realm today as we enliven the local economy and open up to the outside world. The problem is simple: do we want to set out on this Long March of 25,000 li and head north to fight a war of resistance? 4
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Perhaps we will need a few more years before we can free ourselves entirely from the shadow of the Cultural Revolution. Then we will be able to perceive clearly the true value of Mao Thought. We look forward to the advent of business people who will apply Mao Thought to the realm of the economy, just as we hope that theoreticians versed in this area will appear.
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It is in this spirit that we humbly offer this meager volume to those noble individuals engaged in the commodity economy. We cast forth this brick in the hope that it will elicit comments of jade.
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| 1. See Jean-Baptiste Regis, Joseph de Mailla & Pierre de Tartre, S.J., trans., "De Explicatione Textuum Libri Y-King, Caput Primum: Kien : Coelum," in Y-King, from John Minford & Joseph Lau, eds., Classical Chinese Literature, Vol. 1: From Antiquity to the T'ang.
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| 2. Sunzi bingfa and Sanguo yanyi. Both works have been trawled by writers and publishers in Japan, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand and the U.S. to provide today's merchants with ancient strategies that can be applied to modern business.
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| 3. This quotation is from Mao Zedong, "Zhongguo geming zhanzheng he zhanlüe wenti," Mao Zedong xuanji, vol. 1, p. 195. For the English text, see Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung, vol. 1, p. 221. The curious use of this quotation is itself an example of how Mao's words can be so easily taken out of context.
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| 4. These are two clichés that originate in the Communist Party's struggles with the Nationalists and the Japanese.
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