An article by council insider and Nationalist contributor ‘Frustrated’.
Previous posts in this series can be found here: Part One / Part Two / Part Three / Part Four / Part Five / Part Six / Part Seven / Part Eight / Part Nine / Part Ten /
Epilogue, Credits and Further Reading
In the final part of this series I would like to draw conclusions, acknowledge the research of others and make my personal recommendations of further reading for students interested in this subject.
The millions of Jews that lived in Tsarist Russia were officially discriminated against because they were seen as being different, disloyal and also exploitative of the simpler Russian peasantry. Even Lenin once told the writer Maxim Gorky: “We do not have many intelligent (Russian) people. A bright Russian is nearly always a Jew or a person with an admixture of Jewish blood (like Lenin had).”
Understandably, this official discrimination made these ‘brighter’ Russian Jews feel alienated and resentful towards the Tsarist regime. Although Russia was reforming into a less autocratic system of parliamentary government, these Jewish supremacists still plotted to replace the Tsar and then rule his empire.
With helpful funding from fellow Jewish bankers, based mainly in New York, they finally succeeded in overthrowing the Tsar’s old regime with their Communist revolution in 1917. Supremacist Jews often exploit and betray the dopey Christian countries that generously give them refuge. That is why Jews have been expelled from every European country at one time or another!
Benjamin H. Freedman recalled that after the first failed Red revolution in Russia of 1905; “the Jews had to scramble out of Russia, they all went to Germany. And Germany gave them refuge.” But after World War One, these same Jewish refugees helped to stage a Red revolt in Germany. No wonder Hitler and most Germans felt betrayed and then viewed these Bolshevik Jews as enemies!
What else could the Germans do? They had to resist these mass-murdering Jewish Communists like ‘Red Rosa’ Luxemburg from ruling over them and becoming ‘Bloody Red Rosa’ Luxemburg! The solution to Europe’s age-old Jewish problem was recognised by the Jews themselves when they formed their Zionist movement to establish their own state, which they could then move to.
However, the establishment of Israel in Palestine in 1948 caused a war with the Arabs and the expulsion of about a million Jews from Muslim countries during the decade after Israel’s creation. Today, the descendants of Jews who emigrated to Israel from other Middle Eastern lands make up about half of all Israelis. Therefore, Israel could argue that they need some Arab Palestinian land to house descendants of these Jewish refugees expelled from Muslim lands after the birth of Israel.
Although a two-state solution is risky, it may be the only chance for peace. President Trump wants to move the Palestinians out of Gaza’s ruins. But his resettlement should not be outside Palestine!
I feel that the Palestinians might consider ceding Gaza to Israel provided that they are generously rewarded by Israel ceding land bordering the West Bank to a new contiguous Arab Palestinian state existing separately alongside the Jewish state. Both Israel and the new contiguous Arab state of Palestine should then benefit from having only one, shorter, defined and secure border. Just my thoughts.
Acknowledgments and further reading for students of the real ‘Russian’ Revolution. Most of these works by intrepid researchers can be accessed and read for free on the Internet.
None Dare Call it Conspiracy by Gary Allen.
The Last Days of the Romanovs by Robert Wilson.
Zionism. The hidden tyranny by Benjamin H. Freedman.
The Secret Behind Communism by Dr. David Duke.
The Rulers of Russia by Rev. Denis Fahey (an Irish Roman Catholic priest).
The Jewish Role in the Bolshevik Revolution by the Institute for Historical Review.
“Zionism versus Bolshevism, a struggle for the soul of the Jewish people” by Winston S. Churchill.
Credits:
Main Image: Frauemacht, via Wikimedia Commons. A scene from the 2016 Liebknecht-Luxemburg Demonstration in Berlin, held each year in January to honour the murdered communists.
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