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Found: 1460 articles, showing 160 - 170
... pullan, the jews of europe and the inquisition of venice, cit., pp. 296-297. [10] the hebrew expression mamzer barbanid is an obvious corruption of mamzer bar ha-niddah, "bastard son of a menstruating woman", and not as maintained by loly zorattini, "mamzer barchanit" (?), "turncoat bastard, deserter" (cfr. loly zorattini, processi del s. uffizio contro ebrei e giudaizzanti, cit., voi. ii, p. 33). [11...
... kingdom of God. Remember he says LIKE children, not children. Children won't be able to enter into the kingdom of God but only those who are LIKE children. What does it mean: who are like children and not children? Those who have passed through the world, who have known all corruption and who have regained their virginity. Knowledge has two opposites: innocence, the innocence of the sage; and ignorance...
... would not kill her. That was not according to their culture, to kill a woman. So there were four times more women than men and naturally it was creating a very difficult situation. If three women remained unmarried, there was going to be great prostitution, corruption of all kinds. To avoid the situation, Mohammed suggested that every man marries four women. It was perfectly right in Saudi Arabia...
... childhood. Don't remember it -- relive it. It was a suffering. No childhood is happy: every child wants to become adult, mature. big, strong -- every child -- because every child feels himself helpless. He does not know what he has. How can you know when you have not lost it? He will have to lose innocence: he will have to move into the world of corruption; he will have to go deep into sins. He was a...
... dollars. What is the purpose? -- to kiss the ground at the airport. Where is this money coming from? And these are the people ... all the politicians of the world are corrupt, but just because they are in power nobody can say that they are corrupt. You will be crushed. It is almost impossible to be in power and not be corrupted. Corruption is the force that leads you: whoever is more corrupt reaches the...
... airports? These are not international airports...! And if I can corrupt their country sitting in my airplane, I can corrupt from here perfectly well! And I will do everything I can to corrupt, because my corruption is against all that is ugly, all that is brutal, all that is violent, all that is oriented towards war. I will corrupt these people, and their minds. I would like them to be more loving, to be...
... parties are ready to give the power into the Communist Party's hands without making any resistance. That doesn't make sense!" "You can't make sense of this democracy business all at once!" the major sighed. "It's utter idiocy!" the captain agreed. "Perhaps it isn't so stupid after all." The major knitted his brows in the attempt to get to the bottom of it all. "Democracy as a political form is the will...

.... We knew such a person existed only when he went to the platform not from the wings, but from the body of the hall. He was chosen to play the role of candidate 'from the very heart of the people'. Both candidates had been put forward in advance by the S. M. A. Political Administration and had been approved by Moscow. We all waited impatiently for this boring procedure to finish, especially as it was...

... same bowl as good old Uncle Joe. Byrne's' speech was not to the Kremlin's liking, and it was given a sharp answer in Molotov's speech on the occasion of the revolutionary celebrations on 7 November. So much importance was attached to this speech that it was made the subject of compulsory study in all the political study circles throughout the S. M. A. There was no attempt to conceal the connection...

... leader's speech. These two political speeches can be regarded as marking the beginning of the cold war. In the Control Commission Allied relations cooled off still more and went no further than diplomatic courtesy required. Decisions affecting the future of Germany were more and more removed from the Control Commission meetings to the private offices of the Kremlin and the White House. This situation...

... also served as a signal for a final tightening of the screw on the Soviet post-war front. The S. M. A. Political Administration issued an instruction accusing minor Party authorities of having lost contact with the masses and neglecting political educational work. This was the crack of the whip. One could guess what would follow. In fact the first consequence was a change of Party organizers in all...

... the S. M. A. departments. This was followed by measures to tighten things up all through the Soviet machinery. Hitherto the Soviet residents of Karlshorst had lived and worked without engaging in political study. Anybody who knows anything about Soviet life will know what that meant. The higher authorities were secretly astonished, the smaller fry quietly rejoiced; but one and all held their tongues...

..., on the principle of not mentioning the devil in case he appeared. But now political studies were started, including study of the Short History of the C. P. S. U. And it had to be carried through in shock tempo at that. Evidently to make up for lost time. The next step was a campaign to raise labor discipline. It was decided to remind Soviet citizens abroad that there was such a thing as the Soviet...

... time, then he looked wearily at the other man and asked: "But how did you get here?" The engineer only shrugged his shoulders helplessly. Dubov spent four years in the camp. But during all those years he did not suffer as much as his wife and children. Under Soviet law a political prisoner's guilt extends to include his family. His wife was morally and physically shattered. Their children grew up in...

