NOTES OF CHINESE SOCIETY
1 A comprador, in the original
sense of the word, was the Chinese manages or the senior Chinese employee in a
foreign commercial establishment. The compradors served foreign economic
interests and bad close connection with imperialism and foreign capital.
2 The Étatistes were
a handful of shameless fascist politicians who at that time formed the
Chinese Étatiste Youth League, later renamed the Chinese Youth
Party. They made counter-revolutionary careers for themselves by opposing the
Communist Party and the Soviet Union and received subsidies from the various
groups of reactionaries in power and from the imperialists.
3 For further discussion of the
role of the national bourgeoisie, see "The Chinese Revolution and the
Chinese Communist Party", Chapter 2, Section 4, Selected Works of
Mao Tse-tung, Vol. II.
4 Tai Chi-tao joined the
Kuomintang in his youth and for a time was Chiang Kai-shek's partner in stock
exchange speculation. After Sun Yat-sen's death in 1925 he carried on
anti-Communist agitation and prepared the ground ideologically for Chiang
Kai-shek's counter-revolutionary coup d'état in 1927. For years be was a
faithful running dog to Chiang Kai-shek in the counter-revolution. He committed
suicide in February 1949, driven to despair by the imminent doom of Chiang
Kai-shek's regime.
5 The Chen Pao was
the organ of the Association for the Study of Constitutional Government, a
political group which supported the rule of the Northern warlords.
6 In 1923 Sun Yat-sen, with the
help of the Chinese Communist Party, decided to reorganize the Kuomintang bring
about Kuomintang-Communist co-operation and admit members of the Communist
Party into the Kuomintang. In January 1924 he convened in Canton the
Kuomintang's First National Congress at which he laid down the Three Great
Policies--alliance with Russia, co-operation with the Communist Party and
assistance to the peasants and workers. Mao Tse-tung, Li Ta-chao, Lin Po-chu,
Chu Chiu-pai and other comrades attended the Congress and played an important
part in helping the Kuomintang to take the road of revolution. Some of these
comrades were elected members, and others alternate members, of the Central
Executive Committee of the Kuomintang.
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