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MatFayLong
The second point is, I'm familiar with 批鬥 with a song, I'm thinking it's a public trial where no one can win?
批鬥 is "struggle session," which is a form of "trial by mob" except that i) the defendant is not given any chance to seek legal counsel or self-defense; ii) the defendant is not allowed to implicate the plaintiff, who is almost always backed by the communists; iii) any attendant of the trial who refuses to accuse the defendant will immediately join the defendant to await punishment; iv) trial attendance is usually mandatory for the entire community, including small children; and v) punishment is passed down before, during, and after the trial.
Miraculously, the accusers have never lost a struggle session. I wonder why...
Anyway, one form of struggle session is like a witch hunt, in which the defendant is asked to "expose" other "bad people." But a struggle session can be limited to putting, say, just a household on trial and be done with. The main purpose of a struggle session is to demonstrate that the communist party is helping the community get on the right path. It has been hailed as the most "democratic" form of governance because the sentence is determined by the will of the "people," not by lawyers and judges who play favorite with the capitalists. For some reasons without official explanation, the Chinese government decided to stop this practice after an estimated 100 million people have been put through the struggle sessions and 20 million got killed (or later died as a result).
Nowadays, 批鬥 is a politically charged word, similar to how "holocaust" is used in the western world.