... addition was singled out for the honor of being invited to join the Communist Party. This time he did not hesitate. Without a word he filled in the questionnaires. And without a word he accepted the Party ticket, which the corps commander's political deputy presented to him. In the S. M. A. Major Dubov was regarded as one of their most reliable and knowledgeable engineers. He was given the responsible...

... Party'. That was a stereotyped remark and was to be found in almost every officer's personal file, but it was truer of him than of the majority. Certain days were set apart for political instruction, and on one of these days Belyavsky went to his office two hours earlier, as was his custom, and unfolded his papers. The educational circle to which he belonged was of a rather higher level, for it...

... conviction. The bewildered looks of his fellows expressed the mute question: 'Has he gone mad? Why all this unnecessary bother?' It happened that the circle that day included the Instructor from the S. M. A. Political Administration, who was there as observer. Belyavsky's speech attracted his notice; obviously he had not often heard anyone speak with conviction in these circles for political education. He...

... made a note of the name. Next day Belyavsky was summoned to the Political Administration. "Listen, Comrade Captain," the instructor said to him. "I'm amazed at you. I've been looking through your personal file. An exemplary officer, the finest of testimonials, and yet you're not a Party member. That simply won't do. The Party must interest itself in men like you... "No, no, no..." he raised his hand...

..., as though afraid Belyavsky might make some objection. "You made a very remarkable speech in the political circle yesterday... And yet you've never been drawn into Party work. We shall assign you to the task of giving political instruction to the officers' wives. That to begin with. And secondly, you must put in your application for Party membership at once. No objections! Get that?" Belyavsky had...

... no thought of objecting. Membership of the Party connoted a full and valid position in Soviet society. His heart was filled with joy; he shook the instructor's hand with genuine gratitude. The November revolutionary celebrations were drawing near. In addition to having charge of a political education circle, Belyavsky was entrusted with the preparations for the festival. He plunged headlong into...

... social and political activity and devoted all his free time to it. Spiritually he was born again. But above all he rejoiced because the Party had forgotten his past, because he was no longer a lone wolf. Only now did he fully realize how bitterly he had felt his alienation from society. Just about then an insignificant incident occurred which had unexpected consequences. Belyavsky was a keen...

... of the head of the S. M. A. Political Administration, General Makarov. All the women were rather problematic wives, wives only within the bounds of Karlshorst. Almost all the high S. M. A. officials had exceptionally young wives. Marshal Sokolovsky's wife was several years younger than his daughter was. Such things were the result of the war. Belyavsky apologized for troubling them, explained why...

... pants the officer could not help remarking: "One man couldn't have got it down there by himself. He must have had at least two others to help him." It transpired that the day the machine was stolen Major Yeroma was returning late in the evening from the Political Administration, accompanied by two other officers of the Administration of Justice. As he approached his house the Major noticed the machine...

... him what they were thinking, for obvious reasons. After he had gone they quarreled among themselves. The young wife of the head of the Political Administration took Belyavsky's side and declared that the machine must be returned to him. In his indignation he decided to take steps to bring the culprits to justice. He wrote reports of the affair to General Dratvin, the S. M. A. chief of staff, to the...

... Political Administration, and the S. M. A. Military Prosecutor. If justice were done, Major Yeroma should be expelled from the Party, stripped of his officer's rank and sentenced to imprisonment for theft. So the law prescribed. When Major Berko heard what Belyavsky intended to do he advised him not to be in any hurry. A charge against Yeroma involved much else besides him, and in such cases it was...

...," Belyavsky said, "how did my motor-cycle get into your cellar?" "I found it," the major answered with his mouth full of food, and not batting an eyelid. "I shall send a report to the Political Administration." Belyavsky was so taken aback by the Party organizer's impudence that he didn't know what else to say. Yeroma went on eating, or rather guzzling his soup; the sweat rolled down his face. When he had...

... finished the dish he picked it up and poured the last few drops into his spoon. Then he licked the spoon and smacked his lips. "You'll never make any impression on him with a report," Berko said in a rage. "Spit in his plate and let's go!" They went, slamming the door behind them. The same evening Belyavsky went to the office of the head of the Political Administration and handed the adjutant on duty his...

.... In this case it all depends on the Political Administration. You know yourself it's a Party matter." If Belyavsky had had more experience in Party matters, he would probably have avoided measuring his strength against the Party. Meanwhile, the Political Administration had received a resolution from a local Party group recommending Captain Belyavsky's acceptance as a Party member. His application...

