Nobody knows that Zionism appeared as a Marxist movement, a socialist one Zionism is actually a revolution



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Many poets perished under Lenin. Among those executed was the 35- year-old poet Nikolai Gumilev, killed on the 21st of August 1921. It was Grigori Zinoviev who gave the order to execute Nikolai Gumilev.

At the beginning of the New Economic Policy, Lenin was dissatisfied that the terror had to be reined in, but he promised to continue even more intensively in the future. "It is the greatest mistake to believe that NEP means the end of the terror. We shall continue the terror later, and also the

economic terror," wrote Lenin to Leon Kamenev (actually Rosenfeld) on the 8th of March 1922.

In his childhood, the little Vova Ulyanov liked to order about and terrorise his youngest sister Olga. He also enjoyed destroying his toys.

Lenin was extremely displeased with the results of the agitation of the peasants in 1905: "Unfortunately, the peasants destroyed only a fifteenth of the estates; only a fifteenth of what they should have destroyed." (Lenin, "Collected Works", second edition, Vol. 19, p. 279.) In France, the Jacobin "revolutionaries" had ordered the peasants to destroy castles and manors.

Lenin also ordered churches plundered and destroyed. In this manner he collected 48 billion roubles in gold. ("In the Light of Day" by Vladimir Soloukhin, Moscow, 1992, p. 59.) The monastery at Solovetsk was turned into a concentration camp. In the same way, the museums were looted and the booty smuggled abroad. The largest Rembrandt collection in the world was kept at the Hermitage, but this was sold, like art treasures from Russian mansions.

On the 7th of November, Lenin said in a speech to the Russian people: "You must be prepared to sacrifice everything to conquer the world!"

Lenin never wanted to reach the truth through discussion. He was only interested in enforcing the will of his criminal organisation through deception, plunder and murder. Since the Russian people refused to accept the Bolsheviks' insane system, they were forced to liquidate a third of the population, wrote the author Vladimir Soloukhin in the periodical

Ogonyok in December of 1990.

Vladimir Lenin took over many of the methods of the anarchist terrorist Sergei Nechayev (1847-82), who had plans to introduce barracks-

Communism into Russia. Lenin called his own method "war-Commu- nism". Nechayev had worked with the Illuminatus Mikhail Bakunin. Due to the influence of Bakunin, Nechayev came to believe that everything was morally justifiable to a revolutionary. He even recommended joining robbers, who could also be said to belong to the true revolutionaries. This idea became the basis of Lenin's later tactics. Mao Zedong (China) also used these same tactics.

Nechayev had taken part in the student troubles in 1868 and tried to set up a terrorist organisation called The Axe or The People's Settlement in Moscow the following year. He later founded the terrorist group Hell, in

which the Marxist terrorist Nikolai Fedoseyev (1871-1898) eventually became an important figure. He poisoned his father in order to donate his inheritance to revolutionary activity. Fedoseyev founded the first Marxist clubs in Kazan. One of the members of these was Vladimir Ulyanov (Lenin), who joined in 1888. (The collection "Chernyshevsky and Nechayev", Moscow, 1983.)

Sergei Nechayev wrote "The Catechism of the Revolution" in 1868-69, in which he asserted: "There is a need for conspirators with iron-hard discipline for the revolution to succeed. These must spy even on their comrades and report every suspicious act." In this way, Nechayev personally organised the murder of a critical member. After this, he fled abroad in 1872. The Swiss police extradited him to Russia in the same year, and he was sentenced to 20 years of hard labour.

In his "Catechism of the Revolution" Nechayev stressed that a revo- lutionary must be merciless against all of society, especially against the intellectuals. But he must also exploit the fanaticism of the individualist terrorists. These were later to be forgotten or even destroyed according to need. As we know, Stalin began to liquidate social revolutionary terrorists - all in line with Lenin's instructions.

A well-known children's song in praise of Lenin goes like this: "The great Lenin was so noble, considerate, wise and good." But the "good" Lenin did not care about the living conditions of the people. He hated children. Lenin was only interested in his own power and well-being. He also saw to it that his gang of bandits lived well, and also his relatives. Lenin organised holidays for his relatives to various spas, had this paid for by the state and gave them state subsidies. There is written evidence of how Lenin gave Sergo Ordzhonikidze orders to take care of his lover Inessa Armand in the best possible manner when she arrived in Kislo- vodsk. The first special telephone was given to the same "comrade Inessa". It was Lenin who introduced the privileges of the Nomenclatura, whilst he changed the life of normal people into a downright nightmare.

It can be mentioned here that when Lenin spent 14 months in a jail in St. Petersburg in 1895-96, he received meals directly from a restaurant. He also ordered a special mineral water from a pharmacy.

