@wijiantoofficialproduct: Tulung Kerjasamane Yo Cah #fyp #foryou #trendtiktok #day1 #wijiantoofficialproduction

wijiantoofficial production
wijiantoofficial production
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Monday 21 July 2025 06:26:37 GMT
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mas_jee3
mas jee :
jos jis
2025-08-02 04:17:49
1
jalurfilm0
avocado :
wes iclik en
2025-07-24 14:16:35
86
bsrp95
Nek Leren Kesel Mawon :
Marem ji😂
2025-07-25 01:37:45
1
zeloarcha
zeloarcha :
pinteran.. milihe sing gwedi😂
2025-07-24 22:55:00
117
scarr816
sty :
kyk uduk iki winane seng dipost🗿
2025-08-02 09:13:07
1
verdantgreatsun
HJALP master :
saulan kas lamaran iki
2025-08-01 09:10:12
1
garaga22___
garaga22 :
tag bapak e😭😭😭
2025-07-29 16:19:00
2
std_haho_official
Setya Dharma Chondro Dewi :
ijek tak undangne rt kang oko muleh sek
2025-07-21 13:05:56
7
ajinugrahadian
ajinugrahadian :
muuuantep
2025-07-25 12:12:19
1
tar1_7704
ta_ri7704 :
lo lo mbk puja😭
2025-07-23 14:18:14
62
suwotositumorang
Suwoto :
gedi sisih cah
2025-07-31 15:14:35
0
donybe10
donybe :
tak kandakke ibuke lho 🗿
2025-07-27 19:17:44
1
aryawira039
Arya wira raja :
heleh Ra wani Ijen ae kog
2025-07-25 02:09:13
1
winter_2363
faan :
lo lo ko ngunu
2025-07-25 01:26:18
1
wongmumetz0
𝘼𝙙𝙞𝙡𝙉𝙜𝙖𝙣𝙩𝙪𝙠𝙠𝙖𝙣💤 :
biasane nek bari video pasti kawen kawenn
2025-07-26 11:16:18
0
adiandriant_
𝘢𝘥𝘪𝘢𝘯𝘥𝘳𝘪𝘢𝘯𝘵_ :
di nteni cah cah ng prapatan mas🗿🤣
2025-07-22 18:58:40
2
fajribtrdy
fajribtrdy :
ruang tamu jadi saksi biasane tel🗿
2025-07-29 01:17:01
11
masdeniofficial88
mas deni official :
di tunggu undangane bulan depan
2025-07-21 13:19:25
1
user9511006285202
agus badik nur :
ayemee cuuahh
2025-07-25 12:16:51
1
hndrrr2flame
ℍ𝕟𝕕𝕣 🅱🆃🆃🅷 :
langgeng yo thel🗿
2025-07-27 13:32:22
1
style_ippul
IppulTod :
gak karo plat jambi kui😂
2025-07-25 17:25:18
1
ghazyprasht
~MasGhazy ˗ˋˏ♡ˎˊ˗ :
mari iki gawe VT day 1 iclik kak🗿🙏
2025-07-25 04:02:51
3
mohamad_rido
mhmdrd :
tembok e kok iso pink? 😭😭
2025-07-24 22:39:47
1
fadlycee00
liyypely :
Kon muleh ee mbak jajan mu ntek wi nko🗿
2025-07-29 14:49:08
1
moasataz
MazAtaz :
bismillah rungkad 🗿
2025-07-24 15:20:00
1
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Democratic Kampuchea is one of the most misrepresented periods in modern history. What Western media frames as “genocidal madness” was actually a desperate attempt to rebuild a country shattered by war, famine, and near-total collapse. By 1975, U.S. bombings had killed hundreds of thousands, destroyed irrigation systems, railways, farmland, and urban infrastructure. The Khmer Rouge inherited a state with no functioning economy, no food supply, and widespread starvation already underway. Evacuating cities wasn’t “anti-urban extremism.” Phnom Penh could not feed its population. Only 12% of rice paddies were functioning. Moving people to the countryside was a survival measure, not utopia-building. Hospitals had no medicine. Fields had no workers. The choice was evacuation or mass starvation. Yes, excesses happened. Yes, the regime carried out purges—particularly in later years after infiltration and border conflict intensified. But these were rooted in real security fears, not ethnic hatred or a planned extermination campaign. These were not on the scale as claimed by western media. 