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The Jewish-controlled Bolsheviks implemented a methodology to seize grains and crops in Tambov City and Penza City, also seizing livestock farms. These taxations and grain seizures were used as a psychological weapon to increase starvation and instigate resistance, providing an excuse for lethal force. Beatings and rape were used to instill fear. In Tambov, authorities allegedly left grain to rot. The Tambov massacre was a dry run where the Bolshevik Red Army used force against the civilian population, revealing a weapon against ethnic European Christian people. The Red Terror, conducted by the Jewish Bolsheviks during 1918, involved mass torture, murder, and systematic oppression. The Cheka and Red Army executed farmers. At Odessa, officers were fed into furnaces or boiling water. In Kharkiv, scalpings and hand flaying were commonplace.

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In 1917, the February Revolution, a starting point of the Bolshevik Revolution, began. The Bolshevik Revolution was primarily piloted by Jews who hated Russia. On February 22nd, workers at the Putilov plant in Petrograd went on strike. Demonstrations followed, demanding an end to Russian autocracy and Russia's involvement in World War I. During the first week of these events, no newspapers promoted the strikes. However, foreign banking interests and revolutionary Jews sought to exploit the situation, denouncing the past instead of rebuilding the state. Media control promoted revolution. The Cadets newspaper announced that all Russian life must be rebuilt from its roots.

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The Donbas region in Ukraine declared independence from the revolutionary government in 2014, leading to a conflict with Ukraine. Russia intervened to prevent a planned Ukrainian attack, hoping to avoid casualties. Unlike American tanks in Vietnam, a Russian tank stopped when civilians blocked its path, showing cautious rules of engagement.

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The Russian monarchy, rooted in Christian beliefs, prospered under the Romanov family until their murder in 1918. Freemasonry's influence led to the revolution, with the royal family brutally killed in a dark ritual. The bodies were dismembered, dissolved, and consumed, symbolizing a shift towards a new world order. Czar Nicholas II is now a saint in the Russian Orthodox Church, prompting repentance for his dynasty's downfall.

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Bolshevism and Marxism had a devastating impact on Russia and Eastern Europe, resulting in widespread atrocities and millions of deaths. The true death toll is unknown due to censorship and suppression of information. The crimes committed during this time are often ignored or whitewashed. The early 20th century saw tensions and alliances between European nations, leading to World War I. The war eventually led to the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, with Lenin and the Bolsheviks taking power. Stalin succeeded Lenin and continued the oppressive regime, including forced collectivization and the Gulag system. The Soviet Union played a significant role in World War II and the establishment of Israel. The Cold War further perpetuated the influence of communism.

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The Russian revolution was driven by secret societies like the Bolsheviks, led by Lenin and Trotsky. They turned their cult into a mass religion with dreams of global dominance, causing millions of deaths. This event changed the world, showing the power of conspiracy and active minorities in shaping history. We are still feeling the effects today.

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Bolshevism and Marxism had a devastating impact on Russia and Eastern Europe, resulting in widespread atrocities and millions of deaths. The true death toll is unknown due to censorship and suppression of information. The crimes committed during this time are often ignored or whitewashed. The early 20th century saw tensions between European powers, leading to World War I. The war, along with the sinking of the Lusitania, led to America's involvement and the subsequent World War II. The Russian army suffered greatly during the wars, resulting in food shortages and conscription of Central Asians and Southern Russians. The Bolshevik Revolution in 1917 led to the rise of Lenin and the establishment of the Soviet Union. Stalin's reign saw further oppression, including forced collectivization and the Gulag system. The Soviet Union played a significant role in World War II and the establishment of Israel. The Cold War and the psychological warfare of communism continue to impact society today.

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Lithuanians revolted against the Soviet Union, leading to the Soviet army shooting at them. However, the bullets turned out to be blanks, causing the Lithuanians to believe the Russians were not serious. They retaliated, but later that night, the KGB opened fire and killed several people. This incident received little attention due to the Gulf War. The speaker admits to hating Russians for some time after the event.

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Strikes are expanding, involving over 200,000 workers and resulting in clashes between protesters and police. On February 25th, a battalion was sent to Petrograd to end the uprising. However, on February 27th, soldiers defected and joined the Bolsheviks. Two garrisons in Petrograd shot their officers instead of firing on civilians. The returning soldiers mostly joined the Bolsheviks after protesters informed them about the situation.

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A Jewish Marxist named Lev Davinovich Rammstein was funded by the Rockefellers to incite a revolution in Russia with the help of Western banking interests. Trotsky, a German official, and Lenin were supported by US and British intelligence to overthrow the Russian government. The American International Corporation, backed by powerful families like the Rockefellers and Rothschilds, provided millions in funding for the Russian Revolution. This led to the creation of the communist threat of the 20th century, resulting in countless deaths from purges and wars.

