The War Against Putin – What The Government Media Complex Isnt Telling You | Untold History Channel

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Summary

➡ Ron Partain, the host of the Untold History Channel, is discussing the book “The War Against Putin” by Mike King. He mentions that he was delayed due to helping his mother and that he’s taking a break from discussing George Bush. He also talks about his plans to discuss a recent interview with Putin after he finishes the book. Lastly, he shares some technical changes he’s making to his setup and begins to read from the book, which describes Putin’s background and reputation.
➡ Vladimir Putin, Russia’s leader, is a man of many talents and has a long history in intelligence. However, opinions about him are divided, with some people admiring him and others disliking him. This text aims to present a collection of facts about Putin, suggesting that the truth about him might be somewhere in between the extreme views. It also encourages readers to form their own opinion about Putin after considering all the presented facts.
➡ The text also provides a brief history of Russia, from its early beginnings with the Vikings, through various wars and cultural shifts, to the reign of the Romanovs. It highlights the influence of western culture on Russia and the country’s rich cultural heritage.
➡ The text further discusses the geopolitical games between Russia and the West, particularly Britain, over influence in Central Asia, a rivalry that continues to this day. It also mentions the assassination of Tsar Alexander II by communist anarchists, which led to a backlash and the fleeing of many “reds” to America.
➡ Finally, the text hints at the attempted overthrow of the Russian government in 1905, funded by western sources, setting the stage for further discussion in the following sections.
➡ In the early 1900s, Russia faced many challenges, including the assassination of Tsar Nicholas’ uncle, a lost war with Japan, and internal unrest. Wall Street banker Jacob Schiff and President Theodore Roosevelt financially supported Japan, due to their shared dislike of Russia. This led to a weakened Russia, both domestically and internationally, and many revolutionaries fled to Western Europe and America. By 1917, the Bolshevik Reds used the discontent over World War I and an economic crisis to start a revolution, leading to the brutal murder of the Romanov family and the establishment of the Soviet Union.
➡ The Council on Foreign Relations and the Royal Institute of International Affairs are powerful groups that influence global politics. They are secretive and only invite influential people from various fields. The article also talks about the rise of Stalin, who took over the USSR after Lenin’s death and implemented harsh policies, causing fear and suffering. Despite his brutality, many in the West ignored his actions due to their support for Marxism.
➡ The speaker discusses how people who question mainstream beliefs are often labeled as “crazy” to discourage others from thinking differently. They argue that this fear of being ostracized leads many to conform to societal norms, even if they don’t agree with them. The speaker also criticizes the idea of a “new world order,” suggesting it would lead to a loss of cultural identity and individual freedom. They end by encouraging listeners to question the status quo and stand up for their beliefs.

Transcript

It looks like I’m live. Welcome, everybody, to the untold district channel. My name is Ron partain. Sorry I’m running a little bit late today. Yeah, a little bit late. I was testing out a few new things and anyway, my mom came in and she asked me if I could help her with something very quickly, so I couldn’t say no. Anyway, so derailed me a little bit. But I am here, and we’re going to go through the book the War against Putin by Mike King.

Everybody kind of wanted me to talk about the Putin interview with Tucker, and I do kind of want to get into that’s dead yet, but I wanted to go through this book first. I probably could have done it ahead of time, but that thing kind of sprung up on us. It hit and everybody was like, whoa, this is happening. Is it really happening? Is it happening? And then it happened.

And so this is a perfect time for me to go through this. But I was dealing with a lot of the, I was still dealing with the bush stuff and I’m still not done with the bush stuff. I’ll be honest with you. There’s so much more there. But I’m going to take a little bit of a break from that for now. I don’t want to be too one dimensional, but I think this is a very good, the thing with Putin, I think it’s going to be a very good break from that, especially on the heels of the Tucker interview.

And then once the Tucker interview is done, then I’m going to go back and I’ll address the Tucker interview in light of all the information from this. And I think, I want to say that I’ll be in a better position than many people. But I think that going through this will provide me with ammunition to go through and discuss that interview with a little bit more, I don’t know, kind of meat and bones.

If you talk about, let’s see here, somebody’s asked, what book are you reading about Bush? I’m not reading a book about. Just I got done reading the book about Bush last week by the two faces of book, the two faces of book the Two Faces of Bush by Anthony Sutton. And it was a book that he wrote in 1987, or it was 87 or 88. It was before the election, the 88 election.

