... erroneous - there is no evidence that he ever ordered any mass slaughter of children. Compared to others, he appears to have been a benevolent king. Historical evidence shows that he, during the great famine in Judea 24 years before the Christian era, bought foodstuffs in Egypt with the government's and his own money, whereupon he organised a fleet to fetch the supplies and distributed them within his...
... council of twelve apostles. They confiscated the property of the church and the wealth of those who had fled. They banned trade, enforced work duty and abolished money. Everything was to be owned collectively - the people were only allowed to keep their tools - all the produce was confiscated by the commune and polygamy was introduced. This community was intended to become the "thousand year reign of...
... take the king's side. He chose to go over to the revolutionaries. Dark Illuminati forces fomented the riots in the French countryside. The debts owed on the state deficit consumed half of the French budget. All this money found its way into the hands of profiteering Jewish moneylenders. All of these factors were exploited. The time to strike had come for the conspirators, who had united the Jacobin...
... Civil War was started (the Confederacy was funded by Illuminist France). The Illuminati had worked hard to get the United States to use the same banking system as the European countries, where private banks handled the issuing of money so that governments were forced to incur debt at high interest rates. Lincoln opposed this and refused to give the Rothschild bank control over the American economy...
... "Marxismens ideologi" / "The Ideology of Marxism" (Stockholm, 1989). In 1844 Marx wrote in his article "On the Jewish Question", that the Jews more or less controlled Europe, that their worldly god was money and that their most important business was to swindle money from people by means of extortionate interest rates. Marx reasoned: "Which is the deepest foundation of the Jewish religion? The practical...
... needs, egoism... What is abstract in the Jewish religion? Contempt for theory, art, history, for man as a goal in himself - this has become the money-loving man's true conscious position and virtue... As soon as society has managed to rid itself of the empirical nature of Judaism, bartering and its conditions, the Jew will become unimaginable, because then his conscious-ness no longer has an object...
......" He also firmly asserted: "Behind every tyrant there is always a Jew." Marx admitted that the Christian society was being Judaised, so becoming ever more capitalistic and increasingly worshipping money. Every intelligent person knew this. How the Jews took over commerce in Polish Galicia in the 19th century was no secret. Polish businesses were ruined by the amalgamation of Jewish merchants. The...
... the great year of revolutions. The Rothschild family was in charge of the financial side and the League of Communists of the planning. The Rothschilds had become enormously wealthy in connection with the French Revolution (1789-1799) when empires and kingdoms needed to borrow money in amounts previously unparalleled. The Rothschilds had Europe's best information system with their own couriers, who...
..., Marx had no money and was economically dependent on his "friend" Engels. In reality, Nathan Rothschild financed him. This was revealed by his close associate Mikhail Bakunin in his "Polemique contre les Juifs" ("Polemic Against the Jews"). Bakunin broke away from Marx and his companions, because "they had one foot in the bank and the other foot in the socialist movement". The Frankist Illuminati's...
... wanted least of all. He speculated heavily on the stock market, however, constantly losing huge amounts of money. Neither did he show any consideration for the work of others. Many craftsmen he hired had to wait a long time for their pay. His housekeeper, Helen Demuth, worked like a slave in his household for 40 years without any cash pay whatsoever. It does not seem so strange then, that Marx...
... own periodical, Vperyod. A famous Jewish textiles magnate and capitalist from Moscow, Savva Morozov, financed this. (Louis Fischer, "The Life of Lenin", London, 1970, p. 68.) The Morozov brothers had given the proletarian writer Maxim Gorky a two-storeyed house and provided the Bolsheviks with large amounts of money. Lenin's Nature Lenin tried to work out his own ism, a doctrine, which differed very...
... secret and criminal incomes, he constantly demanded money from his mother until her death in 1916. Stalin brought money to Lenin's Bolsheviks through bank and train robberies. Maxim Litvinov also committed bank robberies, giving the money to the Bolsheviks. Oleg Agranyants also referred to a report in the files of the Okhrana concerning Lenin's visits to the German embassy in Switzerland. It was later...
