05.11.2012 Views

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

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

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

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

terror <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 1930s (Ohtuleht, 22nd <strong>of</strong> July 1993). The rest <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

execution squad fell victims to one sort <strong>of</strong> misadventure or ano<strong>the</strong>r.<br />

The house in which <strong>the</strong> Tsar's family, <strong>the</strong>ir servants and doctor were<br />

murdered, was demolished <strong>by</strong> order <strong>of</strong> Boris Yeltsin in 1977. He was <strong>the</strong>n<br />

chief <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Party in Sverdlovsk (now once again Yekaterinburg).<br />

The Jew Markov in Perm had already executed Russia's last Tsar,<br />

Mikhail II, on June 12, 1918. The executioners who assisted him were<br />

Zhuzhgov, Myasnikov and Ivanchenko. Mikhail Romanov's body was<br />

incinerated. Nicholas had abdicated in favour <strong>of</strong> his bro<strong>the</strong>r, Mikhail.<br />

In this way, Russia was cleansed <strong>of</strong> all kinds <strong>of</strong> "pests", which was<br />

what Lenin had demanded in a decree in January 1918.<br />

Winston Churchill confirmed on <strong>the</strong> 11th <strong>of</strong> April 1919: "Of all <strong>the</strong><br />

tyrannies in history, <strong>the</strong> Bolshevik tyranny is <strong>the</strong> worst, <strong>the</strong> most destruc-<br />

tive, <strong>the</strong> most degrading." (Paul Johnson, "Modern Times", Stockholm,<br />

1987, p. 106.) This is true. Every castle in Russia was plundered, like <strong>the</strong><br />

funds <strong>of</strong> larger businesses, which were all confiscated at a later stage any-<br />

way. The Bolsheviks tortured people to get at <strong>the</strong>ir jewels. They began<br />

ruling with starvation as a weapon, just like <strong>the</strong> Cosa Nostra mafia in<br />

Sicily began ruling <strong>by</strong> exploiting <strong>the</strong> drought.<br />

All kinds <strong>of</strong> goods were sent to Berlin. In 1918 alone, 841 wagons <strong>of</strong><br />

timber, 1218 railway carriages <strong>of</strong> meat, two million pounds <strong>of</strong> flax, etc.,<br />

were sent. The "revolutionary" Jews were only interested in <strong>the</strong>mselves.<br />

Gleb Boky continued using Uritsky's old trick <strong>of</strong> demanding large<br />

amounts from hostages, <strong>the</strong> money finding its way into his own pocket.<br />

The GPU discovered in 1932 that Ganetsky had 60 million Swiss francs in<br />

a bank account in Geneva. (Igor Bunich, "The Party's Gold", St. Peters-<br />

burg, 1992, p. 42.)<br />

In October 1918, Jewish bankers in Berlin received 47 cases <strong>of</strong> gold<br />

from Russia, containing 3125 kilos <strong>of</strong> gold, 191 bars. All <strong>of</strong> this had been<br />

plundered from <strong>the</strong> Russian people, gold that later became infamous as <strong>the</strong><br />

Jewish gold. 50 000 German marks and 300 000 Tsar-roubles were also<br />

handed over. In <strong>the</strong> autumn <strong>of</strong> 1917, <strong>the</strong> Jewish banker Mendelssohn in<br />

Berlin received 50 676 kilos <strong>of</strong> stolen Russian gold, 113 636 roubles<br />

(which was equivalent to 48 819 kilos <strong>of</strong> gold). Mendelssohn's signature<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Communist party archives is witness to <strong>the</strong> fact that he received<br />

<strong>the</strong>se riches: a serious case <strong>of</strong> receiving stolen goods. (Viktor Kuznetsov,<br />

"The Secret <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> October Coup", St. Petersburg, 2001, p. 51.)<br />

278

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!