And he wrote it when Bush was still vice president to Reagan. Very interesting. It was very interesting. And hello from sunny California, where in California, just out of curiosity, that’s where I am. But the thing with Bush was just, man, that’s one of those things you watch it or you listen to it, it just wants to make you. It makes your blood boil. No, hold on a second here.

This is. Well, we will not be doing constitution class tomorrow, so just got a message from Doug. So we won’t be doing the constitution class. I, and I did several things. I did several things on Bush, so that wasn’t just the only thing I’d done. It just made my skin crawl. So I needed to take a break. I had to take a break. But anyway, on that note, let’s jump into this thing on Putin.

I don’t know how long this is going to take us. The book is 234 pages, but you know how Mike writes a lot of it is in a very large format. He does it in, the size of the pages are eight and a half by eleven. So it’s almost like a kind of like a Time Life magazine or a life magazine, if you will. Format and text is very large, like probably an 18 font.

Anyway, I’m trying to a little bit of a different configuration here with the screen, if you guys don’t know, because you don’t see my computers, but I have four screens. I have one here, I have one here, one there and then one up there. And what I’ve been doing for the most part is I’ve been reading from the screen above me, but I’m going to try different today.

I’m going to try to read from the one where the camera is a little bit more facing me. So I’m not looking up. Somebody in the comment section said I should stop looking up when I read and I should look more directly at the camera. So I’m going to try it this way and see how it looks and see how it works and see if that makes a difference.

But it’s going to take a little bit of a getting used to me or used to on my end because things are laid out differently. Anyway, all production stuff behind the scenes that you guys will never know. But I’m just giving you the fair warning that if I stumble a little bit, there’s some good reason. But anyway, let’s jump in here and see what we got going on with the war against Putin.

The introduction here as of the date of this expanded republication, which is September 2017, a Google search for the term Putin thug yields an astonishing 550,000 results, about the same as for Putin murderer, coming in at about 450,000 results. As Putin tyrant, or as Putin tyrant, even the whimsical Putin the terrible is pushing 900,000. Most of these negative results source back to some bloviating american politician, commentator, eggheaded academic, editorial writer, or journalist for a major american publication.

Others trace back to european parliamentarians or periodicals. To be sure, favorable western views for Russia’s enigmatic leader are also readily available. But the preponderance of the western sourced adjectives used to describe Vladimir Putin. Putin, be it from the left or from the right, is clearly of an overwhelmingly negative nature. And then here’s some. Hello, redneck. Let me see here. Bakersfield. Okay. Just on the southern end of the San Joaquin.

I’ve been through there many a time, although actually I do enjoy coming down the 58 if I’m heading up north, but I’m not a fan of the 99. But anyway, you’ll know what I mean. Creed will know what I mean by that. So here’s some New York Post pussy. Putin, the New York Times, Vlad the insulter. In time, Russia’s incredible shrinking prime minister, a steady diet of anti Putin hatred and ridicule in the west.

But in Russia itself, the perception is vastly different. Ever since his rise to power, Putin’s approval rating among the russian people has hovered between 75% to 85%, far higher than that of any american president or european prime minister. Indeed, many Russians regard him as the savior of Mother Russia, with some referring to him as Putin the Great. A few among Russia’s orthodox christian faithful today believe that Putin was God sent, literally.

Even Putin’s most hysterical white or western detractors unanimously concede that his talents and abilities are usually formidable. Putin, excuse me, unusually formidable. And I’ll use this. I’m going to pause here to give some of you guys who are maybe new to my channel, just to give the caveat here that about a year ago, I’m monovision, meaning that I see distance from my left eye and up close with my right eye, and I had a retinal detachment in my left eye.

So being able to see up close with my left eye is not. The retinal detachment impacted the center of my vision, and it is very difficult for me to see up close. Everything is really fuzzy. I’ve got the text really big. But even then, sometimes I make mistakes, but it’s not because I can’t read. It’s because literally, I can’t see very well. So know that if I make a mistake, it’s not because I’m stupid, because I really can’t see very well.

But I’m not going to use that as an excuse. I’m going to continue to push on. Putin came from a very humble background as a young boy, he was full of energy, fond of martial arts, and not one to shy away from trouble. His fifth grade teacher, Vera Guruvich, recalls young Vlad in the fifth grade. He still hadn’t found himself yet, but I could feel the potential, the energy and the character in him.

