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Study of the Hegemony of Parasitism - michaeljgoodnight.com

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power <strong>of</strong> a totalitarian state, to stifle future development,<br />

and to hold <strong>the</strong> entire population <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> world in thrall to<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir greed. This program took Lenin back to Moscow to<br />

seize <strong>the</strong> government by force and to rule by terrorism.<br />

FINANCING THE REVOLUTION<br />

In "Germany and <strong>the</strong> Russian Revolution", we find:<br />

Telegram No. 952 D 2615, State Sec. to min in Copenhagen: "Your Embassy<br />

is authorized to pay one million roubles to Helphand. The corresponding sum<br />

should be drawn from <strong>the</strong> Legation assets."<br />

Minister Copenhagen 23 Jan. 1916 -- Dr. Helphand; "The sum <strong>of</strong> a million<br />

roubles already reached Petrograd, and devoted to <strong>the</strong> purposes for which it<br />

was intended."<br />

On May 8, 1916, Berlin requested 130,000 M. for Russian propaganda.<br />

Under Secretary State to <strong>the</strong> Minister in Bern, telegram No. 348: "It was<br />

considered advantageous to Germany to bring out <strong>the</strong> members <strong>of</strong> Lenin's<br />

party, <strong>the</strong> Bolsheviks, who are about forty in number. The special train will be<br />

under military escort."<br />

Vernadsky says, in his "Life <strong>of</strong> Lenin",<br />

"In <strong>the</strong> autumn <strong>of</strong> 1915, <strong>the</strong> German Russian Social Democrat Parvus<br />

Helphand (Israel Lazarevitch) who had formerly been active in <strong>the</strong> Revolution<br />

<strong>of</strong> 1905, announced [in] <strong>the</strong> paper published by him in Berlin, 'The Bell', his<br />

mission to 'serve as an intellectual link between <strong>the</strong> armed Germans and <strong>the</strong><br />

revolutionary Russian proletariat' ... During <strong>the</strong> war Helphand was engaged<br />

in furnishing supplies to <strong>the</strong> Germany army in huge quantities, and so<br />

considerable amounts <strong>of</strong> money passed through his hands ... A railway car in<br />

which were Lenin, Martov, and o<strong>the</strong>r exiles was attached to <strong>the</strong> train leaving<br />

for Germany from Switzerland on April 8, 1917. On April 13, Lenin embarked<br />

on <strong>the</strong> steamer sailing from Sassnitz to Sweden. So <strong>the</strong> trip through<br />

Germany took at least four days."

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