Marxism–Leninism–Maoism

Marxism–Leninism–Maoism, MLM, Gonzalo Thought, Shining Path, or Prachanda Path is a synthesis of Marxism–Leninism and  Maoism and is claimed to be a unified, coherent higher stage of Marxism. It was not synthesized until 1966 with the creation of the Historical Eight Documents by Charu Majumdar. This ideology was lated adopted and revitalized by leaders such as Abimael Guzman (Presidente Gonzalo), Pushpa Kamal Dahal (Prachanda), Ibrahim Kaypakkaya, Jose Maria Sison and Fusako Shigenobu. Leaders of the Communist Party of India - Marxist-Leninist-Maoist, Communist Party of Peru - Shining Path, Communist Party of Nepal - Unity Centre, Communist Party of Turkey - Marxist-Leninist, Communist Party of the Philippines, and the Japanese United Red Army respectively.

Some principles of MLM are:
 * New Democracy
 * Mass line
 * Law of contradiction
 * Anti-Splittism
 * Protracted people's war through rural heartland
 * Cultural Revolution

Marxism–Leninism–Maoism completely rejects the Three Worlds Theory, and consider Maoism to just be Marxism–Leninism applied to the particularities of the Chinese Revolution. It also rejects the revolution of the masses through a urban working class and rather protracted in the rural areas by the masses.

Cball-India.png India
MLM started in India during May 18, 1967 in a village called Naxalbari, West Bengal; a tenant-farmer was attacked by a landlord's gangs as a result of a land dispute, leading to a group of locals later killing the landlord. This attack was led by Kanu Sanyal, who was a local politician from the area who was indoctrinated by Maoism from bordering China. This was supported by other big-tenants, namely the leader of one of the local Communist Party of India party regions, Charu Majumdar, who helped spearhead and further collectivize the revolutionary principle by introducing the creation of the "Historic Eight Documents", a documentation spearheading the idea of a communist revolution led by the lower caste of Indian society, including workers, peasants and tribal peoples to overthrow the upper-class governing society, further spreading the attack of landlords and seizing of land by peoples under a MLM-styled governance. Because of this, this caused a divide between the then-ruling Communist Party of India in West Bengal, as supporting students and CPI leaders from Calcutta were showing support for the revolutionary movement, which led to a general divide in the party itself. As sympathizers for the Naxalite movement were kicked out from the party, many of the students and CPI leaders from those Universities later joined the Naxalite movement in West Bengal. This prospected movement caused much harm that Indira Gandhi, then-ruling President forced a massive campaign to destroy the movement, leading to the arrests of 20,000 members and supporters and the leader, Charu Majumdar himself. His later death in prison would spark ideological and political divide within the Naxalite movement. However, due to the massive spark of outcry by reported military warcrimes, this gained popularity especially within rural and tribal areas of India, most renowned being Bastar area of Chattisgarh province, where the Naxalites still have a strong hold until now.

Cball-Nepal.png Nepal
MLM started in Nepal following a split within the Communist Party of Nepal in 1994 by traditional Marxist and MLM-supporting members of the party, Leaders Baburam Bhattarai and Pushpa Kamal Dahal (Prachanda) attempted to join the 1994 elections, but weren't recognized due to their 'extreme ideology', and only recognized the Marxist-Leninist branch of the former Communist Party. This led to the party going underground, gaining support through political campaigning in areas of rural Nepal. This eventually coincided with the massacre of most of the Nepali monarchy by Prince Dipendra, who later was widely believed to be influenced by Prachanda's ideology. By 1996, the CPN-MLM's general congress had unanimously decided to launch a revolution unless their 40 demands were met. This led to the start of the Nepali Civil War, which lasted for 10 years until the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist party, who had by then held two major cities and large swathes of rural Nepal to sign the Comprehensive Peace Accord in 2006, which legalized the CPN-MLM for the 2006 incoming elections, who had then won by a massive landslide due to the unpopularity of the monarchy-government.