I saw that he had a great deal of interest in language. He picked it up easily. He had a very good memory and an agile mind. I thought, something good will come of this boy. So I decided to give him more attention, to distract him from the boys on the streets. In high school, Putin studied chemistry at a technical institute, which is probably very close to obtaining a chemistry degree from some american colleges.

He would later obtain a law degree from what was then known as Leningrad State University. Brainy Putin later earned a PhD in economics while also mastering the german language. In his spare time, he is basically conversant in English and French. Putin is also well versed in history and literature, including english and american works, an aficionado of ballet, ice hockey, opera, and both classical and blues music. In 1983, Putin married.

I’m not even going to try that name. I guess I should probably take one stab. Laudmila Shrikneva, a beautiful flight attendant with whom he would have two daughters. He is a passionate outdoorsman, animal lover, good with a gun, and holds a black belt in judo. He served 16 years in the intelligence service, rising to Russia’s intelligence chief after the USSR collapsed. Love him or hate him, one thing is for sure, Putin is no joke.

To parody a well known beer commercial, he is the most interesting man alive. Clearly, the negative Internet search supermajority and the russian population supermajority cannot both be right about Mr. Putin. So who is right? Or does the truth about Vladimir Putin lie somewhere in between? Why so much Putin hating in the west? As the astute reader has probably already deduced from the title the War against Putin, what the government media complex isn’t telling you about Russia.

This work intends to set forth a body of evidence which will strongly support the russian majority’s perception. Though the style may seem more breezy and conversational than the conventional academic sedatives which normally deal with such matters, be assured that the scholarship displayed throughout is an unerring, as it is meticulously sourced. This is no opinion piece. It is an organized, concise collection of hard and proven facts which, when weaved together, will state their own conclusions, conclusions which the western powers that be have concealed from you but cannot refute.

And so, dear reader, turn off your tv news and put down your morning newspaper for a while, as the late comedian and social commentator George Carlin used to say, it’s all bullshit and it’s bad for you. Just pretend that you have never heard of Vladimir Putin until now. With the confrontation looming, if certain players have it their way, the people of the free world cannot afford to be misled any longer.

Of course, you will render your own final verdict regarding Mr. Putin. But how can it be just one until you have at least considered the organized array of facts which are about to be presented? That said, let’s climb into the time machine and enjoy a wild ride from past to present. All right, section one. From the beginning through World War II. And so you guys know, if you’re unaware, this book is written by Mike King.

And Mike is a guest on my show. Every Monday or every Tuesday evening at 08:00 p. m. , eastern, we do a show called Tuesdays with Mike, and that’s tomorrow night. And I’ve read through a couple of his books already. The first one was called the Bad War, about World War II, and then the second one was St. Joseph of Wisconsin, about Joseph McCarthy. And this is going to be the third book of I believe he has 28 written.

Anyway, I digress. Chapter one. Rush warriors through the tsars. More than 1100 years ago, diverse groups of seafaring Norsemen, Vikings, essentially known as Rus, settled in modern day Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia, giving their name to the latter, too, the rus government over native slavic and finnish tribes. Some historians believe that these Vikings were invited in to bring order. Others theorize that Rus conquered the territories and then established their rule over the Slavs and Finns.

In any case, the history of Russia is long and storied. In 988, the Rus state entered the entered in Kiev, modern day Ukraine converted to Christianity, which it adopted from the Byzantine Empire, eastern Roman Empire. For this reason, Russia is sometimes referred to as the third Rome. That fusion of Russ, Slavi and byzantine cultures formed the basis of russian culture. For the next 1000 years, Kiev Russ ultimately disintegrated as a state because of the brutal mongol invasion of 1237 to 1240 and the death of about half the population of Russ.

Remnants of the mongol invasion can still be seen in the faces of some modern day Russians. The tartar Mongol mix. After the 13th century, Moscow became the cultural center of Russia. By the 18th century, the tsardom of Russia had become the enormous resource rich Russian Empire, stretching from the polish lithuanian union eastward to the Pacific Ocean. The word for king, tsar is russian for Caesar. Expansion toward the west introduced Russia to western culture, which at that time was far more advanced.

In the late 16 hundreds, Tsar Peter, or Peter the Great, led a cultural revolution that replaced some of Russia’s medieval social and political systems with a scientific, western oriented system. The tsarist house of Romanov, which takes its name from the Roman Empire, indirectly traces its lineage back to Peter. The Romanovs would rule Russia until 1917. The golden age of russian culture and imperialism blossomed under the reign of Catherine the Great.