... revealed that Lenin was a German agent. Lenin was well aware of the seductive power of money. That was why he generously dealt out cheques for large amounts to farmers and non-Russian nationalists in the autumn of 1919. Some of them were taken in by this swindle and perhaps believed the Bolsheviks to be a party of Santa Clauses. Nobody could guess that those cheques lacked cover (Paul Johnson, "Modern...
.... (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 83.) This was confirmed in The New York Times in the same year. The same newspaper wrote on the 23rd of August 1921 that comrade Leon Trotsky had two personal bank accounts in the United States in which he had a total of 80 million dollars. Meanwhile, Lenin claimed that there was no money to help the hungry or to support culture with...
.... According to the myth, Lenin thought only of others. Lenin had earlier stolen money from the Party funds, despite the fact he received his wages from the same source. Once he emptied the whole fund to buy votes from members of the Central Committee. One can read the following in "The Memories of the Russian Socialist" by T. Alexinskaya (Paris, 1923): "According to Lenin's instructions, Nikolai Shemashko...
... transferred the entire Party funds to an account of a fictitious committee... Lenin bribed certain members of the Central Committee so that they would vote for him." At a meeting at the International Bureau of Socialism in Brussels on the 20th of June 1914, Georgy Plekhanov said, among other things: "Ulyanov does not want to return the Party's money, which he has appropriated like a thief." (Excerpt from...
... the minutes.) In England, charges were raised against Lenin for an unpaid debt. In 1907, he had borrowed money from the soap-boiler Feltz, which he had promised to repay, but had not. The police wanted Ulyanov. The police in France also wanted him in 1907, following which he travelled to other countries, including Sweden. He owed 10,000 gold roubles to a band of robbers, who should have received...
... arms for this money through Lenin. The leader of the gang, Stepan Lbov, was caught and hanged. With this, Lenin believed the problem was solved. But one of the bandits came to demand the money. Lenin fled, but was sought after by the police. He had also appropriated the inheritance of the millionaire Schmidt, amounting to 475,000 Swiss francs. So doing, Lenin acted in accordance with the Jesuit...
... out the Party's money from the bank account in Switzerland. All of the code numbers had been changed and the money had been transferred to three new accounts with new codes. This money had, in part, been used for the infiltration of Europe's nations. Lenin had ordered Maxim Litvinov and Theodor Rothstein to build a net of infiltrators throughout Europe as early as 1917. That was why "the Party's...
..." diamonds had been sold in England all the time... Only the money in Lenin's personal accounts remained. Lenin was extremely upset. On the following day - the 13th of December - he suffered from a second, but more intensive, stroke. On December 16th, 1922, when Lenin had barely recovered, he gave the order to be driven from his villa in Gorky (near Moscow) to the Kremlin, where he rested. He did not...
... who lent the money needed to construct the Japanese navy. Several British banks built railways in Japan and financed Japan's war against China. It was the same Jacob Schiff who made sure that no banks were permitted to lend money to the Russians. At the same time, he supported "revolutionary" Jewish groups in Russia. Encyclopaedia Judaica called these "Jewish self-defence groups". The Provisional...
... were on their way to Russia to start a revolution against the government. Trotsky had been given 10,000 dollars by the Germans for this purpose. (Antony Sutton, "Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution", Morley, 1981, p. 28.) Indeed, upon searching Trotsky, the police found 10,000 dollars. He explained that the money came from the Germans but had no further comment on the matter. The Canadians...
... that Trotsky received money from this source as early as 1916. The Canadian military secret service was convinced that Leiba Bronstein was acting on German instructions. Suddenly a counter-order to release Leiba Bronstein and his cronies came from the British Embassy in Washington. The Embassy had received a demand from the Department of State in Washington to release Bronstein-Trotsky as an American...