... was accompanied by brilliant testimonials to his conduct during the war. But now the affair of the stolen motorcycle was beginning to be talked about all over Karlshorst. In order to smother the scandal the Political Administration decided that it must close the mouth of one of the two antagonists, and the choice fell on Belyavsky. Quite unexpectedly he received the order that he was to be...

.... Yet they were condemned, irrevocably condemned to death. To spiritual death at the least. And there are millions of similar cases. That can easily be proved. During the thirty years of the Soviet regime at least thirty million people have been subjected to repressive measures on political grounds. As the families of all such people are automatically classified as politically unreliable, if we assume...
... the crime shortly before his execution, so that he might not be able to say anything to the detriment of Judaism. On the occasion of the ritual-murder trial at Damascus in 1840, there was an attempt with enormous expenditure of money and just as great political pressure, to cause a personage in authority to omit the planned translation of the Talmud and other books, using the extremely revealing...

... Judentum [Judaism Discovered], despite repeated attempts at bribery, nevertheless did appear, it was confiscated by the political pressure of World Jewry. Another scholar, Raabe, who translated the Mishnah, the basic text of the Talmud, completed about 200 A.D., received from a Mannheim Jewish middleman an offer of 3000 Taler together with a beautiful villa on the Rhine, if he gave up the publication of...

... the disadvantage of his racial comrades could be said (ne forte aliquid in opprobrium Judaeorum loqueretur)! Obviously the executioner had been bribed beforehand, although his corruption is called into doubt by the Jewish publisher of the report [11]. In Mainz a child was sold to the Jews by his nurse and slaughtered by the former in April of the year 1283 (Athanasius Fern, Jüdische Moral und Blut...
... more than the executive of others' decisions. The Kremlin considered such a commander more fitted to deal with the changed conditions of the post-war period when, after getting through a critical period, the Politburo again took the reins firmly into its hands. Side by side with the supreme commander's organization there is the office of the Political Adviser, who is the real representative of Soviet...

... Party policy in Germany; his role far exceeds that of a normal counselor. He is responsible for seeing that the Kremlin's political line is followed, and as unofficial political commissar he simultaneously has oversight of all the supreme commander's decisions. When Molotov arrived in Berlin on his way to the London Conference or for the subsequent Foreign Ministers' Conferences in that city, he...

... always saw the Political Adviser before the supreme commander. While the commander was the representative of the Soviet Government, the Political Adviser was the representative of the Party. Their mutual relations corresponded: the first executed the second's will. The Political Administration of the S. M. A. Staff has the same name as that of the Political Adviser, but it is an independent...

... organization. The Political Adviser's Administration forms the link between the S. M. A. and Moscow, whereas the S. M. A. Political Administration is the link with below; in other words, it controls political activities inside the S. M. A. offices throughout the Soviet zone and directs all the political life of that zone. It issues instructions to and receives reports from the Party organizers who act as...

... political commissars to the head of each office, department, and branch of the S. M. A. Although the position of political commissar has been officially abolished more than once, it still continues unofficially in the army under the designation: 'Deputy of the Commander in Political Affairs', and in civilian offices as the 'Party Organizer'. The Political Administration supervises the activities of the...

... political parties in the Soviet zone. It is from this department that the German communist leaders, Pieck, Grotewohl, and Ulbricht, receive their instructions. Among other tasks of the Administration is the propagation and spreading of Soviet ideology. One department is concerned with the instruction of and political work among the German youth. All the educational plans and primers for the German schools...

... are drawn up in conformity with the directives of the S. M. A. Department for Education, but they have first to be examined and confirmed by the Political Administration. Without the Administration's approval nobody can play any part in the public life of the Soviet zone. Even where the simulacrum of democracy is maintained-in the elections of representatives of German parties and trade unions, for...

... instance-the Political Administration predetermines the outcome of those elections. This is achieved by various methods, but preferably through a conversation in the S. M. A., where the 'democratic' representatives are treated with little ceremony, the demand being simply made: "Supply us with a list of your candidates for confirmation." Besides the Political Administration, the S. M. A. also has an...

... at one time it made a very active search for former Gestapo officials, and comprehensive card indexes of former Gestapo agents were compiled. But not for the purpose of administering merited punishment to those indexed. The majority of those who were tracked down were subjected to a very thorough test and a moral and political 're-education' and then, in conformity with the usual Soviet practice...

