Mao Zedong is a much-mythologised historical figure with a controversial and highly contentious legacy. While it is certainly true that many people were put to death or died through other government actions during his reign, it is not possible to know exactly how many and historians will debate how much responsibility for said deaths can be attributed to Mao himself.
It is generally agreed that around 3.5 million Chinese were killed during the Chinese Civil War and the Sino-Japanese war (which overlapped each other). To what degree Mao was responsible for these deaths is entirely dependant on one's interpretation of the historical circumstances surrounding these conflicts.
Mao was also responsible for a number of political policies generally seen as disastrous. These include the three-anti/five-anti campaigns, the anti-rightist movement and the struggle sessions. The political persecution that resulted from these policies cause many deaths. Among them were direct executions, mass-suicides caused by persecution, and labour camps that killed many through over-work and poor conditions. Most would agree that Mao is largely responsible for the policies that caused these deaths, which are estimated to total between 30 and 40 million people. Certainly Mao was aware of the killing, and took no shame in his ordering of political executions, being quoted as saying "We must probably execute 10,000 to several tens of thousands of embezzlers nationwide before we can solve the problem."
Mao was also responsible for enacting a number of socio-economic policies that had grave humanitarian consequences. These include the Cultural Revolution and the Great Leap Forward. These lead to the abandoning of agricultural activities in favour of producing huge volumes of iron and steel. As a result of this, and also due to the mis-reporting of agricultural production figures by district managers who feared persecution, a massive short-fall in basic food production occurred. This triggered the Great Chinese Famine, in which anywhere from 27 million to 38 million people starved to death. It was not Mao's intention to cause such starvation, but he could be considered culpable to some degree for these deaths due to his terrible economic planning and ignorance of the plight of Chinese peasants.
So, it is entirely possible that 78 million people were killed under Mao's leadership, although the exact figure will never be known. Exactly how many of these deaths can be attributed to Mao and his policies is a matter of historical debate.
with money he gave each person$ 500million dollars, the did it them selves.
No, that was Joseph Stalin who killed 20 million people.
No No it is not because it killed my dog and more than 1 million people died Because of it Its True No it is not because it killed my dog and more than 1 million people died Because of it Its True
In Europe, true. The "Black Death" killed about 30% of the population.
I don't know of any data that shows the number of people killed during the Holocaust by method (and the true death figures may never be known), but it is estimated that eleven million people died with six million of them being Jewish.
true
It killed many many people.
true
The Kuomintang.
YES that is true
True. There are over 100 million sheep in Australia, whilst the population of people has only recently reached 21 million.
No way this can be true considering just the Greater New York area alone has somewhere around 20 million people. Last time I checked, there was around 300 million people living in the USA.
they killed there enemies but people say that they loved to kill is that true