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



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Trotsky regarded all patriots as anti-Semites. In April 1919, in the middle of the great terror in Kiev, Trotsky visited the city and ordered that all Russian patriots should be exterminated. They were beaten to death with hammers and their brains ended up on the floor of the shed where this crime was later discovered. (Platonov, "The History of the Russian People in the 20th Century", part I, Moscow, 1997, p. 611.)

Lenin himself confirmed that the Soviet regime really was Jewish. When it was reported to Lenin that a newly formed committee did not have a single Jewish member, he was upset: "Not a single Jew? No, no! That's impossible!" (Oleg Platonov, " Russia's Crown of Thorns: The History of the Russian People in the 20th Century", Moscow, 1997, part I,

p. 519.) According to one the leading Soviet functionaries, Lazar Kaganovich, Lenin demanded that every Soviet Institution should have, if not a Jewish director, then at least a Jewish vice-chairman." (Chuyev, "Thus Spoke Kaga-novich", Moscow, 1992, p. 100.)

The majority of the Jews, even if they did not regard themselves as Bolsheviks, nevertheless supported the Soviet power, looking upon it as their own, as Jewish. Also many rich Jews, fearing for their wealth, preferred the Reds to the Whites. Instead of the privileges their riches had afforded them, they received a lot of privileges thanks to their being close to the power and to the possibility of becoming a power over Russia themselves. The Jews, according to Lenin, "saved the Soviet power" - "the Jews certainly created the skeleton of this power and at the same time gave the people occasion to identify the Soviet power with the power of Jewry". (Oleg Platonov, "Russia's Crown of Thorns: The History of the Russian People in the 20th Century", Moscow, 1997, Vol. I, p. 583.)

The Doom of Admiral Shchastny

In the summer of 1993, previously secret information was published about Trotsky's murder of admiral Alexei Shchastny on June 21, 1918 in Moscow. The reason for the murder was very simple. In the early spring of 1918, Trotsky had given Shchastny, commander of the Baltic fleet, orders to surrender all of his warships (about 200) to the Germans but the admiral had refused.

The Jew Adolf Yoffe, who was Trotsky's close comrade and head of the Soviet delegation at the peace negotiations in Brest, said to the Germans: "There will be neither peace nor war." The Germans took the hint and kept hold of the Russian territory they had occupied. They had further demands. Lenin and Trotsky tried to evade the issue but the Germans threatened to reveal them both as paid agents if Berlin was not allowed to keep a million square kilometres of Russian territory, and was not given 6000 million marks and the Baltic fleet in compensation. Lenin and Trotsky gave in.

The Baltic fleet was just then stationed off Helsinki. As mentioned, Admiral Shchastny refused to obey orders and decided to save the whole fleet and sail it home to Kronstadt. London demanded that the Russians

should not surrender the fleet to the Germans; they should blow it up instead. The pressure from London was enormous. So Trotsky gave a new order to blow up the warships in such a way that the damage done would be minimal and the Germans could easily repair them.

Then the British secret service intervened and gave the admiral copies of German secret service letters containing instructions to Lenin and Trotsky in connection with the Baltic fleet. The admiral realised that Soviet leaders, Lenin and Trotsky, were betraying Russia to a foreign power so he made sure that 167 warships were brought through the ice to Kronstadt. Berlin was furious.

Trotsky wanted to revenge himself on the admiral. He could not do so at once since Shchastny was very popular. In any other state, the admiral would have been decorated for his heroic deed but Trotsky wanted him punished.

The admiral was summoned to the Kremlin on May 28, 1918. Trotsky asked the decisive question: "Did the admiral wish to serve the Soviet regime or not?" A simple answer like "yes" would have been enough, but Trotsky never heard this answer so the admiral was arrested immediately.

During the third day under arrest, the admiral was informed that there was to be a trial. It turned out that the Bolshevik leaders had opened the admiral's briefcase, containing copies of the Germans' instructions to Lenin and Trotsky. The admiral had made a grave error - he had not made those letters public, but had brought them to Moscow. Trotsky also read the admiral's diary, which revealed that Shchastny did not like the Soviet regime.