... collaborators' of the Karlshorst Department for Internal Affairs, it shows that approximately every fifth man in the S. M. A. staff is working for the M. V. D. In M. V. D. jargon this is called the 'saturation coefficient'. The ratio fluctuates according to the importance of the department: in the Political Administration it is higher, in the Administrative and Economic Departments it is lower. The Department...

... Administration for Industry there was a very different atmosphere from that which prevailed in the office of the Political Adviser, the Political Administration, or the purely military administrations. Although the majority of the staff wore uniform, they felt that they were really engineers or other technical experts, that they were all civilians. Here the first requirement was that a man should be a...

... operation had already been carried through in agriculture, with the aid of the land reform. Secondly, it lent itself to the pretense that the new regime was progressive, and thus, if only transiently, it made political capital for the Soviets and their puppets. The S. M. A. lost nothing by this development. Under the new conditions of planned economy the whole group of 'useless' industries was condemned...

... brought more and more under the control of these same 'local authorities'. The total remained the same, but the various entries were rearranged. One of the most subtle moves of the S. M. A. Political Administration in the struggle for political domination in Germany was the formation of the Socialist Unity Party. In the early days after the capitulation the S. M. A. took various steps to strengthen the...

... question again and again-simply because Karlshorst was far from convinced that the K. P. D. would get the desired majority in such elections. The S. M. A. Political Administration held many conferences with the leaders of the K. P. D. headed by Wilhelm Pieck. The Administration insisted that the Party influence must be increased by every possible means. Pieck could only shrug his shoulders helplessly...

.... Then, after discussions with the S. M. A. Political Adviser, the possibility of a fusion of the K. P. D. and S. D. P. D. was raised. At one stroke that would give the K. P. D. a gigantic increase in membership, and therefore in votes. The S. M. A. regarded the S. D. P. D. as a numerically very strong but politically helpless organization without a backbone. If the K. P. D., numerically very weak but...

.... D. and the S. D. P. D. as fraternally shaking hands. The Soviet officers sneered: "We hold out our hand to you: you'll hold out your foot yourself." How completely Karlshorst had misjudged the Germans' political maturity was shown by the elections held in Berlin in October 1946. The newly born political bastard on which the S. M. A. had set such great hopes came bottom but one of the four parties...

... when Comrade Lenin died he left a testament behind. Have you heard anything about it, Comrade Captain?" "No." "They say there are some funny things in it. It seems Comrade Lenin said more or less..." Captain Bagdassarian was already fidgeting uneasily on his chair and he decided to stop this dangerous talk. In the Soviet Union the story went that in his political testament Lenin hit off his two...
... Jewish plans for the immediate future, but also something of Jewish character and psychology in general. A full knowledge of the latter—which can be gained only through personal experience—is the greatest safeguard against Jewish snares and pitfalls of everyday life. In the following pages will be found the names of men and women prominent in political, economic and social circles who, lured by the...

... the " force and make-believe " of the Jewish countersign.* A rich young Bostonian, Garland, gave millions of dollars to the foundation which bears his name, and appointed as one of its trustees the notorious " red ", William Zebulon Foster. " Foster told them that the Garland Foundation could be depended upon whenever anyone got into trouble because of radical political opinions. Several of the...

... organizers of the Communist party and of its ' legal' political branch, the Workers' party, were promised regular monthly salaries by Foster, to be paid from the Garland Foundation " Another example is the Philadelphian, William Curtis Bok, who, on the death of his grandfather, Cyrus H. K. Curtis, in 1933, inherited6 a major interest in the huge Curtis Publishing Company, comprising The Ladies Home Journal...

... regulation of production, distribution and service, of the common good instead of private profit. The Society is a constituent of the Labour Party and of the International Socialist Congress: but it takes part freely in all constitutional movements, social, economic and political, which can be guided towards its own objects. Its direct business is: (a) the propaganda of Socialism in its application to...

... current problems; (b) investigation and discovery in social, industrial, political and economic relations; (c) the working out of Socialist principles in legislation and administrative reconstruction; (d) the publication of the results of its investigations and their practical lessons. The Society, believing in equal citizenship of men and women in the fullest sense, is open to persons irrespective of...

... series of covert blows at the political, economic, social and religious structure of England, and in 1924 it came to power with the advent of the first Labour Government, which can be called the offspring of the Fabian Society. The period had been fruitful, if long. There is no gainsaying that the Fabian Society has been first and foremost a gathering of intellectuals—a rebellious Intelligentsia whose...