... amounts of money from the sufferings of the Russian people. The Bolsheviks acted like criminals and super-capitalists simultaneously. The ruling oligarchy - the Nomenclature - was transformed by Lenin and Trotsky into a Golem, which parasitically plundered the goods of its subjects. (Executive Intelligence Review, No. 39, 30th of September 1988, p. 29.) In Jewish folklore, the Golem was a magical...
...!" (Source: Robert Graves and Raphael Patai, Hebrew Myths, "The book of Genesis", London, 1964, pp. 266-267.) Was it not true that the ancient dreams of the Jewish extremists were realised as they took away the Gentiles' money, cattle, houses, religion and personal liberty? Plundering was officially called the nationalisation of private property. On the 12th of April 1919 the newspaper Kommunist (Kharkov...
... to combat Stalin by referring to Lenin's "testament". It was already too late. Stalin, meanwhile, tried to gain access to Adolf Yoffe's bank accounts. Trotsky's close comrade Yoffe refused to give his money to Stalin and chose to commit suicide on November 17, 1927. Trotsky had thereby lost his chief of propaganda. Parvus, Trotsky and Skobelev used to hold their meetings at Yoffe's in their youth...
... the money for the coup attempts in 1905. Now he took good care of Lenin. He made him editor of the newspaper Iskra as early as 1901, from his home in a Munich suburb, and also organised a printing office in Leipzig. Parvus made sure that the newspaper reached Russia. Parvus even let Lenin live in his flat in Zurich. (Lenin lived in Switzerland between 1914 and 1917.) Parvus had explained to Lenin...
... that the organization of the revolution needed money and that even more money was needed to stay in power. Parvus knew what he was talking about, since he acted as a financial adviser to both the Turks and the Bulgarians during the Balkan wars, 1912-13. At the same time he became immensely rich through his own arms deals. Parvus had worked from Salonica in Greece, where he got into contact with the...
... archives of the U.S. State Department confirms this. Two further names are mentioned in this document: Max Breitung and Isaac Seligman. All those people were Jews and freemasons. According to the same document, plans to depose the Tsar were made in February 1916. There are always some people who make money out of wars and revolutions. We must not forget this when we seek to understand history. The...
.... Jacob H. Schiff was descended from a distinguished rabbinical family. He came to New York in the 1860s. It was Rothschild who trained him. Schiff began buying himself into Kuhn, Loeb & Co. with Rothschild's money. Both Paul and Felix Warburg became part owners of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. Even Alexander Parvus began preparing the Bolsheviks' take-over of power in 1916. He made sure that Lenin had all the money...
... Masonic circles had helped the freemason Thomas Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) to power in the United States. As president he began working diligently to depose the Tsar of Russia. A campaign of slander was started. An agitatory campaign in 1912 led to a bloodbath by the river Lena. There were no widespread troubles, however. Russia had borrowed large amounts of money to be able to go to war. This meant...
... could not help Russia either, since they too relied upon the Jewish financial elite. Shcherbatov said during a meeting of the government (according to the minutes): "We have fallen into the witches' ring. We are powerless: the money is in the hands of the Jews and without them we cannot get a single kopek..." (A. Solzhenitsyn, "Collected Works", Paris, 1984, Vol. 13, pp. 263-267.) Thomas Jefferson...
... (No. 12-13) with an especially revealing title: "It Happened on Purim Day!" (i. e. the 23rd of February 1917). The freemasons began making intense propaganda to have the Tsar deposed. The slogan "For democracy! Against Tsarism!" was used. Of course, all this cost a lot of money, which mostly came from the United States. Jacob Schiff declared publicly in April 1917 that it was through his financial...
... the final triumph of Bolshevism". Thus he spent millions of dollars to depose the Tsar and then laid out even more money to help the Bolsheviks to power... Now it was time for Lenin to return as well. When he first read in the Neue Zurcher Zeitung that the Tsar had been deposed, he thought it was German propaganda. On the 31st of March the German vice-state secretary informed Ambassador Gisbert von...