A farce called a trial took place on the 20th of June 1918. The indictment was communicated to the admiral only two hours before the trial. He never had time to read it. Only one member of the public was allowed to be present - the admiral's sister. There was only one witness, who also presented the official accusation. The witness was Leon Trotsky. The admiral was charged with high treason and sentenced to death.

On the 21st of June, the Chinese Brigade, who spoke no Russian, was called to the Alexandrovsk School. This group executed the admiral and, according to orders, put the body in a sack, which was buried under the floor in one of the rooms. The order came from Leon Trotsky. Today, the Russian ministry of defence occupies this building, not far from the Kremlin. (Sovershenno Sekretno, No. 6, 1993.) Neither the British nor

Hitler ever used those secret letters to expose the true nature of the Soviet leaders and thereby weaken the Kremlin. The question is whether they were all working for an omnipresent but invisible international power.

The Kronstadt Rebellion

In February 1921, the workers in Petrograd and the sailors in Kronstadt had had enough. Several strikes broke out in Petrograd on the 22nd of February. The workers no longer wanted communist guards in the factories. The communist leadership had also cut the bread ration by a third (heavy industry workers received 800 grams per day, normal workers 600). The wages had sunk to a tenth of what they had been before the Bolsheviks grabbed power and the inflation rate was catastrophic. Workers who had sneaked past roadblocks and left town headed for the countryside to find food but were either arrested or simply shot, since the factories were ruled by military discipline. Trotsky had also introduced the American Taylor system (named after the American economist Frederic Winslow Taylor, born in Germantown, 1856, died in 1915) which transformed workers into robots. Lenin was fascinated with this system.

The Bolshevik leadership began executing striking workers as deserters. Many were arrested. Troubles also broke out in Moscow. The demonstra- tors demanded, among other things: "Down with the communist Jews!" (Harrison E. Salisbury, "De ryska revolutionerna" / "The Russian Revo- lutions", Stockholm, 1979, p. 234.) The workers also raised demands for the immediate resignation of Lenin and wanted the Constituent Assembly re-established.

As the threats against the communist Jews became louder everywhere, the aggressive Jewish leader Mikhail Lashevich called the striking, disappointed workers "bloodsuckers who are trying to practise extortion".

The Jewish communist leaders panicked when the sailors in Kronstadt sided with the workers. At a meeting on the 1st of March, the sailors declared their displeasure with the political section of the Baltic fleet. They had been used to choosing their own commanders and opposed the blind discipline the communist power-mongers required of them.

The sailors of the battleship Petropavlovsk supported the workers' protests against the terrible oppression and presented their own program of

15 points, in which they, among other things, demanded new secret-ballot elections to the Soviets, since "the present Soviets do not represent the will of the workers and peasants", freedom of speech, freedom of organisation, the release of all socialist political prisoners, the abolition of commissaries and an end to the supremacy of the Communist Party. The resolution also demanded the right for workers and peasants to be self-employed as long as they employed no one else and that all Jews were to be removed from high posts. The last demand was the most important, according to Alexander Berkman. 15 000 sailors and workers backed this resolution. The resolution condemned the communist government totally and utterly.

The Jewish Bolsheviks were scared, but did not wish to consent to even the least of these demands - the removal of communist guards from roadblocks and factories and the introduction of equal rationing. Instead, the leaders tried to make the sailors withdraw the resolution entirely. It was impossible. The sailors shouted: "We'd rather die than give up!" Then the politruks threatened that "the Party will not relinquish power without a struggle".

First mate Perichenko of the Petropavlovsk, who was the leader of the rebellion, had the local Communist Party elite imprisoned in the beginning of March. All strategic points were occupied.

Among the rebels were social democrats, but also Russian Bolsheviks, anarchists, syndicalists, Social Revolutionaries and various other left-wing groups who wanted to get rid of the Jewish communist control of the "revolution".

On the 6th of March Leon Trotsky was infuriated. At first he wanted to use poison gas, which he had quickly acquired from abroad, against the rebels. Then he said that all those demanding free speech, free press and free trade unions should be shot "like ducks in a pond" or "like dogs". He ordered the rebels to give up. They refused.

