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THE RUSSIAN
REVOLUTION
In 1905, while Russia was engaged in the Russo-Japanese War, the
communists tried to get the farmers to revolt against the Czar, but they
refused. After this aborted attempt, the Czar deposited $400,000,000 in
the Chase Bank, National City Bank, Guaranty Trust Bank, the Hanover
Trust Bank, and Manufacturers Trust Bank; and $80,000,000 in the
Rothschild Bank in Paris, because he knew who was behind the growing
revolutionary movement, and hoped to end it.
In 1917, the revolt began. Grand Duke Nicholas said: "It is on God
himself that the Bolshevicks are waging war." Czar Nicholas II (who
succeeded Alexander III, 1881-94) was dethroned in March after a series
of riots, and a provincial government was set up by Prince George Lvov,
a liberal progressive reformer who wanted to set up a democracy. He made
an effort to strengthen the Russian Army to prevent any future revolts,
but ended up resigning, which allowed Kerensky, a democratic Socialist,
to take over and form a coalition government. He kept the war with
Germany going, and issued an amnesty order for the communists who had
been exiles after the aborted Red Revolution in 1905. Nearly 250,000
revolutionaries returned to Russia.
The Rothschilds, through Milner, planned the Russian Revolution, and
along with Schiff (who gave $20 million), Sir George Buchanan, the
Warburgs, the Rockefellers, the partners of J. P. Morgan (who gave at
least $1 million), Olaf Aschberg (of the Nye Bank of Stockholm, Sweden),
the Rhine Westphalian Syndicate, a financier named Jovotovsky (whose
daughter later married Leon Trotsky), William Boyce Thompson (a director
of Chase National Bank, who contributed $1 million), and Albert H.
Wiggin (President of Chase National Bank), helped finance it.
The Rockefellers had given their financial support after the Czar
refused to give them access to the Russian oil fields, which was already
being pumped by the Royal Dutch Co. (owned by the Rothschilds and the
Nobel brothers), who was giving Standard Oil plenty of competition on
the international market. Even though John D. Rockefeller possessed
$15,000,000 in bonds from the Royal Dutch Co. and Shell, rather than
purchase stock to get his foot in the door and indirectly profit, he
helped to finance the Revolution so that he would be able to get
Standard Oil firmly established in the country of Russia.
As the Congress of Vienna had shown, the Illuminati had never been able
to control the affairs of Russia, so they had to get rid of the Czar, so
he couldn't interfere with their plans.
Leon Trotsky (whose real name was Lev Davidovich Bronstein, 1879-1940,
the son of wealthy Jewish parents), who was exiled from Russia because
of his part in the aborted revolution in 1905, was a reporter for Novy
Mir, a communist paper in New York, from 1916-17. He had an expensive
apartment and traveled around town in a chauffeur-driven limousine. He
sometimes stayed at the Krupp mansion, and had been seen going in and
out of Schiff's New York mansion. Trotsky was given $20 million in Jacob
Schiff gold to help finance the revolution, which was deposited in a
Warburg bank, then transferred to the Nya Banken in Stockholm, Sweden.
According to the Knickerbocker Column in the New York Journal American
on February 3, 1949: "Today it is estimated by Jacob's grandson, John
Schiff, that the old man sank about $20,000,000 for the final triumph of
Bolshevism in Russia."
Trotsky left New York aboard the S. S. Kristianiafjord (S. S.
Christiania), which had been chartered by Schiff and Warburg, on March
27, 1917, with communist revolutionaries. At Halifax, Nova Scotia, on
April 3rd, the first port they docked at, the Canadians, under orders
from the British Admiralty, seized Trotsky, and his men, taking them to
the prison at Amherst; and impounded his gold.
Official records, later declassified by the Canadian government,
indicate that they knew Trotsky and his small army were "socialists
leaving for the purposes of starting revolution against present Russian
government..." The Canadians were concerned that if Lenin would take
over Russia, he would sign a Peace Treaty and stop the fighting between
Russia and Germany, so that the Germany Army could be diverted to
possibly mount an offensive against the United States and Canada. The
British government (through intelligence officer Sir William Wiseman,
who later became a partner with Kuhn, Loeb and Co.) and American
government (through Col. House) urged them to let Trotsky go. Wilson
said that if they didn't comply, the U.S. wouldn't enter the War.
