,

  • although that gives the government a bit too much credit.

  • The leading group trying to re-form China into a nation state was the Guomindang,

  • but after 1920 the Chinese Communist Party was also in the mix.

  • And for the Guomindang to regain power from those big landlords and

  • reunify China, they needed some help from the CCP.

  • Now if an alliance between Communists and Nationalists

  • sounds like a match made in hell,

  • well, yes. It was.

  • That said,

  • the two did manage to patch things up for a while in the early 1920s,

  • you know, for the sake of the kids.

  • But then Sun Yat Sen died in 1925 and the alliance fell apart in 1927

  • when Guomindang leader Chaing Kai Shek got mad at the communists

  • for trying to foment socialist revolution, to which the communists were like,

  • But that’s what we do, man. Were communists.”

  • Anyway, this turned out to be a bad break up for a bunch of reasons,

  • but mainly because it started a civil war between

  • the Communists and the Nationalists.

  • Were not going to get into exhausting detail on the civil war but Spoiler alert:

  • the Communists won.

  • But there are a few things to point out:

  • First, even though Mao [pronounced like Maori] emerged victorious,

  • he and the communists were almost wiped out in 1934

  • except that they made a miraculous and harrowing escape,

  • trekking from southern China to the mountains in the north

  • in what has become famously known as the Long March,

  • a great example of historians missing an opportunity

  • since it could easily have been called the Long Ass March,

  • as it featured donkeys.

  • Second,

  • for much of the time the Gomindang was trying to crush the CCP,

  • significant portions of China were being occupied and/or invaded by Japan.

  • Thirdly,

  • the Communists were just better at fighting the Japanese

  • than the Nationalists were.

  • In spite of the fact that Chiang Kai Shek had extensive support from the U.S.

  • And each time the Nationalists failed against the Japanese,

  • their prestige among their fellow Chinese diminished.

  • It wasn’t helped by Nationalist corruption,

  • or their collecting onerous taxes from Chinese peasants,

  • or stories about Nationalist troops putting on civilian clothes

  • and abandoning the city of Nanking during its awful destruction

  • by the Japanese army in 1937.

  • Meanwhile,

  • the Communists were winning over the peasants in their northwestern enclave

  • by making sure that troops didn’t pillage local land

  • and by giving peasants a greater say in local government.

  • Now, that isn’t to say everything was rosy under Mao’s communist leadership,

  • even at its earliest stages.

  • By the way,

  • That is an actual chalk illustration. Very impressed. [thanks, boss.]

  • In a preview of things to come, in 1942 Mao initiated a “rectificationprogram.

  • Which basically meant students and intellectuals were sent

  • down into the countryside to give them a taste of whatreal Chinawas like

  • in an effort to re-educate them.

  • We try to be politically neutral here on Crash Course,

  • but we are always opposed to intellectuals doing hard labor. [lolzer]

  • But anyway,

  • within four years of the end of World War II the Communists routed

  • Chiang Kai Shek’s armies and sent them off to Taiwan.

  • and these military victories paved the way for Mao to declare

  • the People’s Republic of China on October 1, 1949.

  • so once in power,

  • Mao and the PRC were faced with the task of creating a new, socialist state.

  • And Mao declared early on that the working class in China

  • would be the leaders of a “people’s democratic dictatorship.”

  • Oh democratic dictatorships. Youre the BEST.

  • It’s all the best parts of democracy, and all the best parts of dictatorship.

  • You get to vote, but there’s only one choice.

  • It takes all the pesky thinking out it.

  • The PRC promised equal rights for women, rent reduction, land redistribution,

  • new heavy industry and lots of freedoms.

  • Including freedoms of

  • thought, speech, publication, assembly, association, correspondence, person,

  • domicile, moving from one place to another, religious belief, and

  • the freedom to hold processions and demonstrations.”

  • Yeah, NO.

  • Even putting aside the PRC’s failure to protect any of those rights,

  • Mao’s China wasn’t much fun if you were

  • a landlord or even if you were a peasant who’d done well.

  • Land redistribution and reform meant destroying the power of landlords,

  • often violently.

  • But centralizing power and checking individual ambition

  • proved difficult for the government,

  • and it was made harder by China’s involvement in the Korean War,

  • which helped spur the first mass campaign of Mao’s democratic dictatorship.

  • Designed to encourage support for the War,

  • the campaign was called the

  • Resist America and Aid Korea campaign,” [name's a bit clunky, innit?]

  • and it resulted in almost all foreigners leaving China.

  • A second campaign, againstcounterrevolutionarieswas much worse.

  • People suspected of sympathizing with the Guomindang,

  • or anyone insufficiently communist, was subject to humiliation and violence.

  • Between October 1950 and August 1951

  • 28,332 people accused of being spies or counterrevolutionaries

  • were executed in Guandong city alone.