On the 7th of March, the Red Army opened fire with artillery and attacked Kronstadt from the air. The 561st infantry regiment attacked across the ice on the 8th of March. The ice broke in several places and hundreds of soldiers drowned. Nearly all of the second battalion later went over to the rebels. The Red Army units refused to attack the sailors.

Then new, loyal troops were put in; 60 000 handpicked Red Guards. On the 18th of March (the day of the Red Aid), the 7th army under Mikhail Tukhachevsky attacked the garrison of 16 000 men. The sailors were

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driven back; fort after fort, street after street. Finally, only about a hundred sailors vainly tried to hold a last defence by the Tolbukhin lighthouse. Tukhachevsky later said that he had never seen anything like the bloodbath he experienced in Kronstadt. "It was no normal battle," he explained, "it was an inferno. The sailors fought like wild beasts. I cannot understand from where they drew the strength for their fury. Each house had to be taken by storm."

The revolt was put down by the 21st of March. About 1000 sailors were killed. 2500 were taken prisoner. The Red Guards lost 10 000 men. Most of the rebels managed to escape with their families across the Gulf of Finland to Terijoki and eventually ended up in Helsinki. Finland was forced to extradite them in 1945, 24 years later.

Most of those captured were mercilessly shot by order of Trotsky. A total of 30 000 people were executed in this terrible bloodbath. The official statement was: "Severe proletarian sentences were imposed on all traitors to the cause." It has only now been revealed that Trotsky personally led the mass executions of sailors, their families and others involved. (Dagens Nyheter, November 25, 1993.)

The Jewish anarchist Alexander Berkman from the United States of America visited Kronstadt after the storming. He wrote in his diary: "Kronstadt has fallen. Thousands of corpses of sailors lie in the streets. The execution of the prisoners continues." Trotsky had thereby de- finitively sullied his hands with the blood of the sailors and workers. In remembrance of the 50th anniversary of the Paris Commune and the victory over Kronstadt, he had the bands play "The Internationale", the infamous anthem of the socialists-communists.

Kronstadt was the climax of the Leninist terror. Both Lenin and Trotsky were shaken by the Rebellion. Lenin was very pleased with the arrogant Trotsky's cruel contributions. Both believed, however, that the Russians needed a calmer period after all the terrible killing, which had been going on steadily for several years. The Chekists had used every imaginable excuse to kill. In the town of Bryansk, the death penalty was introduced for drunkenness, in Vyatka for "being out-of-doors after 20:00 hours", in other areas for theft. The prisoners were brought to execution cellars, were made to undress, stood against a wall and shot by a little firing squad armed with pistols. A Chekist with a handcart removed the corpses, which were then winched up like animal carcasses and dropped through a

trapdoor into a waiting lorry. Then more prisoners were brought in and the procedure was repeated.

In Petrograd, the soviet leader Grigori Zinoviev demanded in a speech that the inhabitants of Russia who could not be won over to the cause of Communism should be liquidated. (Det Basta, No. 2, 1968, p. 136.)

In other words, Russia was occupied by groups of Jewish gangsters, who later also fought against each other. Eventually, about a million Jews died in this way. Professor Israel Shahak stressed in his valuable book "Jewish history, Jewish religion - The Weight of Three Thousand Years" (London, 1994) that fanatical Jews have always tried to follow the instructions according to which they must kill all "traitors" of Jewish blood - those who do not accept their own extreme points of view. This was once again confirmed by the murder of Yitzhak Rabin on the 4th November 1995. Those Jewish extremist groups were the worst enemies of all sensible people (including civilised Jews) in Russia. These criminals should not be despised and hated, even now after the event, since, from a spiritual point of view, they were simply the bearers of very primitive and destructive ideas. Hatred leads nowhere. Those criminals demonstrated the truth of this themselves.

To ease the oppression so that the toppling economy could get on its feet again, Trotsky and Lenin agreed to temporarily allow limited private business ventures. According to the Russian historian Viktor Nanolov, it was Trotsky who abolished his own military economy and worked out the plans for NEP - the New Economic Policy. It was cunning politics - first the severe War Communism, then NEP with an abundance of bread to get the Soviet regime accepted...

Of course, the Jews exploited the situation, which arose during the NEP period. In 1924, one third of all shops in Russia were owned by Jews ("Universal Jewish Encyclopaedia", "Revolution of People").