As a dictator, Lenin's ugly attributes came to the fore. He kept his personal fortune, which he had gained from plundered art, valuables and gems he had sold, in a Swiss bank. In 1920 alone, Lenin transferred 75

million Swiss francs into his account. (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-Illuminist principle - the ends justify the means.

Independently thinking people will be aware that the immense crimes of the Soviet Communist Party can never be atoned for. It is equally

impossible to justify the acts of "individual comrades", Lenin among

others. In fact Lenin was fascinated by violence. He spoke of the so-called French Revolution and above all praised the violence it had involved.

Lenin was entranced by violence - he used to lick his lips when a chance to use violence presented itself.

Mark Yelizarov, the husband of Lenin's older sister Anna, said to comrade Georgi Solomon that Lenin was abnormal. (Georgi Solomon, "Lenin and his Family", Paris, 1931.) Charles Rappoport asserted in 1914 that Lenin was a swindler of the worst sort. Vyacheslav Menzhinsky called Lenin a political Jesuit in the Russian exile newspaper Nashe Slovo (Paris, July 1916). Menzhinsky was named People's Commissary for Financial Affairs after the Bolshevik seizure of power. In 1918, he was Soviet Russia's consul-general in Berlin and later, in 1919, he held leading positions within the Cheka. In 1926, he became head of the OGPU (political police), a position he held until 1934, when Stalin had him executed. In 1916, Menzhinsky had openly stated that the aim of the Leninists was to suppress the voice of the workers. He later became an infamous mass-murderer.

Even the merciless sadist Leon Trotsky called Lenin a hooligan at a meeting of the Politburo, because Lenin, when angry, used to call his fellow criminals marauders, idiots, mongrels, thieves, carrion, criminals, parasites, speculants...

On November 7, 1990, Swedish TV showed a programme about the October coup and its consequences. There were interviews with both Leninist-Stalinists and White Guards. Alexander Kondratyevich, former officer in the tsarist Russian army, now living in Paris, had personally seen Lenin. He said that Lenin's eyes were evil and radiated hatred, and he shook with evil and hatred as he spoke. Kondratyevich got the impression that Lenin somehow suffered from paranoia.

The Russian author Alexander Kuprin (1870-1938), who emigrated from his homeland in 1919 to return in 1937 described Lenin in the following manner: "Short with broad shoulders and skinny." He thought Lenin was shallow.

The author Nikolai Valentinov wrote the book "The Lesser-Known Lenin" (Paris, 1972). He thought Lenin's ugly little eyes radiated a piercing contempt, compact coldness and a bottomless wickedness. Valen- tinov claimed that Lenin's gaze reminded him of the stare of an angry boar.

The English philosopher Bertrand Russell maintained that Lenin was the worst person he had ever met. He described in his memoirs how Lenin

spoke of peasants he had hanged and began to laugh as if it had been a joke.

It has been made public in the Russian press how, when Felix Dzer-

zhinsky (actually Rufin), chief of the Cheka, told Lenin of the execution of five hundred leading intellectuals in 1918, the great dictator, in his joy, began to neigh like a horse. He went into ecstasies and cheered out of satisfaction.

In August 1990, the artist Ilya Glazunov was on Leningrad's most popular TV programme, "600 Seconds", where the host asked him: "Who

do you believe to be the greatest criminal of the twentieth century?" Glazunov answered: "Isn't it obvious? Everyone realises who it is." The host was stubborn: "No, I have no idea whom you mean. Tell me, who are you thinking of?" Glazunov said: "Lenin, of course."

Many people who knew Lenin personally stated that chiefly hatred and merciless cruelty fueled him. He always received news of executions with

a smile. He wanted house searches and arrests to occur at night. The real leader of the terrorist organisation Cheka was actually Lenin. At the Seventh Soviet Congress in December of 1919, Lenin stressed that well- organised terror was necessary. He explained that a good communist must at the same time be a good Chekist.

Another myth claims that Stalin took power from the so-called Workers' Councils against Lenin's will. But Lenin wrote the following as

early as 1918: '"All power to the Workers' Councils!' was the slogan of the peaceful revolution. It is no longer applicable." (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 25, p. 156.)

According to another myth, Lenin advocated democracy and freedom. If only he had had a longer time in power, everything would have been different.

Lenin stressed as early as 1917 that the workers needed no liberty,

equality or fraternity. (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 26, p. 249.) He also said that Marxism lacked ethics. The only ethics of Marxism is the class struggle. (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 26, p. 378.)

Stalin did not deviate from the path of Leninism, as was later asserted. He dismantled NEP, which had by then served its purpose. Lenin had given instructions to that effect. Gorbachev also went by these guidelines. Lenin wrote: "If the front-line attack fails, we should go around and

continue more slowly. We must exploit capitalism." This was in 1921

before the beginning of the New Economic Policy. (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 32, p. 318.)