750,000 people died above the natural death rate in Kampuchea from 1975-79. Only 30,000 of which were executions. The Vietnamese invasion in 1978, backed by the USSR, broke the fragile system and ended Democratic Kampuchea. What followed was a pro-Vietnamese puppet government and a rewritten history used to justify the occupation and solidify Hanoi’s influence. Pol Pot’s government was not perfect. But it was not a genocidal dictatorship acting in a vacuum. It was a poor, war-torn nation trying to survive under siege from every direction, with no support, no resources, and constant sabotage. It was a genuine attempt at building and achieving socialism. The standard narrative leaves out this context for a reason. ⸻ Sources: 	•	Michael Vickery, Cambodia: 1975–1982 	•	Ben Kiernan, How Pol Pot Came to Power 	•	William Shawcross, Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia 	•	Noam Chomsky & Edward Herman, After the Cataclysm 	•	Malcolm Caldwell’s final interviews before his death in Phnom Penh, 1978 	•	Cambodian genocide tribunal transcripts and UN archives 	•	CIA documents on Lon Nol regime and U.S. bombing operations (declassified) 	•	Statistics from the Yale Cambodian Genocide Program (used critically)        •     Kampuchea will win by the Canadian Communist league         •    1981 “Thesis on democratic kampuchea”
Democratic Kampuchea is one of the most misrepresented periods in modern history. What Western media frames as “genocidal madness” was actually a desperate attempt to rebuild a country shattered by war, famine, and near-total collapse. By 1975, U.S. bombings had killed hundreds of thousands, destroyed irrigation systems, railways, farmland, and urban infrastructure. The Khmer Rouge inherited a state with no functioning economy, no food supply, and widespread starvation already underway. Evacuating cities wasn’t “anti-urban extremism.” Phnom Penh could not feed its population. Only 12% of rice paddies were functioning. Moving people to the countryside was a survival measure, not utopia-building. Hospitals had no medicine. Fields had no workers. The choice was evacuation or mass starvation. Yes, excesses happened. Yes, the regime carried out purges—particularly in later years after infiltration and border conflict intensified. But these were rooted in real security fears, not ethnic hatred or a planned extermination campaign. These were not on the scale as claimed by western media. 750,000 people died above the natural death rate in Kampuchea from 1975-79. Only 30,000 of which were executions. The Vietnamese invasion in 1978, backed by the USSR, broke the fragile system and ended Democratic Kampuchea. What followed was a pro-Vietnamese puppet government and a rewritten history used to justify the occupation and solidify Hanoi’s influence. Pol Pot’s government was not perfect. But it was not a genocidal dictatorship acting in a vacuum. It was a poor, war-torn nation trying to survive under siege from every direction, with no support, no resources, and constant sabotage. It was a genuine attempt at building and achieving socialism. The standard narrative leaves out this context for a reason. ⸻ Sources: • Michael Vickery, Cambodia: 1975–1982 • Ben Kiernan, How Pol Pot Came to Power • William Shawcross, Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia • Noam Chomsky & Edward Herman, After the Cataclysm • Malcolm Caldwell’s final interviews before his death in Phnom Penh, 1978 • Cambodian genocide tribunal transcripts and UN archives • CIA documents on Lon Nol regime and U.S. bombing operations (declassified) • Statistics from the Yale Cambodian Genocide Program (used critically) • Kampuchea will win by the Canadian Communist league • 1981 “Thesis on democratic kampuchea”

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