Great Leap Forward Propoganda Poster 1958 |
Backyard Furnace |
Eliminating the Last Sparrow 1959 |
But the greatest damage
was to agriculture. Poorly planned
planting procedures were mandated by party officials in Beijing .
As mentioned above, labor was in short supply because of steel
making. There was no fertilizer. Typical of problems in a communist society
the ownership of night soil, the common fertilizer of the era, came into
dispute. Party officials said it was
state property, the peasants claimed their own waste for their garden plots. The
state won. When locusts began destroying
crops, China
began a program of enlisting it’s hundreds of millions in the effort to kill
and many as possible. That effort also
included birds that were devouring the harvested grain. Unfortunately this ill advised program made a
greater dent in the bird population than 0n insects. The results were predictable. Insects thrived without birds to control
them.
Despite the agricultural
shortages, grain was sent to the cities leaving rural China to starve. And they did.
You would think we should
have learned our lessons by now that command economies simply do not work. But
this administration continues to run hell bent into ideologically driven
projects. It still promotes electric
generation policies with costs double to quintuple existing methods. It pushes electric cars the public refuses to
buy and it forces us to buy oil from unreliable nations who maintain a pricing
cartel to keep prices high.
But unlike China of Mao’s
era and today’s, we still have the ability to vote these people out.