During the late 17 hundreds, Catherine presided over the age of Russian Enlightenment. The Smolney Institute, the first state institution of higher education for women in Europe, was founded by her. Catherine also founded the Heritage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. The hermitage is one of the largest and oldest museums in the world and has been open to the public since 1852. Its stunning collections, of which only a small part is on display, comprise about 3 million items, including the largest collection of paintings in the world.

During the early days, during the early 18 hundreds, Russia, which had allied itself with Britain, resisted Napoleon’s great invasion. Russians were very proud of their victory in the first great patriotic War, so much that Tsar Alexander I signed a manifest on Christmas Day in 1812, declaring his intention to build a grand cathedral in honor of Christ the Savior, to signify our gratitude to divine providence for saving Russia from the doom that overshadowed her.

As a memorial to the sacrifices of the Russian Empire, the Aweinspiring Moscow Cathedral took 40 years to build and still more to decorate. Christ the Savior cathedral holds a special spiritual, cultural and historic significance for the russian faithful. Keep this in your memory bank because we will again visit this cathedral at future points of this narrative. During the 1850s, there came the crimearian war against Britain, France and the Otoman Turkish Empire, a war which was imposed upon Russia by the two western imperial powers.

Then Russia lost that war. From 1877 to 1878, Russia fought and won the Russo Turkish War. But when british prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli aggressively injected himself into the peace treaty, the Treaty of Berlin, Russia and its slavic allies in the southeastern Europe were forced to accept a raw deal, a deal so flawed that it would later play a role in the outbreak of World War I by driving a nasty wedge between Russia and its austro hungarian ally.

It is a fascinating story, but again, it digresses. Just know that the long history of the western powers maneuvering against Russia repeats itself time again, time and again. During the 18 hundreds, Britain actually fought two wars in Afghanistan on Russia’s southern border. The ludicrous pretext for the anglo afghan war was to protect India from Russia. The real reason was Britain’s desire to compete against Russia for influence in Central Asia.

Disraeli once wrote to queen Victoria of his plan to clear Central Asia of Muscovites, or Russians and drive them into the Caspian Sea. It should be noted that Benjamin Disraeli was very closely attached to the house of Rothschild, the wealthiest family in world history. The Rothschild enmity toward Russia is now 200 years old. As we shall see later on, the antiputin Rothschild banking dynasty is still working against Russia to this very day.

Disraeli’s invasion of Afghanistan ended badly for the British. They withdrew in 1880 and Disraeli’s political influence was finally checked. This fierce historic rivalry became known as the Great Game. The chess players being Russia and the west and the chess board being Afghanistan. Indeed, the great game is still being played to this day. And you thought we went into Afghanistan to get Osama bin Laden? There’s actually a book.

I believe there’s a book out there called the great Game. In fact, let me look that up here. I want to say it’s called the great game. Yeah, the great game. The struggle for Empire in Central Asia, right here. I’m a fan of listening to podcasts of Americans who fought in the war on terror in either Afghanistan or Iraq. And there was one who was a gal who lost her leg, but still was.

I forget her name, but she talked about that book and how reading that book helped her understand so much of what was going on in Afghanistan. And it just really helped her tremendously understand just the dynamics of what she was dealing with over there. Anyway, I actually bought the book, but I haven’t read it. I got way too many to read. As you can see behind me, those are actually my books.

Anyway, let’s see here. In 1881, Tsar Alexander II was assigned on the fifth, was assassinated on the fifth attempt of his life, bomb throwing red terrorists. Communist anarchists were responsible. The tsar’s son, Alexander II, great grandson Nicholas, watched the tsar’s legs get blown off. The resulting anti red black backlash caused many reds to flee to America. Wonderful. And for those of you who do not understand or know Mike’s writing style, he’s very sarcastic, but it actually makes reading his books kind of fun.

By 1905, the Reds, mainly funded from western sources. Long story, but true, were strong enough to attempt a violent overthrow of the Tsar. That fateful year also witnessed the bombing assassination of Tsar Nicholas’uncle, Grand Duke Sergey Alexandrovich, and the loss of a war with Japan. During that war, the Japanese received massive financial assistance from Wall street banker Jacob Schiff, as well as some financial diplomatic favoritism from Wall Street’s wholly owned Warmonger, President Theodore Roosevelt.