Olgerts Eglits, member of the Latvian Academy of Sciences, on the 17th of April 1989, in the newspaper Atmoda (The Awakening), stated that Stalin had carefully followed Leninist principles. Everybody is likely to remember the bloody events that took place in Riga and Vilnius in January 1991. They, too, were a result of Leninist politics.

Among other documents discovered in Trotsky's archives was a letter from Lenin to Yefraim Shklansky, Jewish Vice People's Commissary for Military Affairs, written in August 1920. Lenin had learned how, in Estonia, volunteers were being drafted into the Polish army. The plan was to send them to Poland via Riga in Latvia. So Lenin decided: "It is not enough to send a few diplomatic protests... Use military means, i.e. Latvia and Estonia must be punished militarily (follow, for example, Balakhovich across the border and hang 100-1000 officials and rich people)."

Lenin promised to pay 100 000 roubles for every person hanged. Lenin's cunning plan was to disguise his terrorists as Stanislav Bulak- Balakhovich's white guards.

This letter was left out of "Collected Works" and was first published in the periodical Das Land und die Welt No. 4, in Munich in 1984, and also in Russia after the fall of Communism.

Wasn't it a typical Leninist trick to make Vytautas Landsbergis respon- sible for the Soviet bloodbath in Vilnius in January 1991?

Alexander Solzhenitsyn has emphasized that Lenin had virtually nothing in common with the Russian culture, since he belonged to the so- called internationalists. That was why he waged a war against every form of national culture. His policy in national questions prescribed fusion of different nationalities and national cultures. The saint of the Bolsheviks wrote in 1919: "The peoples shall be mixed. The national stagnation must cease." (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 20, p. 55.)

Six years earlier in 1913 he had declared: "From a social democratic point of view, the national culture must not be strengthened, since the spiritual life of all humanity will be internationalised already under capitalism. Under Socialism it will be internationalised completely." (Lenin, "Collected Works", Vol. 19, p. 213.) Lenin's successors have tried to realise this thesis in order to change Russia into the ethnic sewer Marx wrote about.

Oleg Agranyants worked as Party secretary in the Soviet commune in Tunisia in 1985. His book "What is to be Done? Or the Most Important Task of our Time - Deleninisation of Our Society", was published in London in 1989. It was actually surprising how vehemently he unmasked Lcnin.

Oleg Agranyants claimed, among other things, that Lenin trusted Stalin completely. Stalin, meanwhile, felt contempt for Nadezhda Krupskaya. Stalin even threatened her in the following manner: "If necessary, we will say that Lenin's real wife was Stasova!" Stalin presumably had a reason for this utterance, since the well-known Jewish Bolshevik Yelena Stasova, best known for her leadership of MOPR or the Red Aid, claimed many times in her 93 years that Lenin had used her name, Lena, as his pseudonym. The first time Vladimir Ulyanov called himself Lenin was in December 1901. In his book, Oleg Agranyants regrets that Lenin's lover's name was Lena and not Varya. Then, instead of Marxism-Leninism, we would have had Marxism-Varvarism (in English: Marxism-Barbarism). Krupskaya never called her husband Lenin. Before the Bolshevik seizure of power she signed all documents Ulyanova. After the introduction of the red dictatorship she signed as Krupskaya.

Oleg Agranyants explained that Lenin's letter to the Party Congress, which is better known as his testament wherein Stalin was described with harsh words and not recommended for leadership, is in fact a banal forgery. Krupskaya wrote this letter. During this period, Lenin's health was so bad that he sometimes forgot his own name. The tyrant, suffering from progressing mental and physical decay, was not capable of dictating a letter. The Politburo knew this and therefore never took this letter seriously. Also by its language, it differed from Lenin's other notes and writings.

If Lenin's earlier writings are studied, only two or three documents can be found which do not praise Stalin while Lenin was extremely severe on his other collaborators. He always had something unpleasant to say about Trotsky or Kamenev or Zinoviev or Bukharin. As the reader will have noticed, he was not particularly restrained in his mode of expression.

Stalin never did anything, which would have diverged from Lenin's opinions or writings. It was Lenin, not Stalin, who began deporting the relatives of his political opponents. It must be pointed out here that the taking of hostages was a state policy, which had been planned by Lenin

and Trotsky, and not simply a result of the cruelty and mercilessness of individual terrorists. It was Lenin who started the plundering expeditions and mass murders. Lenin even demanded all homeless people to be executed on the spot.

Stalin followed the same pattern. He only followed Lenin's decree from January 1918, which exhorted that Russia be purged of all possible vermin for the foreseeable future.

I might mention here that Stalin's attitude toward cultural values was somewhat milder than Lenin's. There was still, of course, no straying from the true Leninist doctrine. Stalin wanted to seem democratic. That was why he introduced so-called general elections for demagogic reasons. In contrast, Lenin had said that the people had nothing to say in the matter, since he, Lenin, had foreseen everything. Stalin, too, was of the opinion that he knew everything better than anyone else did. Stalin re-introduced the tradition of the new-year's tree and in 1942 allowed the use of the tsarist army-shirts (gimnastyorka)... Lenin had despised those things.