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The strikes are growing, involving over 200,000 workers, leading to clashes between protesters and police. To stop the chaos, soldiers were sent to Petrograd on February 25th. However, on February 27th, these soldiers joined the Bolsheviks instead of suppressing the protesters. Two garrisons in Petrograd shot their officers instead of firing on civilians. The returning soldiers had joined the Bolsheviks based on information from the protesters about the current situation.

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This transcript threads together personal reflections, historical events, and the human cost of political upheaval across Russia and Ukraine in the early 20th century. Key points include: - A meditation on evil and destruction: questions about the source of great evil, whether darkness exists in us, and whether ruin benefits the earth. - Personal life and engagement: Speaker 1 describes seeing Alex for one hour, the sadness that work imposes on time with Alex, and being indescribably happy with her; Speaker 3 speaks of utter happiness and unity between two mortals; Speaker 1 recalls an engagement day as a hazy, unforgettable moment. - The 1905–1917 revolutionary context and violence: despite peaceful marchers, authorities panicked, backed Cossacks with whips and infantry; a second volley killed hundreds of marchers; radical press attacked the czar’s reputation; a telegram arrives at the palace leading to mourning; January 9 and March 15 dated entries note troops firing in the city, casualties, and political resolve. - Abdication and immediate reactions: Speaker 5’s grandfather reacts to the czar’s abdication for himself and his son Alexis, declaring “Russia is finished.” - Civil war and anti-Bolshevik movements: In the South, a White army forms against Bolsheviks. - The assassination of Nicholas II and family: It is asserted that Goloshokin, head of the Yakaterinburg Soviet, met with Lenin and others in Moscow; the killings were preplanned, with orders from Lenin to hide details; Dzerzhinsky allegedly directed suppression of information in Berlin via Alexander Joffe. The family is moved to a basement, confronted by 11 armed men; accounts describe the executions and the bloodshed. - Brest-Litovsk and territorial losses: The Bolshevik regime signs the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany, renouncing territories gained over three centuries. - Family dislocation and exile: A family member recalls the abdication and exile, the shock and tears, and the sense that “Russia is finished.” - Famine in Ukraine (1931): Survivors recount eviction from homes by activists, resulting seizures and removal of families; women and children forced outside, with pleas to stay; survivors describe slave labor, loss of cultural and religious leaders, and relief efforts by international organizations and churches, though relief was hampered by the Soviet border. - Famine reporting and international response: Duranty, a prominent journalist, is criticized for lying about the famine; despite internal British discussions showing estimates of up to ten million deaths, the New York Times published favorable reports, influencing recognition debates of the Soviet Union. - Personal losses during famine: A spring scene of a dead little sister, mortuary practices with no coffins, and the struggle to bury her; survivors describe eating rotten cabbage, beets, and scraps; some rely on parishioners, railroad workers, neighbors, and even Soviet officials for food; the famine’s human toll includes starving children and widespread death. - Enduring memories of hunger: Descriptions of children with swollen limbs, convulsions, and the grim daily reality of hunger; the narrative closes with a bleak portrait of famine-stricken Ukraine and the resilience of those who endured.

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Strikes are expanding, involving over 200,000 workers and resulting in clashes between protesters and police. On February 25th, a battalion was sent to Petrograd to end the uprising. On February 27th, soldiers defected and joined the Bolsheviks. Two garrisons in Petrograd shot their officers instead of firing on civilians. The returning soldiers mostly joined the Bolsheviks after protesters informed them about the situation.

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The Russian Imperial Romanov family, including Tsar Nicholas II, his wife Alexandra, and their five children, were killed in July 1918 by Bolshevik troops under the orders of Lenin. The bodies were taken to a forest, where they were stripped, mutilated, and sexually abused. The British King George was horrified by the news. New documents reveal that the Bolsheviks also stole royal jewels. Some believe that Jewish financing and influence played a role in the events.

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Bolshevism and Marxism had a devastating impact on Russia and Eastern Europe, resulting in widespread atrocities and millions of deaths. The true death toll is unknown due to censorship and suppression of information. The crimes committed during this time are often ignored or whitewashed. The early 20th century saw tensions between European powers, leading to World War I. The war, along with the sinking of the Lusitania, led to America's involvement and the subsequent World War II. The Russian army suffered from food shortages and unnecessary deaths, and accusations were made against Jews living in the war zones. Lenin, a Jewish leader, played a significant role in the Bolshevik Revolution and the establishment of the Soviet Union. Stalin's reign saw further oppression, including forced collectivization and the Gulag system. The Soviet Union's influence extended to the creation of Israel and the ongoing Cold War.