... (Tobiach Sobelsohn), another important freemason and "revolutionary", arrived together with him but remained in the Swedish capital to help Jakub Hanecki (Ftirstenberg). It was this same Hanecki (known as Ganetsky) who channelled the German money to the Bolsheviks in Petrograd via Nya Banken (the New Bank) in Stockholm and the freemason Olof Aschberg (Obadiah Asch). Karl Radek, an Austrian citizen...
... for money from the Bolsheviks' secret fund in Stockholm. He received up to 3000 crowns from this source, according to Hans Bjorkegren. Alexander Parvus had founded this fund by the aid of the banker Max Warburg. I telephoned the headquarters of Svenska Handelsbanken (Swedish Bank of Commerce) on January 24, 1991 and asked how much 3000 crowns were worth in 1917. This money was equivalent to 56,250...
..., was in charge of solving all practical problems during the journey. The Bolsheviks of Petrograd sent another 500 roubles. Lenin sent begging-letters to Swedish socialists too, who managed to scrape together several hundred crowns. Those socialists had no idea that Lenin actually had plenty of money. At the end of March he had written to Inessa Armand: "There is even more money than I expected for...
... the journey." Lenin could never get enough. The trade unionist Fabian Mansson organised a collection among the members of parliament. Even right-wing politicians gave money to Lenin, since comrade Mansson had pointed out that the Bolsheviks would be in power in Russia as early as the next day. The Swedish Foreign Minister Arvid Lindman gave Lenin 100 crowns (a lot of money then). The Swedish refugee...
... British agents in Petrograd who provoked the soldiers to mutiny and gave them money. On the 7th of April, General Yanin received a complete report about the actions and hiding places of these British agents. This report is still extant. In May, another still larger group of 200 "revolutionaries", led by the Menshevik L. Martov and Pavel Axelrod, arrived from Switzerland. Many others followed after. Some...
... Lenin began to hate the right wing faction of the Social Revolutionaries. In their article, the authors presented various excerpts from those documents, which showed that the Bolshevik leader, Vladimir Lenin, had been given money for his agitatory campaign by the Germans through a certain Mr. Svensson who worked at the German Embassy in Stockholm. Lenin had received money and instructions from...
... reliable people like Jakub Furstenberg alias Yakov Ganetsky and Alexander Parvus in Stockholm and Ganetsky's relative, the Jewess Yevgenia (Dora) Sumenson (actually Simmons) in Petrograd. She worked at the Fabian Klingsland firm in Petrograd and had lived in Sweden and made business trips to Denmark during the war. She also worked with speculations on the stock market. The German money was transferred...
... from the German Imperial Bank in Berlin via Nya Banken in Stockholm to the Bank of Siberia in Petrograd. All this according to Hans Bjorkegren. Another who received this German money was the Jewish Bolshevik lawyer Mieczyslaw Kozlowski from Poland. He was in constant contact with Alexander Parvus and Jakub Fiirstenberg. German Imperial Bank had, according to order 7433 of the 2nd of March, opened...
... money to give out 17 different daily newspapers, whose total circulation amounted to 1.4 million copies every week. (Vladimir Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 35, Moscow, p. 260.) Trotsky tried to maintain that the money came from the workers. But could the workers really collect hundreds of thousands of roubles every week just to support the Bolsheviks when there were other labour parties, which were...
... more popular than they were? Trotsky convinced no one with his blatant lies. On the 6th (19th) of July, other newspapers also began publishing telegrams reporting transfers of German money to the Bolsheviks in Petrograd under various innocent pretexts. (David Shub, "Russian Political Heritage", New York, 1969.) In Lenin's official biography (p. 177), all these accusations were regarded as libel on...
... the part of the provocateurs. On the evening of the 6th (19th) of July in Margarita Fofanova's flat, Lenin said to Stalin: "If the least fact in connection with the money transfers is confirmed, it would be exceedingly naive to believe that we should be able to avoid death sentences." (Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov/Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 73.) He might have believed so, but he...