Stalin did not ascend the throne himself. It was Lenin who made him general secretary of the Central Committee, since Trotsky did not wish to be seen in this public position due to his manifestly Jewish origin. Stalin was a worthy follower of the Leninist inheritance until Lazar Kaganovich had him poisoned in 1953.

Of course, Stalin was the most bloodstained tyrant in the history of humanity, but he was just following the Leninist path. Stalin was the hangman who executed Judge Lenin's sentences and carried out his plans of enslavement. Once again, it is possible to cite a corresponding order of Lenin: "Begin a merciless campaign of terror and a war against the farmers and other bourgeois elements who are hiding an excess of grain."

A particularly dark secret about Lenin was concealed up to the end of the 1990s. This is evident from his correspondence with his party comrade and Masonic brother Grigori Zinoviev (Radomyslsky). Lenin wrote to Zinoviev on 1 July 1917: "Grigori! Circumstances have forced me to leave Petrograd at once... The comrades suggested a place. It is so boring to be alone... Come and join me and we will spend wonderful days together, far away from everything..."

Zinoviev wrote to Lenin: "Dear Vova! You have not answered me. You have probably forgotten your Gershel [Grigori]. I have prepared a nice cubby-hole for us... It is a wonderful home where we will live well and

nothing will disturb our love. Travel here as soon as you can. I am waiting (or you, my little flower. Your Gershel."

In another letter, Zinoviev wanted to be sure that Lenin was not sleeping with other men in their home. He ended his letter by sending a Marxist kiss to his Vova. He suggested that nothing should be hidden from Lenin's wife Nadezhda Krupskaya and reminded him of the first time she had caught them. (Vladislav Shumsky, "Hitlerism is Terrible, but Zionism is Worse", Moscow, 1999, p. 47.)

In this way the two Masonic brothers practised David's love for

Jonathan. Perhaps this makes it easier for us to understand why the

freemasons are so keen on supporting the homosexual "liberation".

Soviet man was not allowed to be independent of the state, even in

foodstuffs. Stalin made sure to finally end the possibility of this by

enforcing mass-collectivisation. In this, he also followed Lenin's orders. Lenin had said that an independent farmer who had an excess of grain was a danger to the social revolution. (Lenin, "Collected Works", second

edition, Vol. 19, p. 101.) So Stalin, like a parrot, repeated that measures must be taken against the farmer, like against the bourgeois, if he had a good harvest, to protect the social revolution.

It is understandable, then, why people used to tell this joke: Radio Yerevan was asked: "Why is there always a shortage of food in the Soviet Union?" Radio Yerevan answered: "Because the Winter Palace was so badly defended."

Lenin knew that the majority of the Russian people were against his bloodthirsty party. Therefore he waged a terrible war against this people to enslave it by means of fair but meaningless slogans. His successor continued this dreadful war, but used different methods. Vladimir Ulyanov-Lenin knew that the untalented Stalin would follow his directions to the letter.

It was also Lenin who created the problems between different nations. In February 1921 he handed over the Armenian Kars and Ardagan to Turkey in exchange for the town of Batumi. Stalin could not give Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaidjan without Lenin's permission. Lenin did not make a secret of the fact that he, like leading Turkish Jews, disliked the Armenians.

The ungrateful Lenin even persecuted his allies, especially the Social Revolutionaries on the left, who were prepared to support him in all kinds

of ways and entered his government in December 1917. Lenin ordered their leader, Maria Spiridonova, imprisoned half a year after his seizure of power. Stalin had her executed in 1941. Many of those who helped Lenin came to very bad ends.

Lenin's Last Days

Lenin's journey through life ended very tragically. The circumstances surrounding his death have been carefully concealed. It was officially claimed that he suffered from constant headaches as a result of a bullet wound, caused by Fanny Kaplan, due to which he could never sleep properly. This was claimed for the last time by Chazov, the Soviet minister of health, in the periodical Ogonyok No. 42, 1988.

This lie was actually exposed by Pravda itself, in number 18, 1929, where the Latvian Bolshevik Janis Berzins-Ziemelis told about his meeting with Lenin in 1906. He said, among other things: "Vladimir Ulyanov suffered from headaches and sleeplessness even then. That was why he got up late and was nearly always in a bad mood."

So Lenin suffered from headaches even 12 years before the attempt on his life. It was less known at the time that Lenin also suffered from constant pain in his eyes which, according to Vladimir Soloukhin, pointed to a problem with his brain.

On the evening of the 12th of December 1922, Felix Dzerzhinsky told Lenin that his Jewish representative Theodor Rothstein could no longer take 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.


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