Trotsky as a Grey Eminence

When, in 1922, Lenin introduced the most important post of General Secretary of the Central Committee, he wished Trotsky to take this post. Trotsky declined since it would have looked bad to the outside world if there was a Jew at the very top of the communist hierarchy. In the end,

there was the choice of two men for this post - the half-Jew Joseph Stalin (actually Dzhugashvili), and the Russian Ivan Smirnov, a friend of Trotsky's. On the 3rd of April 1922, Stalin was finally chosen. Stalin ordered Smirnov executed in 1936.

Leon Trotsky wanted to be Joseph Stalin's spiritual guide, a grey eminence who could rule the country through this mediocre general secretary. Trotsky called Stalin a grey spot and regarded him as no more than an uneducated administrator. This was, actually, a fair judgement of him - Stalin remained a totally ignorant person until his death. Many years later it became evident that Stalin would no longer let himself be controlled by Trotsky. On the contrary, he wanted to make all the decisions himself. He thought this was possible!

At the same time, he wanted to reduce the influence of the Jews on soviet politics. However, when he went too far against the extremist Jews, he himself lost his life. His Jewish wife Roza poisoned him on the orders of her brother Lazar Kaganovich, according to the confession of the latter in Moscow in 1981.

The socialist Zionist author Arnold Zweig believed Trotsky was Lenin's rightful heir. Zweig admitted that his own intellectual sustenance came from the Illuminatus Moses Mendelssohn.

In any case, Stalin implemented at least most of Trotsky's ideas (he lacked any of his own). Stalin learned much from Trotsky, especially when Trotsky, at the twelfth Party Congress in May 1923, stressed that the Party was always right. Stalin never murdered as intensively as Trotsky. If Trotsky had actually become general secretary, all Russia would have drowned in rivers of blood.

In her memoirs, Trotsky's second wife, Natalya Sedovaya-Trotskaya, showed no compassion at all for any of the millions of her husband's victims. She was, in fact, the daughter of a Zionist banker, Ivan Zhivo- lovsky (actually Avram Zhivatovzo), who helped finance the Bolsheviks' take-over, at first in Russia and then in Stockholm, via Nya Banken (a Swedish bank, owned by the Jewish family Aschberg). This was another reason why the freemason Leon Trotsky always protected the international interests of rich Jews. Ivan Zhivotovsky had close connections with the Warburgs and the Schiffs.

Myths about the kind Trotsky have been spread in Sweden too: "If only he had won the power struggle, then there would have been freedom of

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speech in the Soviet Union.", "It would not have been useless to reform Communism if Trotsky had been in power."

All this is, of course, serious disinformation. Trotsky despised parlia- mentary democracy and spat vitriol on the idea at every opportunity. Of all the Communists, it was he who detested democracy the most. This is apparent when reading his book "What is the Soviet Union and Where is it Going?", published in Paris in 1936. On page 219, he explained that the advocates of the liquidated classes should have no right to form political parties. He stressed that those who support capitalism in the Soviet Union are acting like Don Quixote and lack even the ability to form a party.

In 1922, Trotsky was the most violent opponent of the oppositional groups within the Party. He demanded that those should be liquidated immediately. He suggested that the private plots of land should be confiscated since they, in his opinion, might give rise to an ideological infection among the peasants. Without those plots of land, there would be an immediate food shortage in the cities and it would thereby be easier to control the intellectuals still remaining. The system Trotsky wanted to introduce was completely centralised. It would have created such a horrible, surreal reign of terror as even Stalin and his Jewish advisers failed to accomplish. With Trotsky in power, Russia would have met an even worse fate than it did.

The ideas of the Trotskyists about military socialism were enforced in part by Mao Zedong in China during the "Cultural Revolution". Those terrible experiments reached a frightening perfection in Pol Pot's Cambodia. All this is evident when reading Trotsky's book "The Revo- lution Betryed: What is the Soviet Union and Where is it Going?"

Trotsky was so powerful in 1922 that he greeted the parade on the fifth anniversary of the October Revolution alone, without Lenin.