Trotsky was released, given an American passport, a British transport
visa, and a Russian entry permit. It is obvious that Wilson knew what
was going on, because accompanying Trotsky, was Charles Crane of the
Westinghouse Company, who was the Chairman of the Democratic Finance
Committee. The U.S. entered the war on April 6th. Trotsky arrived in
Petrograd on May 17.
Meanwhile, Lenin had been able to infiltrate the Democratic Socialist
Republic established by Kerensky. In October, 1917, when the Revolution
started, Lenin, who was in Switzerland (also exiled because of the 1905
Bolshevik Revolution), negotiated with the German High Command, with the
help of Max Warburg (head of the Rothschild-affiliated Warburg bank in
Frankfurt), to allow him, his wife, and 32 other Bolsheviks, to travel
across Germany, to Sweden, where he was to pick up the money being held
for him in the Swedish bank, then go on to Petrograd. He promised to
make peace with Germany, if he was able to overthrow the new Russian
government. He was put in a sealed railway car, with over $5 million in
gold from the German government, and upon reaching Petrograd, was joined
by Stalin and Trotsky. He told the people that he could no longer work
within the government to effect change, that they had to strike
immediately, in force, to end the war, and end the hunger conditions of
the peasants. His war cry was: "All power to the Soviets."
He led the revolution, and after seizing the reins of power from
Kerensky on November 7, 1917, replaced the democratic republic with a
communist Soviet state. He kept his word and made peace with Germany in
February, 1918, and was able to get out of World War I. While most
members of the Provisional Government were killed, Kerensky was allowed
to live, possibly because of the general amnesty he extended to the
communists exiled in 1905. Kerensky later admitted to receiving private
support from American industry, which led some historians to believe
that the Kerensky government was a temporary front for the Bolsheviks.
Elections were held on November 25, 1917, with close to 42 million votes
being cast, and the Bolshevik Communists only received 24% of the vote.
On July 18, 1918, the People's Congress convened, having a majority of
anti-Bolsheviks, which indicated that communism wasn't the mass movement
that Lenin was claiming. The next day he used an armed force to disband
the body.
In a speech to the House of Commons on November 5, 1919, Winston
Churchill said: "...Lenin was sent into Russia ... in the same way that
you might send a vial containing a culture of typhoid or of cholera to
be poured into the water supply of a great city, and it worked with
amazing accuracy. No sooner did Lenin arrive than he began beckoning a
finger here and a finger there to obscure persons in sheltered retreats
in New York, Glasgow, in Berne, and other countries, and he gathered
together the leading spirits of a formidable sect, the most formidable
sect in the world ... With these spirits around him he set to work with
demoniacal ability to tear to pieces every institution on which the
Russian State depended."
In a February 8, 1920 article for the Illustrated Sunday Herald,
Churchill wrote:
(From) the days of Spartacus Weishaupt to those of Karl Marx, to those
of Trotsky, Bela-Kuhn, Rosa Luxembourg and Emma Goldman, this world-wide
conspiracy ... has been steadily growing. This conspiracy played a
definitely recognizable role in the tragedy of the French Revolution. It
has been the mainspring of every subversive movement during the
nineteenth century; and now at last this band of extraordinary
personalities from the underworld of the great cities of Europe and
America have gripped the Russian people by the hair of their heads, and
have become practically the undisputed masters of that enormous empire.
There is no need to exaggerate the part played in the creation of
Bolshevism and in the bringing about of the Russian revolution by these
international and for the most part atheistical Jews. It is certainly a
very great one; it probably outweighs all others. With the notable
exception of Lenin, the majority of the leading figures are Jews."
Russian General Arsene DeGoulevitch wrote in Czarism and the Revolution
that the "main purveyors of funds for the revolution, however, were
neither crackpot Russian millionaires nor armed bandits on Lenin. The
'real' money primarily came from certain British and American circles
which for a long time past had lent their support to the Russian
revolutionary cause..." DeGoulevitch, who received the information from
another Russian general, said that the revolution was "engineered by the
English, more precisely by Sir George Buchanan and Lord (Alfred) Milner
(of the Round Table) ... In private conversations I have been told that
over 21 million rubles were spent by Lord Milner in financing the
Russian Revolution."
Frank Vanderlip, President of the Rockefeller-controlled First National
Bank, compared Lenin to George Washington. The Rockefeller's public
relations man, Ivy Lee, was used to inform Americans that the Communists
were "misunderstood idealists who were actually kind benefactors of
mankind."
