Above, the murderous thug Leon Trotsky, founder of the Red Army and Bolshevik Terror.
Reader comment: The Bolsheviks did not leave you alive long enough for a badge. The Nazis were nothing compared to the Jewish-Bolsheviks.
Every American should be studying the Holodomor and Stalin’s terror.
Learn what the Bolsheviks did to Christian Ukrainians and Russians.
Because you may well be reliving it.
“All you freedom-loving “left wing” thinkers in the West! You
left-laborites! You progressive American, German, and French
students! As far as you are concerned, this whole book of mine is a waste
of effort. You may suddenly understand it all someday – but only when you
yourselves hear ‘hands behind your backs there!’ and step ashore on our
Archipelago.” Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
This is what they would visit on you: “We must turn Russia into a desert
populated by white Negroes upon whom we shall impose a tyranny such as the most
terrible Eastern despots never dreamt of. The only difference is that
this will be a left-wing tyranny, not a right-wing tyranny. It will be a
red tyranny and not a white one. We mean the word ‘red’ literally,
because we shall shed such floods of blood as will make all the human losses
suffered in the capitalist wars pale by comparison.” – Leon Trotsky (real name:
“The classes and the races (note: races) too weak to master the new conditions of life must give way…. They must perish in the revolutionary holocaust.” -Jewish Karl Marx, Marx People’s Paper, April 16, 1856, Journal of the History of Idea, 1981 ...... Marx advocated a "racial holocaust" in 1856...several years before Hitler was born.
The European People saw what was being done to the Christian Ukranian/Russian
People by the Bolshevick Jews, even though Americans never pay attention to
what is going on. Do you think the actions of the Jewish Bolsheviks just
might have influenced Hitler's (and European Christians') view of Jews.
He did not "hate them for no reason" These horrors happened as
Hitler was climbing the ladder and Hitler knew what the Jews were doing to Germans and Christians, unlike America where Jewish Bolshevik actions were not reported.
...before the pogroms occurred there were the Jewish tax collectors who impaled
many peasants...and before that... and pretty soon we're back in the Old
Testament. The Jewish CHEKA Bolsheviks were the utter filth of the 20th century.
We’re
relentlessly told that we must “never forget” the “Six Million” victims of
Hitler and the Nazis. But we hear far less about the vastly greater number of
victims of Lenin and Stalin, and the grim legacy of Soviet Communism. At least 20 million people perished as victims of the Soviet
regime, historians acknowledge.
Jews played a decisive role in founding and promoting the
egalitarian-universalist ideology of Marxism, in developing the Marxist
political movement, and in brutally establishing Bolshevik rule in Russia.
With the notable exception of Lenin, who was one-quarter
Jewish, most of the leading Marxists who took control of Russia in 1917-20 were
Jews, including Trotsky, Sverdlov, Zinoviev, Kamenev and Radek.
The Bolshevik slaughter of Russia’s imperial family is symbolic
of the tragic fate of Russia and, indeed, of the entire West. Lenin personally ordered their slaughter......................Z
Watchman comment: Friends and patriots, please be aware that Marxist revolutionaries are destroying our cities today. They want nothing but the destruction of our beloved constitutional republic and the seizure of power. They are merely the Jacobins and Bolsheviks and Anti-fascists of old going by new names.
It is estimated that 8 to 10 million people died during the Russian Civil War alone. The anti-communists and their White Army killed at least 50,000 communists. Many millions of Russian people also died due to famine, starvation, and epidemics. There are Godless Jews, Christians, Muslims, Chinese etc.
Hatred is not limited to one creed. I maintain Godless people have killed the most people in history and just in the 20th century alone. God help us!
Above, Yakov Mikhailovich Sverdlov, known by the pseudonyms
"Andrei", "Mikhalych", "Max",
"Smirnov", "Permyakov", "Jacob", was a Jewish Bolshevik
party administrator and chairman of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee
from 1917 to 1919.
Following the
assassination of Moisei Uritsky and the assassination
attempt on Lenin in August of 1918, Sverdlov drafted a document that called for
"merciless mass terror against all the enemies of the revolution." Under
his and Lenin's leadership, the Central Executive Committee adopted Sverdlov's
resolution calling for "mass red terror against the bourgeoisie and its
agents." During
Lenin's recovery Sverdlov moved into Lenin's office in the Kremlin and took
over some of Lenin's official obligations. He oversaw the interrogation of
Lenin's would-be assasin, Fanny Kaplan,
and even moved Kaplan from the Cheka headquarters to
be held in a basement room underneath Sverdlov's apartment. Sverdlov's deputy
Avanesov gave the order for Kaplan's execution and Sverdlov himself personally
ordered that the body be "destroyed without a trace."
