Whenever we go to China Tours then we find the most travel places in China. Here you can find the concept of politics in the PRC continues to be described as the product of Mao Zedong’s thought, which applies the ideas of Marx and Lenin to the concrete conditions of China. During the early 1980s, however, this formulation was being rendered with subtle yet important qualifications, many of which struck the theme that socialism in China is an evolving notion whose success depends on flexibility in light of actual conditions and imperatives.

Major elements from Chinese tradition found echoes in the Marxist- Leninist worldview that by the 1920s had become the dominant perspective of China’s revolutionaries, Mao included. Marxism, like Daoism, stressed the interconnections and dialectical aspects of all human experience and knowledge. Like Confucianism, it placed social relationships at the core of its political theory and linked these to a strong sense of historical periods and causality. The specific Marxist addition to this traditional orientation was the idea that throughout history there have existed social classes with differing material interests and ideologies, and that the struggle between classes is the substance of politics. Moreover, for Mao, as for Marx, politics was not limited to the realm of’ institutions and governmental processes.

Personal and family life, education, artistic creation, morality, culture-all are understood in Mao Zedong’s thought as expressions of the struggle between classes in the movement toward a more just social order. In China except this concept of politics there are Great Wall of China, Forbidden City and lots of travel places.