Reds 2.0
When you think about communist propaganda, you might think of Stalin glaring down at you from a wall, happy workers singing in strangely clean factories and well-thumbed copies of Mao’s little red book. But it’s the twenty-first century, and even commies must keep up with the times. A dissident faction of Peru’s Shining Path — ...
When you think about communist propaganda, you might think of Stalin glaring down at you from a wall, happy workers singing in strangely clean factories and well-thumbed copies of Mao's little red book.
When you think about communist propaganda, you might think of Stalin glaring down at you from a wall, happy workers singing in strangely clean factories and well-thumbed copies of Mao’s little red book.
But it’s the twenty-first century, and even commies must keep up with the times. A dissident faction of Peru’s Shining Path — VRAE — is now making its case online, with a website and You Tube uploads of revolutionarily inspiring songs.
The songs performed by a VRAE leader in the Andean musical style of Huayño assure the listener that:
Imperialism will be defeated/socialism will flower the world/ imperialism, mainly genocidal Yankees, sucks the blood of the millions of poor around the world/to combat them, to defeat them, is our task/to annihilate them with our forces is our obligation."
But, the political analysis on their website is even better. They tear apart the jailed Shining Path leader Abimael Guzman, labeling him a "revisionist" and a terrorist, and criticize governments such as Nepal, Hamas and Bolivia for practicing pseudo-socialism.
The tract reads like a blast from the past, as if the Amazon fosters active denial of lost battles (many Japanese immigrants in Brazil famously denied their emperor’s defeat for nearly a decade). In a shout out to Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, they call him the natural leader of socialism, upon whom it is incumbent to lead the armed fight against Yankee imperialism. They urge unity in this:
We must put to one side the narrow nationalism which is very noxious and damaging … [and which is] parasitically fomented by Yankee imperialism and its lackeys."
Extra points for their genious use of the word lackey together with Yankee imperialism– when’s the last time you heard that one?
While it’s all song and talk — and assurances of democratic intentions — on the internet, Peruvian authorities are somewhat concerned about the possibility of the narco-terrorist group recruiting more followers. Leaders from the main Shining Path group, which put down arms a decade ago, are contemplating running for office in upcoming Peruvian elections.
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