Sverdlov supported the
Red Terror campaign, specifically when it came to the policy of decossackization that
was started in 1917 as a part of the Russian Civil War. This policy resulted in
the deaths of thousands of Cossacks, while the Soviet government confiscated
land and food produced by the Cossack population. Sverdlov wrote that "not
a single crime against the revolutionary military spirit will remain
unpunished," and that the release of Cossack prisoners was unacceptable. Sverdlov
even directed local officials to set up concentration camps in order to use
Cossack labor before their extermination. This policy was temporarily suspended
in March of 1919 while Sverdlov was in Ukraine overseeing
the election of the Ukrainian Communist Party's central
committee.
A number of sources claim that Sverdlov,
alongside Lenin and Goloshchyokin, played a major role in the execution of Tsar
Nicholas II and his family on 17 July 1918.
In a
speech on March 18th, 1919 Vladimir Lenin praised Sverdlov and his
contributions to the revolution. He called Sverdlov "the most perfectly
complete type of professional revolutionary."
Sverdlov
is commonly believed to have died of Spanish Flu,
after a political visit to the Ukraine and Oryol. Kremlin
doctors diagnosed him with the Spanish flu. Even as his illness progressed, he
continued to perform his duties as chairman of the Central Committee. On March
14th, 1919 Sverdlov lost conciousness and on the 16th he died at the age of 34.
He is
buried in the Kremlin Wall Necropolis, in Moscow. He was
succeeded in an interim capacity by Mikhail Vladimirsky, and eventually by Mikhail
Kalinin as Chairman of the Central Executive Committee, and
by Elena Stasova as Chairwoman of the
Secretariat.
Above, Grigory Yevseyevich Zinoviev, 11 September 1883 – 25 August 1936, born Hirsch Apfelbaum, known also under the name Ovsei-Gershon Aronovich Radomyslsky, was a Jewish Bolshevik revolutionary and a Soviet Communist politician. Zinoviev was one of the seven members of the first Politburo, founded in 1917 in order to manage the Bolshevik Revolution: Lenin, Zinoviev, Kamenev, Trotsky, Stalin, Sokolnikov and Bubnov.[1] Zinoviev is best remembered as the longtime head of the Communist International and the architect of several failed attempts to transform Germany into a communist country during the early 1920s. He was in competition against Joseph Stalin, who eliminated him from the Soviet political leadership in 1925, followed by removal from the Petrograd Soviet in 1926. He joined a secret bloc with Leon Trotsky against Stalin in 1932.
He was a chief defendant in a 1936 show trial,
the Trial of the Sixteen, that marked the start of
the Great Purge in
the USSR and resulted in his execution the
day after his conviction in August 1936.
Zinoviev spent the first three years of World
War I in Switzerland. After the Russian monarchy was overthrown during the February Revolution, he returned to Russia in April 1917 in a sealed train with
Lenin and other revolutionaries opposed to the war. He remained a part of the
Bolshevik leadership throughout most of that year and spent time with Lenin
after being forced into hiding in the period following the July
Days. However, Zinoviev and Lenin soon had a falling out over
Zinoviev's opposition to Lenin's call for an open rebellion against the
Provisional Government. On 10 October 1917, he and Lev
Kamenev were the only two Central Committee members to vote against an armed revolt. Their publication
of an open letter opposed the use of force enraged Lenin, who demanded their
expulsion from the party.
Sometime in 1918, while Ukraine was under German occupation, the
rabbis of Odessa ceremonially anathematized (pronounced herem against)
Trotsky, Zinoviev, and other Bolshevik leaders of Jewish descent in the
synagogue.
Shortly after the assassination of Petrograd Cheka
leader Moisei Uritsky in August 1918 and the
commencement of the five year Red Terror period
of political repression and mass killings, Zinoviev said:
To overcome our enemies we must have our own
socialist militarism. We must carry along with us 90 million out of the 100
million of Soviet Russia's population. As for the rest, we have nothing to say
to them. They must be annihilated.
During Lenin's final illness, Zinoviev, his close associate
Kamenev and Joseph
Stalin formed a ruling 'triumvirate' (or 'troika') in the Communist Party, playing a key role in the marginalization of Leon
Trotsky. The triumvirate carefully managed the intra-party debate
and delegate-selection process in autumn 1923, during the run-up to the XIIIth
Party Conference, and secured the vast majority of the seats. The Conference,
held in January 1924 just before Lenin's death, denounced Trotsky and Trotskyism.
