Search
Close this search box.

Mao

Stalin, Mao, Communism, and their 21st-Century Aftermath (Part IV)—A Commentary by Adam R. Bogart, PhD

Part IV of Dr. Faria’s book examines the reign of Mao in China.          This is the one section of the book that absolutely shocked me. I had no idea that Mao was in a special class of amoral viciousness all his own. Of course, I knew that he was a brutal communist dictator, but […]

Stalin, Mao, Communism, and their 21st-Century Aftermath (Part IV)—A Commentary by Adam R. Bogart, PhD Read More »

Stalin, Mao, Communism, and their 21st-Century Aftermath (Part III)—A Commentary by Adam R. Bogart, PhD

Part III of Dr. Faria’s book is dedicated to Stalin’s influence in the post-war world (1945–1953).          After World War II, the Soviet citizen did not have to worry about being tortured and killed by the Nazis. However, Joseph Stalin and Vladimir Lenin’s position of a need to maintain a constant level of terror did

Stalin, Mao, Communism, and their 21st-Century Aftermath (Part III)—A Commentary by Adam R. Bogart, PhD Read More »

Preliminary Thoughts on Dr. Miguel Faria’s Latest Book by Michele Klimecki

I started reading Stalin, Mao, Communism, and their 21st-Century Aftermath in Russia and China (2024), and like each of your books, I haven’t been able to put it down. Thank you, Dr. Faria, for bearing witness to the strength and struggles our common history represents, especially those of us who came here to America in

Preliminary Thoughts on Dr. Miguel Faria’s Latest Book by Michele Klimecki Read More »

“Corpses of the drowned” by Robert A. Waters

“To choose one’s victims, to prepare one’s plans minutely, to slake an implacable vengeance, and then go to bed…there is nothing sweeter in the world.” —Joseph Stalin In his far-sweeping book about communism, Dr. Miguel Faria, Jr. describes a hellish nightmare. Almost every page drips with the blood of victims, most unknown, but many high-ranking,

“Corpses of the drowned” by Robert A. Waters Read More »

Scroll to Top