It was Trotsky who, as early as 1924, demanded an immediate end to the concessions of NEP. Stalin began demanding this three years later - in 1927. NEP was finally abolished in December 1929. Trotsky was the most actively involved in the liquidation of the free market in the Soviet Union. It was also Trotsky who spurred the Communist leadership to make new conquests. In January 1918 he demanded that the 15 000 Finnish reds should immediately seize power in Helsinki. To that end, Lenin promised to send weapons to Jukka Rahja. The weapons arrived. Everything was ready for a Communist national coup. But then the Germans demanded

that the Bolsheviks stay out of Poland, Lithuania, Courland and also Livonia, Estonia, Finland and the Ukraine. The Bolsheviks were not allowed to crush Finland. Lenin and Trotsky were forced to comply with the German demands on the 3rd of March 1918. (Nootti, Helsinki, No. 4, 1989.)

At the beginning of 1921, Trotsky wanted an immediate incorporation of Georgia in the Soviet Union. He received support from Joseph Stalin and Grigori (Sergo) Ordzhonikidze. Trotsky had a plan worked out straight away and Soviet agents took over power in the province of Borchalin on February 12, 1921. On the 16th of February the Georgian Soviet Republic was declared in Shulaveri and the revolutionary committee asked Moscow for help. One day later the Soviet troops who had been waiting by the border began the attack on the Georgian republic. On the 25th of February the Red Army took Tiflis (Tbilisi), Georgia's capital. The action was completed. The Bolsheviks immediately began killing the intellectuals. Trotsky also made plans to invade Armenia and Iran, but the last plan failed.

Trotsky was very disappointed that it was impossible to occupy the Baltic states. In January 1918, Lenin complained to Trotsky: "It would be very unfortunate if we must give up socialist Estonia."

Trotsky as an Anti-Intellectual

The claim about Trotsky's liberal attitude to the arts is also a fabrication. He believed that the Communist Party should have a monopoly on culture and the arts. It was Trotsky who forced socialist realism on the artists. Landscape paintings could not be made in the Sahara, in his opinion. Neither did he believe in the existence of free imagination. He demanded that all artists should follow the line of realism. It was also Trotsky who dealt out political certificates to the authors, without which they could not continue working at all. Trotsky decided what was allowed to be depicted and not. Both Lenin and Trotsky believed everything created outside the Marxist doctrine was anti-social art.

Mikhail Bulgakov was given the task of writing a Communist play. He refused. There were few authors who dared to refuse. Afterwards, he had no chance to publish himself. In 1929, Bulgakov wrote to Gorky: "Why

must the Soviet Union detain an author who is not allowed to publish his work? Is the intention to destroy him?" In 1939, he had become desperate and wrote the play "Batum" - an apology (rather a smothered scream) and a tribute to the young revolutionary Stalin. This did him no good. He lacked the proper background! In his brilliant novel "The Master and Margarita", published only in 1966, he held cowardice as the deadliest sin. According to the myth, Trotsky also held liberal or avantgarde views on literature. It was even claimed that he was a very competent literary critic. In 1923, Trotsky published his collected articles on literature, along with his decisions, approved by the Party, regarding censorship. The title of this awful book is "Literature and Revolution" (published in English in 1991). According to this book, Trotsky's aim was to transform literature into a weapon of the revolution. He wrote that all ideas dangerous to Communism must be purged. He believed in using the forms of "dangerous" art, however, and thereby propagating the 'wholesome' Communist content. It is hard to imagine any idea more vile than this. This was the birth of propaganda art. The proletarian culture (which really means cultureless-ness) was enforced. Trotsky did not hide this fact. He stressed that the workers had no time left to take part in cultural life, since they had to fight for the revolution. The short pauses between the battles were not enough. He comforted them with a possible chance of enjoying these other values 50 years later, when the revolution was victorious. Only then could they devote themselves to proletarian culture, but until then the workers were first and foremost soldiers of the revolution.

The Murder of Sergei Yesenin

As if all this was not enough, Trotsky also had Russia's most prominent poet, Sergei Yesenin, murdered. Official cause of death: suicide. Despite the fact that his head had been crushed so that brain tissue had leaked out, Yesenin had still been able to hang himself, according to the death certificate of the Jewish professor Alexander Gilyarevsky.


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