... was wrong. The government knew that Lenin had sent a letter to Ganetsky and Radek in Stockholm on the 12th (25th) of April 1917, in which he told them: "I have received the money from you!" That the Provisional Government knew about these shady affairs and had access to Lenin's secret letters is proved in the periodical Proletarskaya Revolyutsya (The Proletarian Revolution) which, in the autumn of...
... 1923, published several of Lenin's strictly secret letters. He had sent one of those letters from Petrograd to Ganetsky in Stockholm on April 21st (4th of May). He wrote: "The money (two thousand) from Kozlowski got here." The editorial staff had obtained the letters from the Archive of the Revolution in Petrograd. The chief of that archive, N. Sergievsky, related that the letters had been found in...
... Revolyutsya without knowing what the letters contained, disappeared without trace in 1926. (Akim Arutiunov, "The Phenomenon Vladimir Ulyanov/Lenin", Moscow, 1992, p. 73.) The most sensational thing was that the Provisional Government's agent in Stockholm helped the Bolsheviks smuggle some of the German money into Petrograd in a courier's bag. (H. Bjorkegren, "Ryska posten", Stockholm, 1985, p. 137.) This...
... Furstenberg's telegrams where they asked him to deny the accusations. He preferred to keep quiet. Of course, Parvus was scared. Perhaps he feared that information about his role in the February coup would be revealed in connection with the money transfers. Later, however, he claimed that he had pulled many of the strings whilst living at Stureplan in Central Stockholm and that the troubles had been provoked...
... Sumenson read: "Have Nya Banken send a further 100,000." She had earlier received a total of just over two million. A lot more money had been transferred to the lawyer Kozlowski's account - 1.3 million a month. There was no longer any choice - Lenin was accused of treason to his fatherland and espionage. On the 7th (20th) of July the Provisional Government wrote an order of arrest for Lenin, Grigori...
... receive the money demanded by Comrade Trotsky. Fiirstenberg." On the 23rd September (6th of October) Trotsky was elected chairman of the Petrograd Workers' and Soldiers' Soviet, despite his being neither a soldier nor a worker. Everything was possible among the freemasons. Meanwhile, the United States demanded ever larger contributions to the war from Kerensky. The Provisional Government reluctantly...
... amounts of money to the Masonic order Grand Orient de France, to be used for the renovation of their palatial headquarters in Paris, propaganda and other purposes. Meanwhile, millions of Russians were starving to death. (Oleg Platonov, "Russia's Crown of Thorns: The History of the Russian People in the Twentieth Century", Moscow, 1997, p. 557.) It became Vladimir Antonov-Ovseyenko's task to tell the...
... was paid for. And finally, he left the power in their hands. According to the myth, Kerensky was opposed to the Communists. He was actually the Grand Secretary of the Grand Orient in Russia. Lenin and Trotsky supplied him with false documents and a large amount of money and had him escorted to Murmansk, which had been occupied by the British. Kerensky was received as a "White" refugee in Murmansk...
... Tribune wrote: "It seems as if the Bolshevik revolution in Russia is actually an enormous financial operation, the goal of which is to transfer the control of vast sums of money from the Russians to European and American banks." At the beginning of April 1919, George Pitter-Wilson confirmed in the Globe (London): "The aim of Bolshevism is to gain complete power in the non-Jewish areas, so that no wealth...
... York Times, August 23rd, 1921. Multiply that sum by one hundred and you have the present-day value of that money. The Russian historian Dmitri Volkogonov revealed after findings in the Communist Party archives that "just the Tsarina's private reserves amounted to 475 million roubles in gold (plus 7 million for the crown jewels)". (Dagens Nyheter, 31st of August 1992.) The Bolshevik financial...