Cball-Peru.png Peru
MLM started in Peru when Abimael Guzman, a former university professor on philosophy, founded the Communist Party of Peru - Shining Path, also known as Sendero Luminoso. Guzman's foundations on Marxism-Leninism-Maoism were heavily rooted from a trip to China, where his adoration of Maoism led him to splinter from his original party, the Communist Party of Peru - Bandera Rojo. His party first gained popularity in the universities of San Cristobal of Huamanga, Huancayo and La Cantuta, where members of the student council were members of Sendero Luminoso. By 1980, Sendero Luminoso launched its guerilla campaign by destroying ballot boxes, seizing control of rural villages and gaining support through swift 'people's court' trials which punished land owners and businessmen. This gained initial support with locals in rural areas, although soon after, with atrocities committed by members of Sendero Luminoso against supposed 'party enemies', this led to a wave of massacres commited by the Sendero Luminoso. Action was not swiftly taken until the prseidency of Alberto Fujimori, which launched a strikingly destructive offensive against bases of the Sendero Luminoso. Both sides had committed atroicites, but by 1992, Guzman was captured by the Peruvian Secret Agency, leading to the fracture of the party. Nowadays, the Sendero Luminoso is but a shell of its own self, as its remaining branch-faction, the Militarized Communist Party of Peru gains money mostly through the Peruvian drug Trade in the Valle de los Rios Apurimac, Ene y Mantaro region (VRAEM).

Cball-Philippines.png The Philippines
MLM started in the Philippines during 1966, with the work of former political professor Jose Maria Sison, who wrote on the errors of the Communist Party of the Philippines in the 1930s-50s, under the former Hukbalahap communist revolution, and how Maoism is the way to Communism for the Philippines. His revolution was later joined by the Kabataang Makabayan, a communist student movement opposing then-dictator Ferdinand Marcos and his nationalist policies. By 1969, he launched the beginning of peoples war in the country under his party's military wing, the New People's Army (NPA). Through taking huge swathes of rural Luzon and Mindanao, members of the Philippine military had surrendered equipment and weapons to the NPA, and many had defected as well, gaining popularity with rural peoples due to the massive urban projects done by the dictatorship threatening rural development, and the kangaroo courts established by the dictatorship at the time. Due to this, even after the bloodless "People's Power Revolution", a million-strong rally that gave liberal politician Corazon Aquino presidency in the 80s, the New People's Army remained largely popular due to the liberal government's failure to rectify the mistakes on rural development and poverty in the Philippines. However, as members of the vastly-growing New People's Army had mixed political beliefs, with some only joining to gain money, Jose Maria Sison and the cabinet of the New People's Army launched a massive purge which had nearly 70% of the New People's Army's members kicked out due to lack of political alignment, destroying much of the mass base gained by the revolution at the time, and leading to the splintering of the group into two factions. But as of 2018, the New People's Army's cadreship had risen by 7% since the 1980s with over 8000 members, and continues to be a threat to the Philippine government. Jose Maria Sison himself was arrested in 1977 in his home in Quezon, and was released after 9 years by a pardon by the Corazon Aquino government. He later took political asylum in the Netherlands, where he was later re-arrested by the Dutch governemnt in 2007, and was released 5 months later after pressure from leftist groups in major countries and human rights organizations.

Ottoman.png Turkey
MLM started in Turkey in 1972 by former members of the Revolutionary Workers and Peasants Party of Turkey, who, after being emboldened by the imprisonment of Ibrahim Kaypakkaya, a Turkish Maoist, had organized in Tunceli Province and began a guerilla war against the Turkish Government. Kaypakkaya was ifluenced after reading Mao's writings in the University of Istanbul. After being expelled for opposing the 6th US fleet visit to Istanbul, he later joined the RWPPT and gathered support for Maoism within the party. He later broke off after calling the leader of the party a 'revisionist'. He was later jailed and imprisoned in 1971, and was executed in 1973. His supporters had largely remained in Tunceli until the Syrian Civil war, there the TKP/ML began growing in numbers as they allied themselves with the PKK, a Kurdish communist rebel group in Turkey and had gained significant numbers from internationalist fighters heading to Rojava, the main base of the TKP/ML. The group adopted from rural-based guerilla fighting to organized guerilla through urban attacks against landowners and monopoly businessmen mostly in the city of Istanbul, although rural-based guerilla fighting to a extent is still practiced in the mountains of Tunceli/Dersim province of Turkey.