Lenin even knew that he wasn't really in control, and wrote: "The state
does not function as we desired. How does it function? The car does not
obey. A man is at the wheel and seems to lead it, but the car does not
drive in the desired direction. It moves as another force wishes."
In March, 1918, on orders from Schiff, which were relayed by Col. House,
the Bolshevik's Second Congress adopted the name "Communist Party." That
same year, Lenin organized the Red Army (Red Army-Red
Shield-Rothschild?) to control the population, and a secret police to
keep track of the communists.
The Third International (or Comintern) had its first Congress in 1919 in
Moscow, where they established that Russia would control all of the
world's communist movements. They met again in 1920 to lay the
foundation for the new Communist Party. Hopes of world revolution ran
high, as they hoped to 'liberate' the working class and enable them to
break away from the reformist democracy they sprung from. Lenin said
that the "victory of the world communist revolution is assured." But, he
added, that the revolutionary activities had to be discontinued so they
could develop trade relations with capitalist countries, to strengthen
their own. The name of the country was officially changed to the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.). Their aims, were to create a
single world-wide Communist Party and to overthrow the "international
bougeoisie" by force to create "an international Soviet Republic."
From 1916-21, famine swept through Russia (perhaps due to crop
tampering), with close to five million dying, because industry was shut
down. On September 21, 1921, American relief services began in Russia,
after President Herbert Hoover received a plea from famous Russian
writer Maxim Gorky. The United States appropriated $20 million for the
country, with $8 million spent for medical supplies. Over 700,000 tons
of goods were sent to feed 18,000,000 people. As it turned out, the U.S.
was actually supporting the Communist Civil War, which ended in 1922.
American and European industrialists rushed to the aid of the Russians.
The International Barnsdale Corporation and Standard Oil got drilling
rights; Stuart, James and Cook, Inc. reorganized the coal mines; General
Electric sold them electrical equipment; and other major firms like
Westinghouse, DuPont and RCA, also aided the Communists. Standard Oil of
New Jersey bought 50% of their huge Caucasus oil fields, and in 1927,
built a large refinery in Russia. Standard Oil, with their subsidiary,
Vacuum Oil Co., made a deal to sell Soviet oil to European countries,
and even arranged to get them a $75 million loan. Today, Russia is the
world's largest petroleum producer, and some researchers believe that
the Rockefellers still own the oil production facilities in Russia,
withdrawing the profits through Switzerland.
Rockefeller's Chase National Bank (later known as Chase Manhattan Bank)
helped establish the American-Russian Chamber of Commerce in 1922, and
its first President was Reeve Schley, a Chase Vice-President. In 1925,
Chase National and PromBank (a German bank) developed a complete program
to finance the Soviets raw material exports to the United States, and
imports of U.S. cotton and machinery. Chase National and Equitable Trust
Co. were the dominant forces in Soviet credit dealings. In 1928, Chase
sold the Bolsheviks bonds in America, and was severely criticized by
various patriotic groups who called them "a disgrace to America."
America sent Russia vast quantities of food and other relief supplies.
Lenin had said that the capitalists would do business with anyone, and
when Russia was through with them, the Communists would take over the
world. That is what the Russian Communists have been led to believe. In
reality, the Illuminati was completely financing the entire country of
Russia, in order to transform them into a world power with principles
completely opposite to that of the United States.
In May, 1922, Lenin suffered the first of a series of strokes. When he
died in 1924, supposedly from syphilis, the country's leadership was
taken over by Joseph Stalin (1879-1953, Iosif Visarionovich Dzhugashvili),
after a bitter fight with Trotsky. Lenin said on his deathbed: "I
committed a great error. My nightmare is to have the feeling that I'm
lost in an ocean of blood from the innumerable victims. It is too late
to return. To save our country, Russia, we would have needed men like
Francis of Assisi. With ten men like him we would have saved Russia."
Trotsky was expelled from the Party in 1927, and then exiled from the
country in 1929. He attempted to mobilize other communist groups against
Stalin.