After a brief lull in the summer of 1924, Trotsky published Lessons of October, an extensive
summary of the events of 1917. In the article, Trotsky described Zinoviev's and
Kamenev's opposition to the Bolshevik seizure of power in 1917, something that
the two would have preferred left unmentioned. This started a new round of
intra-party struggle, with Zinoviev and Kamenev once again allied with Stalin
against Trotsky. They and their supporters accused Trotsky of various mistakes
and worse during the Russian
Civil War. They damaged his military reputation so much that he was
forced to resign as People's Commissar of Army and Fleet Affairs and Chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council in January
1925. Zinoviev demanded Trotsky's expulsion from the Communist Party, but Stalin
refused to go along at that time and skillfully played the role of a moderate.
Above, the leadership of
the USSR, April 1925. In the photo, taken in the Kremlin: Joseph
Stalin,
General Secretary of the Communist Party; Alexei Rykov, Chairman of the Council of People's
Commissars (Prime Minister); Lev Kamenev, Deputy Chairman of the Council of People's
Commissars (Deputy Prime Minister); Grigory Zinoviev, Chairman of the
Comintern's Executive Committee
Police photographs of Zinoviev, taken by the NKVD after his arrest
in 1934.
After the murder
of Sergei Kirov on 1 December 1934 (which
served as one of the triggers for the Great Purge of
the Soviet Communist Party), Zinoviev,
Kamenev and their closest associates were once again expelled from the party
and arrested in December 1934. They were tried in January 1935 and were forced
to admit "moral complicity" in Kirov's assassination. Zinoviev was
sentenced to 10 years in prison and his supporters to various prison terms.
In August 1936, after
months of careful preparations and rehearsals in secret police prisons,
Zinoviev, Kamenev and 14 others, mostly Old Bolsheviks,
were put on trial again. This time, the charges included forming a terrorist
organization that supposedly killed Kirov and tried to kill Stalin and other
leaders of the Soviet government. This Trial of the Sixteen (or the trial of the
"Trotskyite-Zinovievite Terrorist Center") was the first Moscow Show
Trial and set the stage for subsequent show trials where Old
Bolsheviks confessed to increasingly elaborate and egregious crimes, including
espionage, poisoning, and sabotage. Zinoviev and the other defendants were
found guilty on 24 August 1936.
Before the trial, Zinoviev and Kamenev had agreed to plead guilty to the false charges on the condition that they not be executed, a condition that Stalin accepted, stating: "that goes without saying". Nonetheless, a few hours after their conviction, Stalin ordered their execution that night. Shortly after midnight, on the morning of 25 August, Zinoviev and Kamenev were executed by shooting.
Accounts of Zinoviev's
execution vary, with some having him beg and plead for his life, prompting the
stoic Kamenev to tell Zinoviev to "quiet down and die with dignity."
Regardless, Zinoviev put up such resistance to the guards that, instead of
taking him to the appointed execution room, the guards took him into a nearby
cell and shot him there.
Above, Kamenev with Lenin in Gorki
Kamenev was born as Leo Rosenfeld in Moscow, the son of a Jewish railway worker and a Russian Orthodox Christian mother. Both of his parents were active in radical politics. His father used the capital he earned in the construction of the Baku-Batumi railway to pay for Lev's education. Kamenev attended the boys' Gymnasium in Tiflis, Georgia (now Tbilisi) and later Moscow University where he became involved in political activity. His arrest in 1902 interrupted his formal education. From that point on, he worked as a professional revolutionary, and was active in the capital St. Petersburg, Moscow and Tiflis. He adopted the surname Kamenev during this period. In the early 1900s, he married Olga Bronstein, a fellow Marxist (and younger sister of Leon Trotsky, who had also adopted a different surname). The couple had two sons together.
In January 1914, he
was sent to St. Petersburg to direct the work of the Bolshevik version of Pravda and
the Bolshevik faction of the Duma.
Kamenev was arrested in November and tried, where he distanced himself from
Lenin's anti-war stance. In early 1915, Kamenev was sentenced to exile in Siberia;
he survived two years there until being freed by the successful February Revolution of 1917.
Before leaving
Siberia, Kamenev proposed sending a telegram thanking the Tsar's brother Mikhail for refusing
the throne. He was so embarrassed later by his action that he denied ever
having sent it.
During
Lenin's illness, Kamenev was appointed as the acting President of the Council
of People's Commissars and Politburo chairman. Together with Zinoviev and Joseph
Stalin, he formed a
ruling 'triumvirate' (or 'troika') in the Communist Party, and played a key role in the marginalization of Trotsky.