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According to State Department documents, Jewish figures planned the overthrow of the Russian Tsar in 1916 to implement a communist regime. Communism was a Jewish ideology invented and funded by Jews, manifested by Bolsheviks like Lenin and Trotsky. Tsar Nicholas II, a devout Christian, had witnessed Jewish terrorism. After the Tsar abdicated, Jacob Schiff funded Alexander Kerensky to release political prisoners, leading to anarchy. Schiff and Max Warburg sent Trotsky to Russia with millions to lead a Jewish revolution. Jacob Schwarlov ordered the elimination of the Tsar and his family, which was carried out by Jacob Jirovsky. The Romanov family's murder was celebrated by some Jews as a ritual sacrifice. US Ambassador David R. Francis stated that most Bolshevik leaders were Jews aiming for a worldwide revolution. Jewish publications boasted about the Jewish role in the revolution; seventeen of the first Soviet government's 22 ministers were Jews. The first legislation approved was the Anti-Semitism Act in 1917, making anti-communism equal to anti-semitism. Leading Bolsheviks hated Russians and Christians, slaughtering millions. Bolshevism was an invasion, resulting in immense suffering. Collectivization, confiscation of goods, and deliberate famines (Holodomor) led to millions of deaths in Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia. Lenin aimed to destroy the peasant economy and create a proletariat. The Red Terror, announced by Jacob Swadlov, involved mass executions and torture. Gendry Shagoda, a Jewish NKVD director, was responsible for millions of deaths. The Cheka, led by Felix Jarsynski, was largely Jewish and practiced brutal torture methods. Lazar Kaganovich ordered deaths and destruction of Christian monuments. The Gulag system, run by Jews like Naftali Frankel and Levi Bermham, involved forced labor and extermination camps. Communism was created by bankers to enslave the masses.

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Speaker 1: "a couple thousand people." The country was "Millions. 25, 50,000,000." How could a couple thousand take over? "People didn't respond"—they thought it would blow over. "One building" housed the entire Bolshevik party; "one building could have saved all of Russia, all of the people. No gulags, no Solzhenitsyn, none of it. No Red Terror, etcetera." The czars faced "Equal parts pride and fear." They believed "There's no way that these rebel rousers are going to provide an actual threat," and then "blood" followed. The pattern: "operational preparation of the environment" (OPE). First stage: "separation"—oppressed and oppressors; Lenin and the "coalition of the fringes" building. Then "Soviet" to Soviet—"councils of workers and factories"—not millions. Then "messaging"—"peace, land, bread" and "mass formation hypnosis" to unite; "infiltrate" key institutions; stage of revolution. "September '17."

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During the Bolshevik regime, the Tambov and Penza regions experienced harsh tactics to seize crops and livestock, causing starvation and fear among the population. The Bolshevik authorities used beatings, rape, and deliberate grain rotting as weapons. This Tambov massacre served as a test for the Red Army's brutal force against civilians, revealing Lenin's weapon against European Christians. The Red Terror campaign involved mass torture, murder, and oppression by the Jewish Bolsheviks in 1918. European farmers were executed, and atrocities like tying officials to planks and burning them occurred in Odessa, while scalpings and hand flames were common in Kharkiv.

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According to State Department documents, a group of Jews planned the overthrow of the Russian Tsar in 1916 to implement a communist regime. Communism was a Jewish totalitarian ideology invented and funded by Jewish figures like Jacob Schiff and manifested by Bolsheviks like Lenin and Trotsky. Tsar Nicholas II, a devout Christian, had witnessed Jewish terrorism and failed to execute communists after a 1905 revolution. Schiff financed Alexander Kerensky to release political prisoners, and Trotsky led Jewish communists to Russia with $20 million to lead a revolution. Jacob Schwarlov ordered Jacob Jirovsky to eliminate the Tsar and his family, which he did in 1918. Some Jews allegedly saw the slaughter as a ritual murder. US Ambassador David R. Francis stated that most Bolshevik leaders were Jews aiming for a worldwide revolution. Jewish publications boasted about the Jewish role in the revolution; seventeen of the first Soviet government's 22 ministers were Jews. The first legislation approved was the Anti-Semitism Act in 1917, and "racist" became a term to silence dissent. Leading Bolsheviks hated Russians and Christians, and Bolshevism caused mass slaughter. Collectivization, confiscation of goods, and deliberate famines led to millions of deaths in Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia, known as the Holodomor. Lenin sought to destroy the peasant economy and regarded Europeans as animals. Trotsky aimed to turn Russia into a desert populated by white Negroes. Gendry Shagoda, a Jewish sacred police official, was responsible for millions of deaths. The Jewish Cheka, led by Felix Jarsynski, tortured and murdered Christians. Lazar Kaganovich ordered deaths and destruction of Christian monuments. Lenin said hatred is the basis of communism. Zionism, driven by Jewish brains, aimed to create a new world order. Stalin ordered killings by quotas. Jewish butchers committed atrocities. Trotsky executed people and ordered children murdered. The Gulag, a system of forced labor camps, was founded by Jews and run by Jewish commissars. Communism was created by bankers to enslave the masses.