In 1924, Stalin wrote The Foundations of Leninism, hoping that Lenin
would pass the torch of leadership to him. However, in a December, 1922
letter to the Party Congress, Lenin said of Stalin: "After taking over
the position of Secretary-General, Comrade Stalin accumulated in his
hands immeasurable power and I am not certain whether he will be always
able to use this power with the required care." Lenin wrote in January,
1923: "Stalin is excessively rude, and this defect, which can be freely
tolerated in our midst and in contacts among U.S. communists, becomes a
defect which cannot be tolerated in one holding the position of
Secretary-General. Because of this, I propose that the comrades consider
the method by which Stalin would be removed from this position and by
which another man would be selected for it; a man, who above all, would
differ from Stalin, in only one quality, namely, greater tolerance,
greater loyalty, greater kindness, and more considerate attitude toward
the comrades, a less capricious temper, etc."
Financed by Kuhn, Loeb and Co., Stalin implemented a new economic policy
for rapid industrialization, known as the "First Five Year Plan." Even
though the U.S. Government was sending over food, Stalin was using the
food as a weapon to finish communizing the country. Those who refused to
cooperate with the communist government were starved to death. Between
1932-33, it is estimated that between three and seven million people
died as a result of Stalin's tactics.
Stalin later admitted that two-thirds of Russia's industrial capability
was due to the assistance of the United States.
Just as Lenin said: "Down with religion! Long live atheism!" Stalin
said: "God must be out of Russia in five years." He eventually did away
with the "withering away" concept, and developed a fanatical, rigid, and
powerful police state. Stalin said that the goals of Communism was to
create chaos throughout the world, institute a single world economic
system, prod the advanced countries to consistently give aid to
underdeveloped countries, and to divide the world into regional groups,
which would be a transitional stage to a one-world government. The
Communists have not deviated from this blueprint.
In 1933, the Illuminati urged FDR to recognize the country of Russia in
order to save them from financial ruin, as a number of European
countries had already done. On November 17, 1933, the U.S. granted
diplomatic recognition to Russia. In return, Russia promised not to
interfere in our internal affairs. A promise they never kept. They
became a member of the League of Nations in 1934, but were thrown out in
1939 because of their aggressive actions toward Finland.
Meanwhile, the U.S. continued to send them aid. The Cleveland firm of
Arthur G. Mackee provided equipment for a huge steel plant at
Magnitogorski; John Clader of Detroit, equipped and installed a tractor
plant at Chelyabinski; Henry Ford and the Austin Co. provided equipment
for an automobile production center at Gorki; and Col. Hugh Cooper,
creator of the Mussel Shoals Dam, planned and built the giant
hydroelectric plant at Dniepostrol.
On August 23, 1939, Hitler signed a non-aggression pact with Stalin, and
together they attacked Poland in a blitzkrieg war, which led to World
War II. Because of a treaty with Poland, France and England were forced
to declare war on Germany. Hitler had said publicly, that he didn't want
war with England, but now was forced into battle with them. By the end
of May, the Netherlands and Belgium had fallen, and France followed in
June. In 1940, Russia moved against Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia,
Bessarabia (now Moldova), northern Bukovina (NE Romania), and part of
Poland. This sort of worried Hitler.
In England, the Illuminati-controlled press attacked Prime Minister
Chamberlain, because they felt their war against Germany was too mild.
The International Bankers wanted a major war. Chamberlain was pressured
into resigning, and Winston Churchill replaced him, and immediately
stepped up the war with an air attack on Germany.
A year later, the German High Command, unknown by Hitler, sent Rudolph
Hess to England to meet with Lord Hamilton and Churchill to negotiate a
Peace Treaty. Hess, next to Hitler, was Germany's highest ranking
officer (credited for writing down and editing Hitler's dictation for
Mein Kampf and also contributing to its content). The German generals
offered to eliminate Hitler, so they could join forces to attack
Communist Russia. Churchill refused, and had Hess jailed. He was later
tried and convicted at the Nuremberg war crime trials, and was given a
life sentence, which was served out at the Spandau prison.
Shortly after their failure, the German High Command convinced Hitler to
attack Russia, which he did. After overrunning Europe, 121 German
divisions, 19 armored divisions, and three air fleets, invaded Russia on
June 22, 1941. American communists urged the world to mount an immediate
united effort to help Russia.
The Nazi advance was swift and savage, with the German army barreling
deep into the Ukraine with one victory after another. Foreign Policy
experts predicted the defeat and collapse of the country. In October,
Kiev fell, and Hitler announced there would be a final effort to take
Moscow and end the war. On October 24, with his army 37 miles from
Moscow, Hitler planned on waiting until the winter was over before he
made his final attack. But then, Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, and the
U.S. entered the War.
