Comrade, I don’t want you to be upset with me. You’re a very interesting conversationalist for me.
Believe me, I’m sometimes as genuinely surprised by your information as you are by mine.
According to my information, the Great Leap Forward (1958–1960) was Mao Zedong’s massive economic campaign aimed at the accelerated industrialization and modernization of China. The campaign failed due to utopian management methods, the destruction of agriculture, and environmental problems, resulting in the Great Chinese Famine—one of the largest humanitarian disasters in history.
According to my information, the imposition of pseudoscience (Lysenkoism): In agriculture, experiments were conducted with deep plowing and ultra-dense seeding, which led to soil depletion and a sharp drop in crop yields.
According to your information, crop yields increased by 150%.
If this has offended me, then I apologize to you, of course, but I don’t understand what I’m apologizing for… We’re talking about Mao the manager now.
Comrade, I don’t want you to be upset with me. You’re a very interesting conversationalist for me.
Believe me, I’m sometimes as genuinely surprised by your information as you are by mine.
According to my information, the Great Leap Forward (1958–1960) was Mao Zedong’s massive economic campaign aimed at the accelerated industrialization and modernization of China. The campaign failed due to utopian management methods, the destruction of agriculture, and environmental problems, resulting in the Great Chinese Famine—one of the largest humanitarian disasters in history.
https://zh.wikipedia.org/zh-hans/三年困难时期
You say that the foundation was laid…
According to my information, the imposition of pseudoscience (Lysenkoism): In agriculture, experiments were conducted with deep plowing and ultra-dense seeding, which led to soil depletion and a sharp drop in crop yields.
According to your information, crop yields increased by 150%.
If this has offended me, then I apologize to you, of course, but I don’t understand what I’m apologizing for… We’re talking about Mao the manager now.
What’s the catch, Comrade?