http://moneyteachers.org/Russian.Communism.htm
There have been no real Communist Revolutions in
the history of this world. Communism is a myth, a false ideology used
to justify murder, mayhem and misery. The so-called "Communist"
revolutions have enjoyed the full financial backing of Western
"Capitalists" in the form of International Bankers (illuminati). The so-called
Communist Revolutions are really Capitalist Revolutions used to take
power away from one group of Capitalists and give it to another.
Before the Russian revolution, you had the Czar
and his bureacracy. A small minority governed over the majority and
lived lives of extravagence and luxury at their expense. The Czar was a
threat to the Illuminazi's for a variety of reasons and had to be
eliminated.
Once the "White Russians", which wanted to
establish a Russian Republic, were defeated by the so-called
"Communists" (with money from Western Bankers), they pretended to
represent the working class. They were really just greedy, bloodthirsty
tyrants working towards the Illuminazi objectives. In the end, only the
1% of the population that belonged to the Communist Party Ruling Class
enjoyed any benefits from the labors of the "working class"
"Membership in the
party ultimately became a privilege, with a small subset of the general
population of Party becoming an elite class
or nomenklatura in Soviet society. Nomenklatura enjoyed many
perquisites denied to the average Soviet citizen. Among those perks were
shopping at well-stocked stores, access to foreign merchandise,
preference in obtaining housing, access to dachas and holiday resorts,
being allowed to travel abroad, sending their children to prestigious
universities, and obtaining prestigious jobs (as well as party
membership itself) for their children. It became virtually impossible to
join the Soviet ruling and managing elite without being a member of the
Communist Party."
"The Gulag Archipelago", written by Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, tells the story of the true "Worker's paradise"
established under the Soviet System:
"the Gulag Archipelago traces the history of the
Soviet concentration camp and forced labour system from 1918 to 1956,
starting with V.I. Lenin's original decrees shortly after the October
Revolution establishing the legal and practical frame for a slave labor
economy, and a punitive concentration camp system. It describes and
discusses the waves of purges, assembling the show trials in context of
the development of the greater GULag system with particular attention to
the legal and bureaucratic development." (source)
These particular members of the Russian Working
class were a whole lot worse off than if they had lived under the Czar.
"Today's major industrial cities of the Russian
Arctic such as Norilsk, Vorkuta, Kolyma and Magadan, were camps
originally built by prisoners and run by ex-prisoners.[5] Anne
Applebaum, author of Gulag: A History, explains: "It was the branch of
the State Security that operated the penal system of forced labour
camps and associated detention and transit camps and prisons. The Gulag
system is infamous as the place where many millions died from inhuman
work conditions and hunger." (source)...
More than 14 million people passed through the
Gulag from 1929 to 1953, with a further 6 to 7 million being deported
and exiled to remote areas of the USSR. According to Soviet data, a
total of 1,053,829 people died in the GULAG from 1934 to 1953, not
counting those who died in labor colonies or those who died shortly
after their release but which resulted from the harsh treatment in the
camps. Anne Applebaum notes that "both archives and memoirs indicate
that it was common practice in many camps
to release prisoners who were on the point of dying, thereby lowering camp death
statistics." The total population of the
camps varied from 510,307 (in 1934) to 1,727,970 (in 1953).
Most Gulag inmates were not political prisoners,
although the political prisoner population was always significant. People could be imprisoned in a Gulag camp for crimes
such as unexcused absences from work, petty theft, or anti-government
jokes. About half of the political
prisoners were sent to Gulag prison camps without trial; official data
suggest that there were more than 2.6 million imprisonment sentences in
cases investigated by the secret police, 1921-1953. While the Gulag was
radically reduced in size following Stalin’s death in 1953, political prisoners continued to exist in the Soviet
Union right up to the Gorbachev era.
(Ibid)
The system was designed to create criminals, who
were then used as slave laborers for the profit of the Communist Party
Leadership. These men and women were literally worked to death in
sub-human conditions, starvation diets, and death camp conditions.
Farmers and Peasants faired the same or worse.
Especially in the Ukraine:
Famine affected other parts of the USSR. The
death toll from famine in the Soviet Union at this time is estimated at
between five and ten million people. The worst crop failure of late
Czarist Russia, in 1892, had caused 375,000 to 400,000 deaths. Most
modern scholars agree that the famine was caused by the policies of the
government of the Soviet Union under Stalin, rather than by natural
reasons.
According to Alan Bullock, "the total Soviet
grain crop was no worse than that of 1931 ... it was not a crop failure
but the excessive demands of the state, ruthlessly enforced, that cost
the lives of as many as five million Ukrainian peasants." Stalin refused to release large grain reserves that
could have alleviated the famine, while continuing to export grain; he was convinced that the Ukrainian peasants had hidden
grain away, and strictly enforced draconian new collective-farm theft
laws in response.
As a result of forced collectivization, forced
labor camps and political "purges", it is estimated that Stalin murdered
20 million of his own people. A fact that is always excluded in most
high school texts.
Communism never existed, nor was it intended to
exist. It was just another siren's song used to lure societies to their
Illuminazi created doom.
http://moneyteachers.org/Russian.Communism.htm