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"Under the Sign of Scorpion" by Juri - Gnostic Liberation Front

"Under the Sign of Scorpion" by Juri - Gnostic Liberation Front

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During <strong>the</strong> new Tsar's coronation a cross <strong>of</strong> St. Andrew, which had<br />

adorned his ceremonial dress, fell to <strong>the</strong> floor. A few hours later a terrible<br />

panic broke out among <strong>the</strong> crowd who had come to Moscow to see <strong>the</strong><br />

new Tsar. Through rumours, people imagined that <strong>the</strong> gifts which used to<br />

be handed out in connection with coronations would not be enough for all<br />

<strong>the</strong> poor this time. The crowd pressed forward and about two thousand<br />

people were suffocated or trampled to death. Millions <strong>of</strong> Russians saw this<br />

event as a bad omen. The Tsar, meanwhile, did not break <strong>of</strong>f his cele-<br />

bration, but continued on to <strong>the</strong> ball at <strong>the</strong> French Embassy. The<br />

superstitious were proved right...<br />

There are historians who still have not understood why so many<br />

important tsarist generals betrayed Nicholas II. The Tsar said repeatedly<br />

that he had been betrayed. But now this riddle has also been solved. The<br />

most important generals, according to <strong>the</strong> Jewish freemason Manuil<br />

Margulies, were Masonic bro<strong>the</strong>rs who obeyed <strong>the</strong>ir lodge instead <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Tsar. Among <strong>the</strong>se generals, he mentioned Vasili Romeiko-Gurko,<br />

Mikhail Alexeyev (1857-1918), who later founded <strong>the</strong> White Army,<br />

Nikolai Ruzsky, Alexander Krymov, Alexei Manikovsky, Alexei Poli-<br />

vanov, Alexander Myshlayevsky, Teplov, even Lavr Kornilov, who was<br />

ordered to inform <strong>the</strong> Tsar and his family that <strong>the</strong>y were all under arrest.<br />

Kornilov later broke away from <strong>the</strong> freemasons. (M. Nazarov, Nash<br />

Sovremennik, No. 12, 1991.)<br />

The Tsar Nicholas II was also betrayed <strong>by</strong> <strong>the</strong> right-wing member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

National Assembly, Alexander Guchkov, who became Minister for War in<br />

<strong>the</strong> Provisional Government. He later regretted his action and took part in<br />

Kornilov's revolt, but it was already too late. Even members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Romanov dynasty betrayed <strong>the</strong> Tsar.<br />

On <strong>the</strong> 2nd (15th) <strong>of</strong> March, <strong>the</strong> freemasons had, after <strong>the</strong> American<br />

model, formed a provisional government led <strong>by</strong> Prince Georgi Lvov<br />

(1861-1925). That was why <strong>the</strong> Jewish freemasons were so angry with<br />

Mikhail II for holding power simultaneously. This error was corrected one<br />

day later. Mikhail II was ritually murdered in Perm on June 12, 1918.<br />

Every one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> eleven ministers was a freemason. Of course, all <strong>the</strong> most<br />

important freemasons were <strong>the</strong>re: Nikolai Nekrasov (Minister <strong>of</strong> Com-<br />

munications), Alexander Kerensky (Minister <strong>of</strong> Justice), Pavel Milyukov<br />

(<strong>the</strong> Minister <strong>of</strong> Foreign Affairs, pr<strong>of</strong>essor and leader <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bourgeois<br />

Cadet Party) and Mikhail Tereshchenko (Minister <strong>of</strong> Finance). The Zionist<br />

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