Galluping Mao: A 1993 Opinion Poll
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Tang Can, Zhu Rui, Li Chunling and Shen Jie
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In late 1993, the Beijing Youth News published a survey conducted by scholars at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. They interviewed one hundred people about what they thought of Mao Zedong
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Beijing Youth News is a popular daily produced under the aegis of the Party Youth League. Most of its editors and writers were under 40 and the paper was widely read among Beijing youth. It was in the vanguard of commercialized Party propaganda.
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The tone of the report is factual and detailed. It frankly admits what everyone knows from their own experience: that official ideology had little impact on young people, especially those in their early 20s and under. Unfortunately, although it indicates that some of those questioned were highly critical of Mao, no details are given.
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The poll was published with a lengthy commentary by Yang Ping, one of the paper's leading journalists who was also an active conservative involved with the journal Strategy and Management (Zhanlüe yu guanli). Daresay because of the alarming ignorance about Mao and official ideology among the young that the survey reveals, Yang, a young man himself, wrote an editorial comment entitled "Confronting Mao Zedong":
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Young people today who have experienced the twists and turns of the 17 years since Mao's death understand all too well the negative influence of romantic and extremist approaches to China's Reform. We appreciate that the transformation of Chinese society cannot happen overnight. We need to develop a tireless spirit of long-term commitment. We are also painfully aware that nihilism, cynicism, and petit-bourgeois attitudes are corrupting the souls of our youth at this crucial juncture in our history. It is in this context that Mao Zedong's boldness of vision, his indomitable will, his approach that combined revolutionary realism with revolutionary romanticism allowing him to determine the way forward and then not stray off
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