Anti-Maoism: Difference between revisions
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===Maoism being metaphysical=== | ===Maoism being metaphysical=== | ||
===Maoism being Third Worldist=== | ===Maoism being Third Worldist=== | ||
Critics of Maoism frequently conflate Marxism–Leninism–Maoism with [[Maoism–Third Worldism|''Maoism''–Third Worldism]], despite these tendencies being mutually conflicting. Although Maoists may hold disagreements over the extent of revolutionary potential in the [[First World]], most maintain that [[revolution]] is in fact possible. | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
Revision as of 22:00, 18 November 2025

Anti-Maoism encompasses nominally communist movements which seek to undermine and denigrate Marxism–Leninism–Maoism, Mao Zedong Thought, and the Mao Zedong himself.
Anti-Maoists frequently engage in dogmato-revisionism, anti-Chinese chauvinism, and generally fallacious arguments to attack Maoism. Most "communists" who are anti-Maoists belong to Hoxhaism, Dengism and other revisionist stances. These revisionists are threatened by Maoism due to it being the most advanced stage in Marxist thought, giving it the capacity to expose the shortcomings in their own tendencies.
The ideological superiority of Maoism is shown through its role as the guiding ideology for many communist movements around the world (such as Peru, the Philippines, and India); Hoxhaism, by contrast, has very few adherents that are actively waging revolution.
Stances
Maoism being class collaborationist
Maoism as a nationalist deviation
Maoism being dogmatic
Maoism being metaphysical
Maoism being Third Worldist
Critics of Maoism frequently conflate Marxism–Leninism–Maoism with Maoism–Third Worldism, despite these tendencies being mutually conflicting. Although Maoists may hold disagreements over the extent of revolutionary potential in the First World, most maintain that revolution is in fact possible.
Further reading
- Enver Hoxha Refuted (1981), by N. Sanmugathasan