Survivor of Mao’s China Xi Van Fleet talked about the gender insanity under the communist dictator, comparing it to what she’s seen in the United States with the transgender push.
Speaking on “The Megyn Kelly Show” podcast, the Chinese woman and author of “Mao’s America” talked about growing up in Communist China during the Cultural Revolution, and issued a stark warning to Americans about the similar rhetoric she hears from Vice President Kamala Harris and the Left to that of Mao Zedong’s.
“I know dear to your heart is the transgender issue. And people ask me, ‘Did Mao do transgender in China?’” Van Fleet told Megyn Kelly. “No, he didn’t. He did not have to because he had enough in tactics to achieve his goal, but he did attack gender role.”
“And so growing up in China, the girls were all taught that femininity is toxic and it is weak,” she added. “It is bourgeois. It is not revolutionary. It is something to get rid of. … women and young girls, we think, talk, act, and dress like men and we become kind of like men.”
“And that is what Mao did to China. Mao was dealing with a people that never knew freedom and always, always live under tyranny,” Van Fleet continued. “In America, this is the free people. And so they have to be more sophisticated. And what they’re doing in America, I have to say, it’s more evil than what Mao did, only that Mao killed more people. But this idea of you can transition from one gender to another just by identifying yourself, that is absolutely evil.”
Kelly pointed out that it’s also “very destabilizing for the family unit, for the community, for the school, and that seems to be of some benefit to a Mao-type thinker.”
Van Fleet also talked about how the communist dictator used “identity politics to divide people and control people and set them against each other” and said
“Back then I really did not know. I did not pay that much attention,” Van Fleet explained. “I tell everyone that when I came to America, I thought I left communism behind me. I thought, I really thought there’s nothing for me to worry about and as myself, I made this mistake.”
“I did not share my stories of the Cultural Revolution with my friends, my family,” she added. “I just want to forget about it. And so now in 2020, I realized that people just don’t know. They don’t know and that is why actually in 2022, I finally decided that a short interview here and a speech over there won’t do it. I quit my job and wrote that book, and that book really explained the parallels of these two Cultural Revolutions, and [I] tell everyone this is history repeating.”
No comments:
Post a Comment