  • A third mass campaign, theThree Anti Campaign” w

  • as aimed at reforming the Communist party itself.

  • And the final mass campaign, the Five Anti Campaign

  • was an assault on all bourgeois capitalism,

  • which effectively killed private business in China.

  • Very few of the victims of this last campaign actually died,

  • but capitalism was weakened and state control bolstered.

  • OK, let’s go to the Thought Bubble.

  • Mao and the CCP set out to turn China into an industrial powerhouse by following the

  • Soviet model.

  • We haven’t really talked about this, but under the Soviet system,

  • Russia was able to accomplish massive industrialization--

  • not to mention tens of millions of deaths from starvation--

  • through centralized planning and collectivization of agriculture,

  • following what were known as Five Year Plans.

  • The Chinese adopted the model of Five Year Plans beginning in 1953

  • and the first one worked,

  • at least as far as industrialization was concerned.

  • In fact, the plan worked even better than expected,

  • with industry increasing 121% more than projected.

  • In order for this to work though,

  • the peasants had to grow lots of grain and sell it at extremely low prices.

  • This kept inflation in check, and saving was encouraged by the fact that...

  • ...the Five Year Plan didn’t have many consumer goods,

  • so there was nothing to buy.

  • For urban workers,

  • living standards improved and China’s population grew to 646 million.

  • So far, Mao’s plan seemed to be working,

  • but there was no way that China could keep up that growth,

  • especially without some backsliding into capitalism.

  • So Mao came up with a terrible idea called the Great Leap Forward.

  • Mao essentially decided that

  • the nation could be psyched up into more industrial productivity.

  • Among many other bad ideas,

  • he famously ordered that individuals build small steel furnaces

  • in their backyard to increase steel production.

  • This was not a good idea.

  • First off, it didn’t actually increase steel production much.

  • Secondly, it turns out that people making steel in their backyard

  • who know nothing about making steelMake Bad Steel.

  • But the worst idea was

  • to pay for heavy machinery from the USSR with exported grain.

  • This meant there was less for peasants to eat

  • and as a result, between 1959 and 1962, 20 million people died,

  • probably half of whom were under the age of 10.

  • Jeez,Thought Bubble, that was sad.

  • And then in happier news came the Cultural Revolution!

  • Just kidding, it sucked.

  • By the middle of the sixties,

  • Mao was afraid that China’s revolution was running out of steam,

  • and he didn’t want China to end up just a bureaucratized police state like,

  • you know, most of the Soviet bloc.

  • and The Cultural Revolution

  • was an attempt to capture the glory days of the revolution and fire up the masses,

  • and what better way to do that than to empower the kids.

  • Frustrated students who were unable find decent, fulfilling jobs

  • jumped at the chance to denounce their teachers, employers,

  • and sometimes even their parents and to tear down tradition,

  • which often meant demolishing buildings and art.

  • The ranks of theseRed Guardsswelled

  • and anyone representing the so-calledfour olds

  • old culture, old habits, old ideas, and old customs

  • was subject to humiliation and violence.

  • Intellectuals were again sent to the countryside as they were in 1942;

  • millions were persecuted;

  • and countless historical and religious artifacts were destroyed.

  • But the real aim of the Cultural Revolution was

  • to consolidate Mao’s revolution,

  • and while his image still looms large,

  • it’s hard to say that China these days is a socialist state.

  • Many would argue that Mao’s revolution was extremely short-lived,

  • and that the real change in China happened in 1911.

  • That’s when the Chinese Republic ended 3,000 years of dynastic history

  • and forever broke the cyclical pattern the Chinese had used to understand their past.

  • I mean at least in some senses,

  • those Nationalist revolutionaries literally put an end to history.

  • That sense of living in a truly New World

  • has made many great and terrible things possible for China

  • but the legacy of China’s two revolutions is mixed at best.

  • China, for instance, made most of the camera we use to film this video.

  • And

  • China made most of the computers we use to edit. [i see what you did there, Stanny]

  • But no one in

  • the People’s Republic of China will legally be able to watch this video,

  • because the government blocks YouTube.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • I’ll see you next week.

  • Crash Course is

  • produced and directed by Stan Muller.

  • Our script supervisor is Meredith Danko.

  • Our associate producer is Danica Johnson.

  • The show is written by my high school history teacher

  • Raoul Meyer and myself,

  • and our graphics team is [not Secretly Canadian] Thought Bubble.

  • Last week’s phrase of the week was

  • "Disco Golf Ball."

  • If you want to guess at this week’s phrase of the week or suggest future ones,

  • you can do so in comments,

  • where you can also ask questions about today's videos

  • that will be answered by our team of historians.

  • If you like Crash Course, make sure youve subscribed.

  • Thanks for watching,

  • and as we say in my hometown,

  • DontForget The easiest time to add insult to injury is when signing somebody's cast.

Hi, I’m John Green

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