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Procurement quotas for Ukraine were raised by 42% between 1932 and 1935, despite Ukraine being the most productive agricultural region in the Soviet Union. Soviet policy prevented peasants from accessing food until quotas were met, resulting in around 7,000,000 deaths in what became known as the second Holodomor. Desperate peasants resorted to cannibalism and suicide, surviving on anything they could find, including blossoms, rotting flesh, and grass. City workers faced worsening conditions with a 7-day work week. Stalin claimed equal wages were not possible and those failing to meet targets were exiled, put in the gulag, or executed. According to Alexander Solzhenitsyn, the Bolsheviks who took over Russia were not Russian, hated Russians and Christians, and were driven by ethnic hatred, torturing and slaughtering millions without remorse. He stated that Bolshevism committed the greatest human slaughter of all time and that the world's ignorance of this crime proves the global media is in the hands of the perpetrators.

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In 1917, the February Revolution, a starting point of the Bolshevik Revolution, began. The Bolshevik Revolution was primarily piloted by Jews who hated Russia. On February 22nd, workers at the Putilov plant in Petrograd went on strike. By the next day, demonstrations demanded the end of Russian autocracy and Russia's involvement in World War 1. During the first week of events, no newspapers promoted the strikes. Foreign banking interests and revolutionary Jews sought to exploit the situation, denouncing the past instead of rebuilding the state. Media control promoted revolution. The Cadets newspaper announced that all Russian life must be rebuilt from its roots.

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Following rapes, executions, and beatings imposed on Russians in Tambov, resistance grew. By 1921, over 14,000 men had driven out or killed Jewish Bolshevik representatives from 3 districts of Tambov City. This resistance transformed into an organized uprising under Alexander Stepanovic Antonov, a Christian leader. Thousands joined Antonov's army, which peaked at over 50,000. After Rangel's defeat in Crimea, the Red Army deployed 100,000 troops to Tambov Province, using heavy artillery and executing civilians. By the end of March, Britain and other nations signed trade agreements with Russia, which was seen as Western bankers providing money to the Bolsheviks.

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The Bolsheviks implemented a methodology in Tambov and Penza to seize grains, crops, and livestock, using taxation and grain seizures as a psychological weapon to instigate resistance and justify lethal force. Beatings and rape were used to instill fear. Bolshevik authorities were accused of letting grain rot in Tambov. The Tambov Massacre was a dry run where the Red Army used force against civilians, revealing Lenin's weapon against ethnic European Christians. The Red Terror was a campaign of torture, murder, and oppression by the Jewish Bolsheviks starting in 1918. The Czech Guard and Red Army executed farmers. In Odessa, officers were fed into furnaces or boiling water. In Kharkiv, scalpings and hand flayings occurred.

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During the periods of 1921 to 1922, 1932 to 1933, and 1946 to 1947, millions of Russians died due to deliberate famines orchestrated by the Jewish Bolshevik regime. This tragedy, known as the Holodomor, affected Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia, with people resorting to extreme measures like eating grass and even cannibalism. Encyclopedia Britannica estimates that the Stalin Kaganovich famine alone caused the death of around 8 million people, including 5 million Ukrainians. Overall, the three Holodomor genocides resulted in a death toll of approximately 16.5 million. Russian historian Alexander Solzhenitsyn further estimated that the Jewish Bolshevik regime exterminated up to 6 million Europeans between 1917 and 1958 through forced collectivization, hunger, purges, banishment, executions, and mass deaths at Gulags. These acts align with communist theory's acceptance of industrial-scale murders.

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In 1917, the Bolshevik revolution began with the February Revolution, led by Jews who disliked Russia. The workers at the Putilov plant went on strike, demanding the end of Russian autocracy and participation in World War 1. Foreign banking interests and revolutionary Jews took advantage of the situation by controlling the media and promoting the revolution. The Cadets, a newspaper of the constitutional Democrats, declared that Russian life needed to be rebuilt from its roots.
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