... accomplishments seem the realisation of Weishaupt's dream of Masonic Illuminism, cleverly combined with Moses Mendelssohn's dream of Jewish Illuminism (Haskalah). Historically, it was founded in 1883 at the time when in the realm of philosophy and metaphysics, the political economy of John Stuart Mill, in England, and the Positivism of Auguste Comte, in France, had thrown perturbation into the minds of numerous...

... the decision taken and followed of penetrating into or, as Bernard Shaw himself expressed it, of permeating numerous existing societies with Fabian socialistic ideas and principles. This method of penetrating into organizations, political and economic, and of boring from within, gave, in time, remarkable results. Fabians, mainly Civil Servants, easily found their affinities in Liberal circles and...

... unswerving resolve to get to the top and govern England. They accepted the creed or tenets of any camp into which they penetrated and, by degrees, converted its adherents to their own views. In this manner Fabian members secured their positions in political, industrial and educational fields. To suit even Anarchism, they formed a special Fabian branch which bore the name of The Fabian Parliamentary League...

... Bolshevism by his Labour Party have for ever sullied the political honour of England and are a matter of history. Yet another aspect of Fabianism is the great part it took in the formation and, later, direction of The League of Nations, which Bernard Shaw calls an incipient international government. II. ECONOMICS. In the realm of the Economic, Industrial and Financial life of England, The Fabian Society...

..., resorted to intensive propaganda, generously distributing their tracts and leaflets. From Our Political Correspondent. The Government is to be presented with a brand new policy. Certain ministers are to take part in its preparation. It is called a " long run" Under Fabian educational schemes come the formation of the Educational Groups and of " The Nursery," the latter designed as a kind of training...

... Allen into " the Universities Socialist Federation." Fertile seeds of Fabian Socialism are also sown at the Summer Schools organized annually by the Society, which E. R. Pease rightly terms a " propagandist society ". The culminating triumph of the Fabians, in the realm of education, was the creation of the London School of Economics and Political Science at the London University where, today, one of...

... begin fashioning the new plan at a meeting to be held at Transport House.15 The prime movers are Major C. R. Attlee (Postmaster-General), and Mr. G, D. H. Cole. Sir Stafford Cripps (the Solicitor-General), Mr. Ernest Bevin, and Mr. Noel Baker, M. P. (Mr. Arthur Henderson's Parliamentary Private-Secretary) are among those expected to accept Society is more intellectual than political. This ascendancy...

... is composed of several Jews, among them Bernard M. Baruch, Herbert Swope, Mordecai Ezekiel, James Warburg, Frank W. Taussig, Others like Swanson, Secretary of the Navy,18 Arthur Bullitt, Louis M. Howe, Raymond Moley, Tugwell, George N. Peek, if not Jews, were closely connected with Jews and such radical organizations as the Conference for Progressive Political Action, the Rand School for Communism...

..., the Friends of Soviet Russia, the League for Industrial Democracy. The League for Industrial Democracy19 is the American counterpart of British Fabianism. It runs parallel to the Ethical Culture Society, founded by the Jew, Felix Adler, the Conference for Progressive Political Action, the Intercollegiate Socialist League, the Intercollegiate Liberal League, the American Civil Liberties Union, and...

... following lines, not devoid of a certain interest:— A. The Jew as a social force in history: The prophets of Israel as the preachers of political, social and economic democracy. The rabbis as the teachers in a democratic school of Jewish students. The Jewish figures in political history almost invariably the leaders in Liberalism, Labour and Socialism: (a) Examples: Karl Marx, Lasalle, Hess, Lasker...

... England and America. In England, the centralisation of all the plans for the " new policy " has, for quite some time, been worked under the name of " Political and Economic Planning" or " P. E. P. ", and in America it has taken the name of " N. R. A. " (National Recovery Act). The plans of both are identical, only the method of execution is different. Whereas the English must be dealt with slowly, and...

..., aliens to the Anglo-Saxon race, are swayed only by cupidity and the promise of material prosperity. Both methods produce the same results: the concentration of all material resources in the hands of the Jews, the lowering of our standard of living, and complete physical and moral degradation.29 — 1. "Who will ever suspect that all these peoples were stage-managed by us according to a political plan...

... Nina Somorodin, Clare Sheridan, Louise Bryant and Margaret Harrison. 10. See Time (Chicago Weekly) for July 17, 1933. 11. Pw/oco/No. 15, supra, pp. 158-9. 12. Supra, pp. 39-40. 13. Compare the subversive Conference for Political Progressive Action in America. 14. Supra, p. 204. 15. The premises of The Labour Party. 16. Easton Lodge is the seat of Frances, Dowager Countess of Warwick. The Socialism of...

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