Through a lend-lease agreement, America responded by sending $11 billion
in raw materials, machinery, tools, complete industrial plants, spare
parts, textiles, clothing, canned meat, sugar, flour, weapons, tanks,
trucks, aircraft, and gasoline to aid the Russians, which turned the
tide against the Germans. Some of the material which was sent: 6,430
aircraft; 121 merchant ships; 1,285 locomotives; 3,734 tanks; 206,000
trucks, buses, tractors, and cars; 82 torpedo boats and small
destroyers; 2 billion tons of steel; 22,400,000 rounds of ammunition;
87,900 tons of explosives; 245,000 telephones; 5,500,000 pairs of boots;
2,500,000 automobile inner tubes; and two million tons of food. In
dollars, it broke down this way:
1942 - $1,422,853,332
1943 - $2,955,811,271
1944 - $3,459,274,155
1945 - $1,838,281,501
The Russians were to pay for all supplies, and return all usable
equipment after the war. It didn't happen. For instance, they kept 84
cargo ships, some of which were used to supply North Vietnam with
equipment during the Vietnam War. What we sent to the Russians, after
the War, became the foundation upon which the Soviet industrial machine
was built. Through an agreement negotiated years later by Henry
Kissinger, the Russians agreed to pay back $722 million of the $11
billion, which amounted to about 7 cents on the dollar. In 1975, after
paying back $32 million, they announced they were not going to pay the
remainder of the Lend-Lease debt.
After the War, in 1946, America turned over two-thirds of Germany's
aircraft manufacturing capabilities to Russia, who dismantled the
installations, and rebuilt them in their country, forming the initial
stage of their jet aircraft industry.
Even though Congress had passed legislation forbidding shipments of
non-war materials, various pro-Soviet officials and Communist traitors
in key positions openly defied the law and made shipments. In 1944,
Harry Hopkins, Henry Morgenthau (Secretary of the Treasury), Averell
Harriman (U.S. Ambassador to Russia), and Harry Dexter White (Assistant
Secretary of Treasury), supplied the material needed for Russia to print
occupation currency. Printing plates, colored inks, varnish, tint
blocks, and paper were sent from Great Falls, Montana, in two shipments
of five C-47's each, which had been loaded at the National Airport near
Washington, DC.
The Russians then set up a printing facility in a Nazi printing plant in
Leipzig and began to print currency which the U.S. couldn't account for.
Russia refused to redeem the currency with rubles, therefore the U.S.
Treasury had to back the currency. The Russians were using these newly
printed Marks to sap the German economy, and take advantage of the
United States, who, by the end of 1946, had lost $250,000,000 because of
redeeming, in U.S. dollars, marks which were issued in excess of the
total amount of marks issued by the Finance Office, who was officially
printing occupation money for the Germans. In addition, the $18,102
charge for the plates and printing material was never paid.
In 1943, a Congressional investigation revealed, that even before the
U.S. had built its first atomic bomb, half of all the uranium and
technical information needed to construct such a bomb, was secretly sent
to Russia. This included chemicals, metals, and minerals instrumental in
creating an atomic bomb, and manufacturing a hydrogen bomb. In 1980,
James Roosevelt, the son of President Franklin Roosevelt, wrote a novel,
A Family Matter, which detailed how his father made "a bold secret
decision- to share the results of the Manhattan Project with the Soviet
Union," in 1943 and 1944.
Air Force Major Racey Jordan, was a Land-Lease expediter and liaison
officer for the Russians in Great Falls, which was the primary staging
area for the massive Lend-Lease supply operation to the Soviet Union. In
his diaries, which were published in 1952, he said that the U.S. built
the Soviet war machine by shipping all the materials needed to construct
an atomic pile, including graphite, cadmium metal, thorium, and uranium.
In March, 1943, a number of black leather suitcases wrapped in white
window sash cord, and sealed with red wax, said to be of a diplomatic
nature, were to be sent to Moscow. One night the Russians had taken them
out for dinner, and suspicious of their friendliness, Jordan decided to
sneak away, and went back to the base with an armed sentry. He
discovered that two Russian couriers from Washington had arrived and had
procured a plane bound for Russia, to take about 50 of these cases.
