While the useful brainwashed idiots in the west continue to praise Comrade Putin, the new Soviet Union is getting ready to finally rule over the world. What brought our world to this stage? IGNORANCE – that is men’s worse enemy because Knowledge is what gives us the power. Here is the TRUE story of the American Civil War which is contrary to popular belief.
1861-1865: Civil War breaks out in America. Source: ChallengeYourKnowledge by ZionistReport.com
“Contrary to popular history, the American Civil War is not about slavery. Only 2% of southerners hold slaves, and 4 of the Northern states are actually slave holding states. Lincoln does indeed oppose slavery, but he mainly uses the issue as a tool to maintain popular moral support for his main goal; saving the Union. The Rothschild’s view the American US Civil War as a chance to “divide and conquer” America.
If the South can break away from the Union, two rival nations can be played off against each other in a European style game of “balance-of-power.” Lincoln needs money to fund the war. He is extorted by the New York Jewish bankers, who want the government to sell high-interest bonds to them. Lincoln thwarts the bankers by issuing interest-free currency directly from the Treasury. (Greenbacks). Britain & France threaten to intervene on the side of the South. In the fall of 1863, Czar Alexander II sends warships to dock in New York and San Francisco. Afraid of confrontation with both the US and Russia, the instigators of the Crimean War are forced to back off.
1865: In a statement to Congress President Abraham Lincoln states,
“I have two great enemies, the Southern Army in front of me and the financial institutions in the rear. Of the two the one in my rear is my greatest foe.”
Later that year on April 14 President Lincoln is assassinated, less than two months before the end of the American Civil War. The 1863 National Banking Act reinstated a private US central bank and banking Treasury Chase’s war bonds were issued. Lincoln was re-elected the next year, vowing to repeal the act after he took his January 1865 oaths of office. Before he could act, he was assassinated at the Ford Theatre by John Wilkes Booth. Booth had major connections to the international bankers. His granddaughter wrote This One Mad Act, which details Booth’s contact with “mysterious Europeans” just before the Lincoln assassination. On the same night of Lincoln’s murder, Lewis Powell, an associate of Booth, attacks Secretary of State William Seward in his home. Vice President Andrew Johnson was also targeted for assassination that night, but the conspirator assigned to kill him (a German immigrant named George Atzerodt) loses his nerve at the last minute. Atzerodt, Powell and 5 other plotters will be executed.
Following the Lincoln hit, Booth was whisked away by members of a secret society known as Knights of the Golden Circle (KGC). KGC had close ties to the French Society of Seasons, which produced Karl Marx. KGC had fomented much of the tension that caused the Civil War and President Lincoln had specifically targeted the group. Booth was a KGC member and was connected through Confederate Secretary of State Judah Benjamin to the House of Rothschild. Benjamin fled to England after the Civil War.
Lincoln’s post war policy towards the defeated states was to have been one of reconciliation and rebuilding. With his sudden death, however, a radical faction within the Republican Party, known as the Radical Republicans, are free to abuse and punish the southern states for their attempt at succession. More so than the Civil War itself, it is the vindictive oppression of the South during Reconstruction that will incite racial tensions, and leave lasting scars that will take nearly a century to heal.
1866: One year after the murder of President Lincoln, Lincoln’s ally, Czar Alexander II also comes under fire. Red Revolutionary Dimitry Karakozov draws his pistol and attempts to fire at Czar Alexander II. The attempt is thwarted when a quick-thinking bystander jostles his arm as he fires.
“Your great industrial development has built up very large fortunes in few hands; and the conditions such fortunes produce must bring on a class conflict that cannot fail to make a test of the stability of your institutions. The men who have those fortunes know only the law of greed; they have no respect for the rights of others; and they will surely make an effort to use the strong arm of government to enslave the people. They will use the public franchises you grant in so liberal, so dangerous a way, to tax the people. These men of large fortunes will organize into groups to increase their power, and their aggressions will as surely drive the body of your people to the enactment of laws which may be most hurtful to the general prosperity. I see a great conflict must soon come in America between the few who have vast fortunes and the many reduced to a kind of industrial slavery.” -The Russian Tsar Alexander II
“Josef Stalin Statues Go Up In Russia As U.S. Civil War Statues Fall,” Source: usatoday.com
‘To see Stalin:’ Latest WWII film aims to stir up Russians Video provided by AFP Newslook
This summer marked the 80th anniversary of the “Great Terror,” a massive purge Stalin ordered against political opponents. Yet the milestone was barely noticed by Russians, who increasingly see Stalin as a national hero who defeated the Nazis in World War II as a valued U.S. ally rather than the brutal mass murderer reviled by historians.