... department Goskhran confiscated all of this. Some Swedish journalists (including Staffan Skott) have, in accord with the prevailing myth, tried to explain that most of this wealth was handed over to the Communist parties in other countries, while millions of Russians died of starvation. That is not entirely accurate. According to the historian Igor Bunich, Lenin and Trotsky took care of this money...
... returned to the United States at the same time, when his mission had been accomplished. Each case was worth 60,000 roubles in gold. The total value was thus 32.4 million. The Bolsheviks also used the Harju Bank in Estonia to transfer money. Eventually, all of the Bolsheviks' gold reserves ended up in the United States, according to the Russian historian Igor Bunich. Over 600,000 miners died under forced...
... Alexander Parvus in Berlin in which it was revealed that someone in Petrograd had stolen from Lenin. Just before Dzerzhinsky had travelled to Switzerland to investigate the situation. It turned out that not all the cargoes had reached Berlin; not all the money had ended up in the Swiss bank accounts of Lenin and his approved comrades. Some cargoes of "nationalised" goods had been sent to Sweden, including...
... many valuable icons (some of these are still on display in the National Museum in Stockholm), the money had gone into the hands of other people than Trotsky and Lenin. Stalin transferred Lenin's foreign money deposits to Moscow in the 1930s. In 1998, an account was found in Switzerland, which belonged to Vladimir Ulyanov. No one had touched it since 1945. There was slightly less than one hundred...
... be impossible to reveal who was really responsible for the shooting. He carried that secret with him to his grave. The Polish Jew Dzerzhinsky, who was an infamous drug-addict and sadist, died suddenly under mysterious circumstances on the 20th of July 1926 when he began to express his desire to have as much power as Stalin. Stalin was also interested in "inheriting" the money Dzerzhinsky had put...
... deals. The man who held the Tsar's family imprisoned was Trotsky's favourite - Alexander Beloborodov, one of the soviet leaders in Yekaterinburg. His real name was Yankel Weisbart and he was the son of a rich Jewish fur-trader, Isidor Weisbart. Weisbart was once caught red-handed in the act of stealing a large amount of money but nothing happened to him. Yurovsky was one of the leading Chekists in...
....) He officially died of tuberculosis. Sverdlov had had a strong influence over the Bolsheviks in Yekaterinburg since 1905, when the Party sent him there to organise "revolutionary" activities (he organised robberies and murders to collect more money for the Party). The real facts about Yakov Sverdlov's death remained a state secret in the Soviet Union. Sverdlov had also stolen other people's property...
... goods were sent to Berlin. In 1918 alone, 841 wagons of timber, 1218 railway carriages of meat, two million pounds of flax, etc., were sent. The "revolutionary" Jews were only interested in themselves. Gleb Boky continued using Uritsky's old trick of demanding large amounts from hostages, the money finding its way into his own pocket. The GPU discovered in 1932 that Ganetsky had 60 million Swiss...
... international Zionist organization Po'alei Zion accounted for a collection of money, have been found in the archives. Those outside the organization were not permitted to see such reports. Leon (Leiba) Mekhlis, another notorious executioner under Stalin, was also a member of Po'alei Zion. Po'alei Zion was founded in 1899 and the Russian branch in 1901. The leaders of the organization were then Khaim...
... murdered 2341 people. In 1935 he became the chief of the Soviet military intelligence service. After 20 years as a Soviet assassin, he broke down when he was ordered to kill his Jewish friend and Communist fellow murderer Ignatz Reiss in Switzerland. Reiss had put aside a lot of money to defect to the West. Krivitsky went into hiding, whereupon another Jewish assassin, Isaac Spiegelglas, was ordered to...
... killing of large numbers of children began as early as 1934. After all, they cost money... In Moscow, the murders were carried out in the prison dungeons of the Lubyanka, the Butyrka and the Lefortovo. Stalin and Kaganovich had their most famous victims cremated at night, following which they had the ash smuggled out and buried in a mass grave in the Donskoye graveyard. This seemed the safest way to...