The historical image of a blue blooded teddy Roosevelt being the scourge of the Wall Street Robert barons is mythical, as is the image of the Teddy Roosevelt, the war hero. After the war, Japan expressed its gratitude to shift by awarding him the Order of the Sacred Treasure. In 1907, he was again honored with the japanese order of the Rising Sun. Shiff was personally awarded the order by Emperor Meji in the imperial palace.

Schiff’s support of the japanese military was not motivated by any special love for Japan, of course, what motivated Schiff was the ongoing mutual animosity between Tsarist Russians and the Jews of Russia, an animosity that was also shared by the House of Rothschild during the late 17 hundreds. Ancestors of the shifts and the Rothschilds had actually shared a double house in Frankfurt, Germany. Though the red uprising was fondly put down, russian prestige and position had been weakened both at home and abroad.

Many of the red terrorists who managed to get out of Russia obtained refugee status, obtained refuge in western Europe or America. Leon Trotsky and his gang actually settled in Brooklyn, where they plotted their future return. In 1911, Russia’s popular reformist prime minister, Peter Stolipin, was shot to death in the Kiev opera house in front of Tsar Nicholas and his daughters. And just as a refresher, I don’t generally read the big gray boxes and nor the stuff about the pictures, but if you guys want to pause the video to read them, you can.

In 1914, Russia, having been cleverly turned or cleverly lured into an alliance with new friends France and Britain, and seeking to settle old scores with the otoman Turks, joined what would soon turn into World War I. Unfortunately for Russia, Turkey was partly to alliance with Germany and Austriahungary, both in which had been russian allies until british Prime Minister Disraeli caused the divorce in 17 or in 1878. This therefore pitted Russia against Germany and Austriahungary in a mutually destructive war that was soon to bring down all three empires and otoman Turkey too.

Okay. Chapter two the Bolshevik Soviet Revolution as they had during the 1905 war with Japan, the communist revolutionaries used popular discontent over World War I and an economic crisis to foment another attempt at revolution. In 1917, the Bolshevik Reds comprised promised agitated mobs that would bring about a worker’s paradise, an earlier version of a hope and change. Red lettered Lenin returned to Russia in the sealed train, bringing with him sacks of gold given to him by the german banker Max Warburg, whose brother, Paul Warburg was the chief architect behind the 1913 funding of the Federal Reserve system.

That’s the central bank of the United States. Warburg and the german government knew that a revolution would undermine the russian government and ultimately knock Russia out of the war. But Warburg’s motives were less than patriotic financiers such as the Warburg brothers. The Rothschild clan. John D Rockefeller, JP Morgan and Jacob Schiff coveted control over Russia’s vast territory and resources. They saw the mighty empire as the chief obstacle to their ultimate vision of global economic integration, an ambitious idea which even back then was openly discussed within the elite circles of London, Paris and New York.

In February of 1917, Tsar Nicholas was forced to advocate. Russia became a democratic republic led by the socialist Alexander Karinsky. The tsar and his family were taken into custody with the expectation that they would eventually be exiled. Probably due to Rothschild’s influence, Britain, the tsar’s supposed ally, refused to grant asylum to the Romanov family. In October of that same year, the Bolsheviks staged a second revolution. Karinsky was overthrown and the Bolsheviks seized the city of St Petersburg.

Their dictatorial power grab would trigger a civil war. When the tsar and his family fell into bolshevik hands, efforts to exile the Romanovs ceased. The royal family was marched for death. As a boy, Tsar Nicholas had witnessed the bombing murder of his grandfather, Alexander II in 1881. The same fate now awaited him and his beautiful family. On the evening of July 1617, the Romanov family was awakened at 02:00 a.

m. Told to dress and then herded into the cellar of the house in which they were being held. Moments later, the bolshevik killers stormed in and gunned down the entire family, their doctor, three servants, or doctor and three servants. Some of the Romanov daughters had to be stabbed and clubbed to death after the initial gunfire had failed to kill them. News of the brutal murder of the Romanov sent shock through waves through Russia, all and all of Christian Europe.

For the next four years, a civil war between the Reds and the Whites raged through Russia. Again this backdrop, the communist international, known as the common turn, was established in Moscow. The common turn stated openly that its intention was to fight by all available means, including armed forces, for the overthrow of the international bourgeoisie or the entrepreneurial class, and for the creation of an international soviet republic. And just for reference here, the Reds were the communists and the whites were the Christians.