He detained the flight, and discovered that the shipment was being sent
to the "Director, Institute of Technical and Economic Information" in
Moscow. He opened eighteen of the cases, and discovered a collection of
maps that identified the names and locations of all the industrial
plants in the U.S., along with classified military sites. One case
contained a folder of military documents marked, "from Hiss," and
another case which contained a White House memo from "H.H." (Harry
Hopkins, former Secretary of Commerce and head of the Lend-Lease
Program) to Al Mikoyan (Russia's number three man, after Stalin and
Foreign Commissar Molotov), which accompanied a map of Oak Ridge and the
Manhattan Engineering District, and a report from Oak Ridge, which
contained phrases like: "energy produced by fission," and "walls five
feet thick, of lead and water, to control flying neutrons."
In short, traitors within the Administration of Roosevelt were giving
the Soviets the instructions and the material to build nuclear weapons,
even before the United States had fully developed the technology for use
by our country. Jordan reported all of this to Air Force Intelligence,
but nothing ever happened.
The Russian's ability to establish their space program was also provided
by America. When General Patton was moving eastward through Germany, he
captured the towns of Peenemunde and Nordhausen, where German scientists
had developed the V-1 and V-2 rockets. Gen. Dwight Eisenhower ordered
him to turn the two towns over the Russians, who dismantled the
facilities and shipped them to Russia, along with the scientists. One of
the German scientists, Dr. Werner von Braun, led a group of 100 other
scientists, who surrendered to the Americans. He later became head of
the American space program.
Braun was prepared to launch history's first satellite, long before
Russia developed one, but Eisenhower would not authorize it, because it
was to be made to appear that Russian technology was superior to ours,
when it wasn't. It would add to the facade being developed that Russia
was stronger than we were, and therefore should be feared.
As recently as 1978, it was believed that Russia still had not been able
to construct a single-stage rocket capable of placing large payloads in
orbit. American researcher, Lloyd Mallan, called the Soviet's 'Lunik'
moon landing a hoax, since no tracking station picked up its signals,
and that Alexie Leonov's spacewalk on March 18, 1965 was also staged.
Concerning the film of the spacewalk, Mallan said:
"Four months of solid research interviewing experts in the fields of
photo-optics, photo-chemistry and electro-optics, all of whom carefully
studied the motion picture film and still photographs officially
released by the Soviet Government ... (indicate them to be)
double-printed. The foreground (Leonov) was superimposed on the
background (Earth below). The Russian film showed reflections from the
glass plate under which a double plate is made ... Leonov was suspended
from wire or cables ... In several episodes of the Russian film, light
was reflected from a small portion of wire (or cable) attached to
Leonov's space suit ... One camera angle was impossible of achievement.
This showed Leonov crawling out of his hatch into space. It was a
head-on shot, so the camera would have had to have been located out in
space beyond the space ship."
The U.S. donated two food production factories ($6,924,000), a petroleum
refinery ($29,050,000), a repair plant for precision instruments
($550,000), 17 steam and three hydroelectric plants ($273,289,000).
Later, Dressler Industries built a $146 million plant at Kuibyshov, to
produce high quality drill bits for oil exploration. The C. E. Lummus
Co. of New Jersey built a $105 million petrochemical plant in the
Ukraine ($45 million would be put up by Lummus through financing from
Eximbank and other private banks, which was guaranteed by the O.P.I.C.).
Allis-Chalmers built a $35 million iron ore pelletizing plant in Russia,
which is one of the world's four largest. The Aluminum Co. of America
(ALCOA) built an aluminum plant, which consumed "half the world's supply
of bauxite." We sent the Russians computer systems, oil drilling
equipment, pipes, and other supplies. The ball-bearings used by Russia
to improve the guidance systems on their rockets and missiles, such as
their SS-18 intercontinental ballistic missies, were purchased in 1972
from the Bryant Grinder Co. in Springfield, Vermont.
All of this financial aid to Russia was advocated by Henry Kissinger and
the U.S. Government. The reasoning behind it was to allow Russia to
increase their industrial and agricultural output to match ours, because
by bringing the two countries closer together, hostilities would be
eased. They were not. The Illuminati, through the U.S. Government, had
allowed the Soviet Union to have a technology equal to our own.
Congressman Otto Passman, who was the Chairman of the Appropriations
Subcommittee, said: "The United States cannot survive as a strong nation
if we continue to dissipate our resources and give away our wealth to
the world."
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