... during Lenin's time. The NKVD had built up an efficient information system where those who informed on an "enemy of the people" received a large amount of money from NKVD commissars in leather jackets. The West considered all of this to be quite normal. The American ambassador in Moscow, Joseph Davies (a freemason), was especially enthusiastic about the mock trials. He reported to the secretary of...
...: "The National Suicide" and "The Best Enemy Money Can Buy". The American trade embargo was just a gigantic bluff. The totalitarian and completely ineffective Soviet state could never have survived without aid from outside. The history of ancient China provides us with an example of a similar state. In the year 8 A.D., an important official, Wang Mang, usurped the power and proclaimed himself emperor...
... Whites. Only then was he given permission to give the money to the Whites, who fought against the Bolsheviks and wanted to re-establish the Tsarist Empire. The Finnish Whites were eager to occupy Murmansk as soon as possible, but the Finnish President, Pehr Evind Svinhufvud, after receiving warnings from London, did not dare issue orders to this effect. When it became clear that the White Russian...
... the White Army, which was comprised of nationalist volunteers. The Allies thwarted the Whites at all times, and in the beginning they even fought against them. Meanwhile, the Bolsheviks received all kind of help, money and information from the West. Britain sent rifles and ammunition for 250,000 men to Soviet Russia, according to The Manchester Guardian (2nd of May 1919). The Whites received an...
... insignificant portion of this shipment. The Frenchmen only gave tiny sums of money to the Whites. The Allies even gave the Bolsheviks direct aid when they conquered the Ukraine, whereas the Ukrainian nationalist leader and freemason Simon Petlyura's freedom fighters received no aid at all. ("Ukraine & Ukrainians" by Dr. Ivan Owechko, Greeley, Colorado, 1984, p. 114) Of all their opponents, the Bolsheviks...
... perceived the fact that the left wing political parties are controlled by the very same men of finance whom they officially regard as their enemies. He claimed: "There is no proletarian, not even a communist movement that has not operated in the interests of money, in the direction indicated by money - and that without the idealists among the leaders having the slightest suspicion of the fact." Spengler...
... went so far as to call socialism the capitalism of the lower class. Reginald McKenna (head of the Midland Bank in Great Britain) admitted forthrightly: "Those who find and hand out the money and the credit, direct the government's policy and hold the fate of nations in their hands." Several serious works have demonstrated by means of documents that each and every war in Europe during the last two...
..., Paris, 27th of September 1985.) Lenin exploited the situation and set up food-traps, Torgsin, where people could buy macaroni, lard, grain, for gold or foreign currency. All who tried to buy anything were immediately seized and forcibly relieved of all their gold. They were also forced to explain where they had got their money. Millions of lives were saved by various private organizations from Sweden...
... and the United States - above all by ARA (American Relief Administration). ARA collected 70 million dollars (56 million of this came from the donations of Americans). This money was enough to buy food for 18 million Russians. Lenin had collected 400 million roubles in gold from Kiev, 500 million from Odessa and 100 million from Kharkov, but he felt absolutely no inclination to give any of it away to...
... the starving. He announced: "We have no money!" (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Petersburg, 1992, p. 85.) Meanwhile, the bands of criminals and robbers Trotsky had set free continued to pillage the country. Later, Mao Zedong in China also used criminals. The famine threatened to bring tens of millions of people to their graves. Cannibalism occurred in the hardest hit areas. A committee called...
... extremely influential Council on Foreign Relations) found the money for food deliveries. But Lenin used this capital exclusively for his own and the highest leaders' personal needs, according to the historian Gary Allen ("None Dare Call It Conspiracy"). The peasants who were given back their land were forced to look after themselves - which they also did, as the reader will soon realise. On the 30th of...
.... American money continued to breathe life into this fragile, inefficient and brutal system, despite all the difficulties. A contract was concluded with the Ford Motor Company on the 1st of May 1930. Ford promised to spend 30 million dollars (approximately 600 million dollars today) to build up the Soviet automobile industry. And so the Americans built a Ford factory in Nizhny Novgorod, which was called...
