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> The relics may have been destroyed, but (most of) the people lived, some still living. Culture doesn't die with the relics, it lives with the people.

I would have to disagree with this. Those people are in their 70s now. And without relics, there is no anchor for cultural values.

Cambodia did the same thing and it has been a disaster to their culture.

The destruction of the relics was on purpose. Hence “cultural” revolution.

> its stated goal was to preserve 'true' Communist ideology in the country by purging remnants of capitalist and traditional elements from Chinese society, and to re-impose Mao Zedong Thought as the dominant ideology within the Party

It was a deliberate attack on Chinese culture to solidify Maos power.

Your statement sounds too much like marketing speak without any substance. I think I heard it before. Oh yeah: Thor Ragnorak. It is low effort.


> I would have to disagree with this. Those people are in their 70s now. And without relics, there is no anchor for cultural values.

Relics without the people are pretty meaningless. There's very little you can learn about the ancient Egyptian culture even with all the preserved relics.

Sadly we lose tradition, heritage, and culture with the passing of every person. That's universal, Cultural Revolution or not, east or west. But personally I've seen new relics and artifacts recreated after the end of Cultural Revolution, so all is not lost.

> Your statement sounds too much like marketing speak without any substance. I think I heard it before. Oh yeah: Thor Ragnorak.

Well if it's cliche it's only because it's true. BTW never saw that movie, or any of the recent Marvel junk.


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