The triumvirate carefully managed the intra-party debate and delegate selection
process in the fall of 1923 during the run-up to the XIIIth Party Conference,
securing a vast majority of the seats. The Conference, held in January 1924
immediately prior to Lenin's death, denounced Trotsky and "Trotskyism."
The murder of Sergei Kirov on
1 December 1934 was a catalyst for what are called Stalin's Great Purges,
as he initiated wide-sweeping show trials and executions of opponents. Grigory Zinoviev,
Kamenev and their closest associates were again expelled from the Communist
Party and were arrested in December 1934.
During this time
Kamenev wrote a letter to Stalin, saying:
At a
time when my soul is filled with nothing but love for the party and its
leadership, when, having lived through hesitations and doubts, I can boldly say
that I learned to highly trust the Central Committee's every step and every
decision you, Comrade Stalin, make," Kamenev wrote. "I have been
arrested for my ties to people that are strange and disgusting to me.
In
August 1936, after months of careful preparations and rehearsals in Soviet
secret police prisons, Zinoviev, Kamenev and 14 others, mostly Old
Bolsheviks, were put on trial
again. This time the charges including forming a terrorist organization that
allegedly killed Kirov and tried to kill Stalin and other leaders of the Soviet
government. This Trial of the Sixteen (or the trial of the "Trotskyite-Zinovievite
Terrorist Center") was one of the Moscow
Show Trials, and it set the
stage for subsequent show trials. Old Bolsheviks were forced to confess
increasingly elaborate and monstrous crimes, including espionage, poisoning,
sabotage, and so on. Like other defendants, Kamenev was found guilty and
executed by firing squad on 25 August 1936.
After Kamenev's execution, his relatives suffered similar fates. Kamenev's second son, Yu. L. Kamenev, was executed on 30 January 1938, at the age of 17. His eldest son, air force officer A.L. Kamenev, was executed on 15 July 1939, at the age of 33. His first wife, Olga, was executed on 11 September 1941, in the Medvedev forest outside Oryol, together with Christian Rakovsky, Maria Spiridonova, and 160 other prominent political prisoners. Only his youngest son, Vladimir Glebov, survived Stalin's prisons and labor camps, living until 1994.
Above, Lev Kamenev, acting Chairman of the Council
of People's Commissars (Premier) Soviet Union, greeted on the military parade
to celebrate 6th anniversary of the October revolution, 7 November 1923
Karl Radek, in full Karl Bernhardovich Radek, original name Karl Sobelsohn, (born 1885, Lemberg, Galicia, Austria-Hungary [now Lviv, Ukraine]—died 1939?), Jewish Bolshevik
propagandist and early leader of the Communist
International (Comintern) who fell victim to Joseph Stalin’s Great Purge of the 1930s.
A member of a Galician Jewish family, Radek attended the universities of
Kraków and Bern.
In 1915, while attending the Socialist Zimmerwald conference, Radek
became acquainted with Vladimir
I. Lenin, who later invited
Radek to return with him to Russia. Radek left Lenin in Sweden and remained there to publish a
Bolshevik weekly bulletin. When the German revolution began in November 1918,
he traveled there as a representative of the Central Committee of the Russian Communist Party, helped reorganize the German Communist Party, and worked on
its Central Committee until his arrest in February 1919.
Released in December 1919, Radek
returned to Russia, where he quickly assumed a prominent position in the
Presidium of the Communist International. In 1923, representing the Comintern,
he returned to Germany to help prepare a communist revolution there. But the
uprising (autumn 1923) proved abortive, and Radek’s Soviet colleagues
(particularly Stalin), who also opposed him for his strong support of Leon Trotsky,
used his involvement in the German fiasco as an excuse to oust him from his
post as secretary of the Comintern and from the party’s central committee (May
1924). He was expelled from the party as a Trotskyite in 1927 and was banished
to the Ural
Mountains.
After recanting his oppositionist views (1929), Radek was readmitted to the party. He adopted a pro-Stalin position, praising the communist leader profusely, and consequently was made a member of the editorial board of the state newspaper, Izvestiya, and allowed to become one of the nation’s major commentators on foreign events (1931–36). In 1935 he was also appointed to the commission that prepared the 1936 Soviet constitution. Nevertheless, in October 1936 he was arrested and accused of participating in a Trotskyite conspiracy to dismember the Soviet Union. In January 1937, at the second show trial of the Great Purge, he confessed his guilt to the fabricated charge and, unlike his fellow defendants who were executed, was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Despite rumours, circulated in 1941, that he had been released to produce anti-German propaganda, there is strong evidence to suggest that he died in 1939 in prison or in a Soviet concentration camp.
Below is the link to Mark Weber's work.
https://archive.org/details/themarkweberreport-20120118-communismsdeathtoll
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