... another 200 million dollars at an especially low rate of interest. These loans were without securities and the borrower was supposed to have begun repaying them six years later. The borrower was allowed to use the money for anything whatever - as if the Soviet Union was the banks' best customer. The newly opened archives have revealed that Moscow made a variety of illegal money transfers to Communist...
... countries vast amounts of money for necessary commodities. Moscow owed the German banks 37.6 billion DEM by the end of 1991 (Svenska Dagbladet, 27th of November 1991). Various Japanese companies were owed a total of 200 million dollars by Moscow in 1996. The Soviet Union had outstanding debts for various goods from different Western companies, which amounted to almost 10 billion dollars in the spring of...
... the Soviet Union and thereby prolonged the suffering of its citizens. Why was the Soviet Union finally made to fall? It became increasingly difficult for the United States to support the Soviet empire, as appeared from facts given in Dagens Nyheter on the 13th of July 1991. America did not have enough money to cover even its own expenses. The American government owed 4000 billion dollars to private...
... in the beginning of 1991 in order to speed up the phasing-out of the Soviet Union. They flooded the country with worthless roubles and thereby caused hyperinflation with the intention of deposing Gorbachev. Prime Minister Valentin Pavlov revealed this on the 13th of February 1991 in the newspaper Trud. This huge flow of money into the Soviet Union had been well prepared. Banks in Austria...
... of the Soviet Union! This was one of Gorbachev's last crimes against the Russian people before his resignation in December. His previous crimes are exposed in my book "Bakom Gorbatjovs kulisser" / "Behind Gorbachev's Scenes" (Stockholm, 1987). Soon after this, President Bush sent aid money for food in the form of a loan of 1.5 billion dollars to the Soviet Republics (except for the Baltic states...
..., which had become independent) which was to be repaid. (Expressen, 19th of November 1991) At the same time he demanded that Gorbachev should use violence if necessary. On the 8th of July 1992 in Munich, George Bush said: "There is not enough money in the whole world to save Russia. Now the Russians have to start working too." (Swedish TV-Aktuellt, 8th of July 1992.) Being a member of the influential...
...! The historian Jean Boyer stressed that Castro's money and weapons did not come from Moscow but from the United States. It was the freemason Eisenhower who helped Castro to power. The military aid to Cuba was later sent via the Soviet Union. So we need not be surprised at the fact that 5000 Cuban soldiers were used to protect the American and French oil companies in the Cabinda area of Angola when...
... and spies everywhere! It was also claimed that the Soviet citizens had the right to work. The slaves could not work normally under oppression for worthless money, which could only be used in shops where there was nothing worth buying. It could also be proved that the workers in the Communist countries were in poorer health than those in the West. On the 13th of December 1991, the Jewish cultural...
... cause complete chaos. Make sure that the disorder remains until the suffering and tortured gentiles desperately want our regime back. The gentiles must work under our leadership and be useful to us. Those who are not useful to us must be expelled. He who is not with us is against us 'An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth,' that is what Moses taught us. Money is our God!" The Jewish doctor Jacob...
... industrial countries continues at full speed. The result may be bankruptcy, hyper-inflation or complete obedience to the financial elite. In the best imaginable case, our great-grandchildren might be free of tax-slavery if they spend all their money paying off the interest and suffer deprivation whilst their parasites grow still richer. Russia is being plundered especially intensively. There are one or two...
... Street and the Bolshevik Revolution", Morley, 1981. Sutton, Antony, "Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development", Standford, 1973. Sutton, Antony, "The National Suicide" Melbourne, 1973, Sutton, Antony, "The Best Enemy Money Can Buy", Billings, 1986. Suvorov, Viktor, "The Ice-Breaker", Moscow, 1992. Suvorov, Viktor, "M Day", Moscow, 1994. Toll, Sofia, "The Brothers of the Night", Moscow, 2000...