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The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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In the beginning <strong>of</strong> 1923, Lenin and Comintern leader Grigori<br />

Zinoviev decided that Germany was ready for a bolshevik revolution.<br />

<strong>The</strong> communists considered it a key area for world revolution and<br />

wanted to use the discontent among the people. Comintern and the<br />

Red Aid desperately tried to implement the plan in Germany while<br />

the sun was in the sign <strong>of</strong> Scorpio. <strong>The</strong>ir seizure <strong>of</strong> <strong>power</strong> was to take<br />

place at midnight 22 October 1923.<br />

At dawn the next day Hamburg, Berlin and other large cities would<br />

be in the hands <strong>of</strong> the bolsheviks. All these operations were led by<br />

the freemasons Karl Radek (actually Sobelsohn), Bela Kun, and Josef<br />

Unschlicht (member <strong>of</strong> the Cheka and the Soviet military intelli-<br />

gence) from Moscow. <strong>The</strong> operation was to be extended to all <strong>of</strong><br />

Germany. Officially Radek was stationed at the Soviet Trade Dele-<br />

gation in Berlin. <strong>The</strong> German communist functionaries thought,<br />

however, that preparations were not sufficient for such a large<br />

undertaking (the time was not ripe, as it were), and wanted to<br />

postpone the "revolution" for three months. <strong>The</strong> high-ranking free-<br />

masons, who controlled various communist movements, simply had<br />

other plans for Germany.<br />

Only, they "forgot" to inform the terrorist leader Ernst Thalmann.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore together with his 300 "revolutionaries", he began his<br />

attempted coup in Hamburg on 23 October at 5 a. m. On 25 October,<br />

all terrorists were defeated.<br />

Hitler got the attention he needed, when on 8 November 1923 he<br />

tried to stage a counter-action - a very badly organized coup d'etat<br />

in Munich. Afterwards he hid temporarily at a house <strong>of</strong> a Jewish<br />

women called Hanfstaengl in Munich. Hitler became known not only<br />

in Germany but also abroad. Hitler's name was on the front pages <strong>of</strong><br />

the newspapers all over the world. He utilised the trial fully and<br />

turned defeat into an ideological victory. He was released after less<br />

than nine months, even through he was sentenced to five years in<br />

prison (the law actually stipulated life imprisonment).<br />

In prison he dictated his political manifesto "Mein Kampf", whose<br />

first part was published on 18 July 1925 and second part in 1927. He<br />

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