How To Commemorate the Tiananmen Square Massacre of June 4, 1989
A mega post of vital resources about the CCP's heinous crimes during the Tiananmen Square Massacre, Chinese Cultural Revolution, and The Great Leap Forward
Comrades: Know your history. Today marks the 34th anniversary of the June 4, 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre. In modern clown world, we are living through a simultaneous slow-motion Tiananmen Square and Cultural Revolution.
Although the real death toll of Tiananmen Square will never be known, the thousands of peaceful protestors who were slaughtered are a rounding error compared to the tens of millions killed by the CCP in the past century. While the Nazis, Soviets, and Bolsheviks are long gone, the CCP is still in firm control over the world’s most populous country. They have crushed the spirit, culture, and history of one of the the world’s oldest civilizations. However, they martyred Tank Man into an immortal symbol for all dissenters.
Shortly after the Tiananmen Square massacre, China was admitted to the WTO. Since then, many leaders of the “free world” have become CCP court eunuchs. Every major Western institution from McKinsey to Harvard to the NBA has been bought off and castrated to never criticize the CCP. In their twisted minds, CCP slave labor is good for ESG because their sweatshops build the solar panels and batteries that will save the planet!
Ironically, the Call of Duty trailer that featured Yuri Bezmenov saying “know your history” was censored by Activision Blizzard at the behest of the CCP to remove a few seconds of footage from the Tiananmen Square Massacre:
Like my pseudonym Yuri, I have a twist of fate connection to that infamous day. If the Tiananmen Square Massacre did not occur, my parents would have returned to China and I would have grown up there in a parallel universe. I would not have enjoyed the freedoms of America and the ability to tell these stories on this samizdat. My family knew several people who were killed or imprisoned 34 years ago, which prompted my grandparents to also flee. They chose to work at McDonald’s here as free people, rather than keep their careers as slaves living in fear. My father Yuri Sr. wanted to be a writer, but his parents pushed him to study science so he could capitalize on a slim chance to move to America.
Now here I am 34 years later, writing on Substack and drawing attention to the horrors my family fled. For the full story, check out the struggle session podcast below.
To commemorate the CCP’s victims, I have compiled the following for you today:
All 5 of my posts about the CCP and the modern cultural revolution
12 rare and gruesome photos from the Tiananmen Square Massacre
20 images of the Chinese Cultural Revolution echoing in images of the American Woke Revolution
5 movie recommendations about the tumult of 20th-century China
Upgrades from comrade to commissar greatly appreciated:
The MSM no longer mentions Tiananmen Square, so we must amplify it here. Please share far and wide:
From the Yuri archives:
Tiananmen Square 1989: pictures from hope to despair
The censored screen shot from the Yuri Bezmenov Call of Duty trailer:
The Chinese Cultural Revolution of the 1960s echoing in the American Cultural Revolution of the 2020s:
5 movie recommendations if you have an extra 6 hours. The Last Emperor and Seven Years in Tibet were the last Hollywood movies ever made that criticize the CCP. Then tinseltown sold its soul in order to sell movie tickets in the Chinese market.
Back when CNN did real journalism and smuggled footage from Tiananmen Square out of the country:
This Tweet explains a lot:
How To Commemorate the Tiananmen Square Massacre of June 4, 1989
I used to manage a global team which included several Chinese guys based in Shanghai. One guy in particular was very western, loved the NBA, etc. When he visited the States he was very open about how much he despised Mao and the communist party but when I would visit him in China he would never discuss it. One time I mentioned something in passing at a Starbucks of all places he got noticeably uncomfortable. That was the first time I realized what it truly meant to live in a authoritarian dystopia. The eyes and ears are always there, even if they aren’t, they are in your mind...and that’s the point.
Fuck the commies.
I watched the news of Tiananmen as an 18 year old in the American Consulate TV room in Lusaka Zambia. The room was packed with Zambian men who watched on the edge of their seat. At each clip of gunfire or shot of wounded or dead protesters they shouted at the screen as if it was happening to them. They left the room later ready to tear something down.