Japan
MLM started in Japan in 1969 following a split in the New Left Communist League, where political leaders such as Fusako Shigenobu, Tsuneo Mori and Takaya Shiomi split from the group due to their occult-like anti-Japaneseism tendencies. They began their political movement without gaining initial support, only giving them a top member count of 400. Due to this, the group was quickly dispersed by the late 70s. The Japanese United Red Army was considered by many Maoist groups as some form of cautionary tale for their members, as they had committed to robberies, civilian-targeted terrorist attacks and kidnapping for extortion incidents. They are famous in Japan for holding a stowaway lodge hostage and turning it into a military centre, and for robberies across multiple banks in Japan. Their members also were sent to Beirut to fight for the Lebanese Communist Party and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. The group later dissolved in the early 80s, where their leader advocated for peaceful means of Communism for Japan.

Personality

 * Everyone but me are revisionists
 * Leaders who make mistakes are also revisionists
 * Election is fucking stupid, lets revolt instead
 * Urbanites deserve jack shit, the rural people deserve to rule!
 * Yall are gonna thank me once the entire world turns communist.
 * I'm a gardener, a housecleaner and a mechanic. Don't ask why all these jobs correlate to bomb ingredients please.

How to Draw
MLM_flag.svg
 * 1) Draw a ball with Eyes
 * 2) Fill it in red
 * 3) Add a white hammer and sickle in center (CPI-Maoist design)

Friends

 * [[File: ML.png]] Marxism–Leninism - You're always right.
 * [[File:Chavismo.png]] Chavismo - Fellow revolutionary, too bad your descendant is a revisionist scumbag.
 * [[File: Mao.png]] Maoism - Taught us guerrilla warfare and the mass line, but that 3 worlds theory shit, kinda cringe
 * [[File:Demcon.png]] Democratic Confederalism - Nubar Ozanyan died for your struggle.
 * [[File:Mariateguism.png]] Mariateguism - You inspired the communist fight in my country. But all of your sons are revisionist

Frenemies

 * [[File: Mao3word.png]] Maoism–Third Worldism - You're a Maoist, but cool it with the third worldism!
 * [[File: Mspont.png]] Mao-Spontex - Maoist anarchist? What?
 * [[File: Hoxha.png]] Hoxhaism - We both agree everyone who disagrees with us is a revisionist, so it's a shame you're such a revisionist.
 * [[File:Insarch.png]] Insurrectionary Anarchism - Nice tactics, but a state is needed and insurrection is not the answer.
 * [[File: Juche.png]] Juche - What kind of fuckery are you guys?

Enemies

 * [[File: Neoliberal-icon.png]] Neoliberalism - Neo-colonialist.
 * [[File: React.png]] Reactionary - F*ck em.
 * [[File: Lib.png]] Liberalism - Exploiters!
 * [[File: Cap.png]] Capitalism - Pigs, all of you.
 * [[File: Fujimori.png]] Fujimorism - Die.
 * [[File: Dengf.png]] Dengism - Revisionist rat! I will hang up dead dogs to condemn you!
 * [[File: Cultism.png]] Cultism - Thanks a lot for ruining the MLM acronym! We're the real MLMs! And we're  NOT  a cult!
 * [[File: Dsa.png]] Democratic Socialism - Cringe Revisionist.
 * [[File:Socdem.png]] Social Democracy - Fascist scum! Go back to simping for capitalists!
 * Socauth.png Social Authoritarianism - Fascist scum as well! You're using actual fascist shit under a socialist name, and i'll fucking hang you for that!
 * Gender Accelerationism.png Gender Accelerationism - Twitter 'communists' aren't communists, they're neoliberals! Quit calling yourselves commies, you liberalist scum!
 * Jihad.png Jihadism - We beat the fucking shit out of you in Raqqa, and we'll do it again, fascist scum!

Wikipedia

 * Marxism–Leninism–Maoism
 * Shining Path
 * Abimael Guzmán
 * Communist Party of India (Maoist)
 * Communist Party of Nepal (Unity Centre)
 * Communist Party of the Philippines
 * Communist Party of Turkey (Marxist-Leninist)
 * Japanese United Red Army

Literature

 * Mao Tse-Tung’s Contribution to Marxism-Leninism
 * Marxist-Leninist-Maoist Basic Course
 * The Science Of Revolution
 * Selected Works of İbrahim Kaypakkaya
 * Collected Works of the Communist Party of Peru
 * Historic Eight Documents of the Communist Party of India
 * Program for a People's Democratic Revolution

Youtube

 * What is Marxism-Leninism-Maoism?
 * Marxist-Leninist-Maoist Training Video (meme)