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Politics : World Affairs Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: goldsnow who wrote (1515)8/17/2002 6:33:25 PM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3959
 
More Jewish/Zionist myths. Zionist Jews were organizing in Russia long before the Jewish Communist Revolution.
It became more and more apparent that these Zionist/communist Jews were more interested in the advancement of the Jewish/Zionist agenda than the advancement of a revolution that would ostensibly benefit all mankind. The Jews who financed, instigated, and led the Revolution were always under the financial control of Jewish Zionist "capitalist" from the West such as Jacob Schiff and the Rothchilds.

For the Zionist Jews who financed the Jewish/Bolshevik Revolution, the Communist Revolution was simply a mean of imposing state capitalism (communism) upon the Russian people rather than the Jewish corporate capitalism of the West. Jewish communism is simply state capitalism controlled by Jews.



To: goldsnow who wrote (1515)8/17/2002 8:27:33 PM
From: Emile Vidrine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3959
 
Another interesting fact about Stalin's antisemitism is the fact that his wife was Jewish, his son-in-law was Jewish, and his daugher-in-law was Jewish. The Zionist claim that Stalin was antisemitc is simply self-serving propaganda. Stalin simply opposed the Russian Jews who betrayed the Revolution and supported Zionism and Israel above their own native Russian homeland. Stalin's purge of Zionist Jews was infinitesimal compared to the tens of millions of Christians who were murdered by the Jewish communist from 1917-1950.

Stalin's fears were confirmed when the Jewish/Zionists finally assassinated him:

Bulganin, Molotov, Voroshilov, and Lazar left Stalin's dacha late one night, actually at 2:00 A.M. ...

They ordered their chauffeurs to drive them to Voroshilov's dacha at Zhukovka. It was the perfect place to meet, and, obviously, such a meeting was expected of them. One could not take chances with Stalin. His eyes and ears were everywhere. Every meeting, no matter how small, was reported back to him. Not even chauffeurs could be trusted. Everyone was a spy. The tiniest conversation between Politburo members reached Stalin's ears.

Voroshilov's home was ideal. He had no children, didn't believe in keeping servants or even guards around, and his wife was away visiting her mother for a few days. Anyone questioning such a meeting would be dismissed rather quickly, for Stalin had instructed them to prepare a report that very morning. ...

{p. 258} It was Molotov who finally summoned up enough courage to approach the subject.

"What do you mean by 'medicine?' "

The moment had arrived. Lazar knew that part of his plan had been flushed out. ... He looked around the room: Molotov, Bulganin, Voroshilov, all old friends, all trusted, all good men ...

Separately, each of them could not do what had to be done. Collectively, in the spirit of the revolution, they could now do the necessary, the essential, for with them would rest the fate of all Russia.

Lazar sighed and looked at the ceiling. They would have to know. They would have to join in.

They would have to understand completely the ramifications of all that he said. He had spoken to Rosa {his sister, Stalin's wife}, many times in fact, but it was also important to him that she not attend a meeting such as this. She had to be protected at all costs.

{p. 259} Voroshilov raised his hand. He usually did that to signify he wanted to say something, no matter how many people were in the room, one or a dozen.

"It seems quite clear to me what we have to do. A small dose of a drug slipped into his wine, which now is usually not pretasted, would render him into a coma, and with his weak heart, his death would be speeded up. But, it would not be poison in the purest sense, but rather a drug to aid in death, a helper."

He sounded almost professorial. All eyes now turned to Lazar. He had specifically suggested this meeting. ...

"We then come to the drug dicoumarol ... in its proper dosage, it is an anticoagulant. It makes the blood thinner and as a result retards the coagulation of the blood. In effect,

{p. 260} it liquefies and dissolves such a clot. This is what Stalin now takes ... I am not a doctor, but I have been told that the dosage is no longer monitored like before."

"What form is the medication in?" Molotov interjected. He was beginning to see where this was all heading.

"White tablets. They are unmarked. This is another reason why Stalin keeps a close tab on his medicine cabinet. He is obviously afraid of someone sneaking in and replacing the pills with something that will kill him."