Many here apparently don’t know that on July 30, 1937, Stalin’s secret police launched a campaign that would see more than 1.5 million “anti-Soviet elements” arrested and nearly 700,000 of them killed, according to Soviet archives. Historians say that during Stalin’s three decades of rule, which ended with his death in 1953, an estimated 15 million to 30 million people were executed or died in labor camps or starved to death.
Although condemned for his brutality after his death, Stalin is now getting new respect from both an older generation nostalgic for the lost Soviet empire, which collapsed in 1991, and a younger generation of nationalistic Russians.
About 10 statues of Stalin have gone up around the country since 2012, said Pavel Gnilorybov, a historian who works with a group that tracks human rights abuses.
Some of the renewed admiration comes from President Vladimir Putin, who often laments the breakup of what had been the world’s only other superpower besides the United States.
Putin condemned the “excessive demonization” of Stalin during an interview that aired this summer with Oscar-winning filmmaker Oliver Stone. Putin said attacks on Stalin amounted to “attacking the Soviet Union and Russia.”
The former Soviet leader’s creeping rehabilitation is evidenced by the assortment of Stalin magnets, mugs, T-shirts, statues and other paraphernalia sold by street vendors, and the red carnations often seen placed at his grave on Red Square.
Bookstores around the country sell volumes glorifying Stalin as a bulwark against fascism. Last month, prominent lawyer Henri Reznik resigned from the Moscow State Judicial Academy after it hung a plaque commemorating Stalin in its central hall. In May, a portrait of Stalin went up on the entrance to a Moscow subway station.
Public approval of Stalin reached a 16-year high this year, according to a poll by the Levada Center, a research group. It found that 46% of Russians felt “admiration,” “respect” or “sympathy” for the Soviet leader in February, up from 37% in March 2016. Another poll by Levada this year showed that 39% of Russians believed Stalin’s mass repression was a crime, down from 51% in 2012.
“I’ve always had a positive view about Stalin, but it’s improved in recent years since I learned more about him,” said Alexei Filippov, 42, a retail sales manager. “There’s been a lot of books explaining the real reasons of the so-called repressions.”
“Repression is a made-up word. It was really a fight against crime,” said Filippov, adding that Stalin “was our commander in chief. We owe the victory against Nazism to him.”
Ilya Rogotnev, 33, a university teacher and member of the pro-Stalin nationalist group Essence of Time, said the Russian government is finally “coming into sync with a collective opinion” about the former leader.
“For a long time, Stalin was not defended by anyone,” Rogotnev said. “A lot of trash, lies and libel was dumped on him.”
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, who came to power after Stalin, condemned his predecessor’s personality cult in a closed-door speech at a Communist Party Congress in 1956. It took a half-century to change that view.
“This is happening by the will of the government, which is … struggling to find glorious pages in the country’s history and thus cannot accept the simple fact that the Soviet past was criminal,” said Nikita Petrov, a historian with the Memorial human rights organization that documents Stalin-era repressions.
He said the government is now targeting groups like his for uncovering past Soviet human rights crimes. Last year, the Memorial group was labeled a “foreign agent” under a law restricting foreign financing for non-governmental organizations.
In another case, Russia’s communications watchdog and de facto censor posted a warning about a textbook written by historian Andrei Suslov, following complaints by the nationalist group Essence of Time over negative accounts about the Soviet past.
“(The watchdog) cited their experts as saying the textbook was ‘harmful to children,’ which is pretty absurd,” Suslov said.
Teacher Rogotnev said he doesn’t justify Stalin’s crackdown but thinks it should be examined in the context of his positive achievements: victory against Nazi Germany in World War II and the rapid industrialization of the Soviet Union.
“The repressions really were huge and terrible, but they were also natural and inevitable within the context of the terrible 20th century,” he said.
“If you take Stalinist repressions separately, then sure, he could come out as a tyrant or a vampire,” Rogotnev added. “But if you look at this figure in a bigger context, then you see that he is a function of the historical process and the political system in the Soviet Union.”
Source Article from https://zionistreport.com/2017/08/confederate-statues-fall-u-s-russians-erecting-statues-dictator-stalin/