To win the civil war, the Reds used strategic terror to intimidate the white adversaries into submission. On orders from Lenin and Trotsky, the Red Terror was announced by Yakov Sferdlov the terror was marked by mass arrests in the middle of the night, executions, and hideously creative tactics of torture. As many as 100,000 Russians were brutally tortured and murdered during the Red Terror carried out by the Czecha or the secret police.

Lenin and Trotsky’s oppression of the russian people broke their strength and will to resist the Reds. The famine of 1921 was partly due to the folly of the central economic planning as well as to a deliberate effort to kill off any Russians still not willing to support the red takeover. The communist Bolsheviks had run the money printing presses to finance their civil war and welfare schemes. When inflation followed, they imposed price controls, causing farmers to lose money by farming.

The shortages were compounded by the Reds seizure of seeds and food. The horrific famine was then used to selectively feed those regions submissive to the Reds and to starve out those loyalists to the white factions. Hungry Russians and Ukrainians resorted to eating grass and even cannibalism. The horror escalated, with Lenin deliberately blocked foreign relief efforts. When the death toll reached eight to 10 million, Lenin finally relented. Were it not for the mostly american aid, the death toll for Lenin and Trotsky’s cruel falling might have doubled or tripled.

The demoralizing terror took a heavy psychological toll on the frightened people of the former Russian Empire. By 1922, many will have been broken into total submission to the red monsters of the dreaded Czecha. At the conclusion of the Red Terror, red famine and Red White civil war, Lenin and Trotsky formally established the Soviet Union. With its capital city in Moscow. The former Russian Empire was now also known as the USSR, or Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

The communist giant spanned the eurasian landmass of its multiethnic republics. The Russian Republic was by far the largest and most populated. The well known criminal brutality of the Soviets shocked the world, as did the bold communists’declarations to overthrow all other nations from within, including the United States. For these reasons, three consecutive american presidents, Harding, Calvin, Coolidge and Hoover, all refused to diplomatically recognize the Soviet Union. It was not until 1933 that President Franklin D.

Roosevelt, with strong support from the New York Times and Washington Post, granted recognition to the Soviet Union as Bolshevism fastened its death grip over Russia. The parallel movement known as globalism was gaining added momentum in the west during this time. The Royal Institute of International affairs, aka Chatham House, was founded in London and the Council on Foreign Relations, or CFR, was established in New York City with father of the Federal Reserve Paul Warburg serving as the CFR’s first director.

To this day, these influential think tanks work toward global economic and political integration. To that end, these same players set up the League of Nations. So the forerunner of the United nations, soon after the end of World War I. Side note here, the Chathamaus or RIAA and CFR still to this day are very prominent in Washington DC. Many of you guys are probably aware of when Joe Biden said, oh, well, yeah, well, I went over to Suds and sudden told the guy that he wasn’t going to get the money and that if he didn’t fire the prosecutor, he wasn’t going to get the billion dollars.

And the guy said, well, you don’t have that authority. And he says, well, call the president, call him, see what he says. He said, you’re not getting the money if you don’t get it, if you don’t fire over the guy, I’m out of here in an hour. And if you don’t fire the guy, you’re not getting it. And he said, well, son of a bitch, the guy got fired.

So that was done at the council on Foreign Relations, which he is a member of. And then I think there’s also a famous clip of Hillary Clinton saying that she was very happy that the Council on Foreign Relations opened a satellite office in Washington DC. So she didn’t have to go as far, meaning she didn’t have to go from DC to New York to get her orders. Because basically the Council on Foreign Relations is, they’re the people who mostly run the Department of State.

And it doesn’t really matter what the policy of the president is. The policy of the Department of State, which is probably the most powerful entity in the government in terms of foreign policy and whatnot. It’s all done through the Council on Foreign Relations, and then the Royal Institute of International affairs is the british version. Anyway, I digress. Chatham House rules of secrecy govern the members of both of these exclusive clubs.

Membership is by invitation only. Members may discuss generalities of group meetings, but are expected to remain discreet concerning who attends these meetings and what is said. Up until the present day, the membership roster of the CFR and Chatham has been consisted of top names from politics, media, banking, business and academia. Membership has included finance capitalists, communists, neoconservatives, ambitious careers, and starry eyed academic types. The chosen few recruited by the globalist groups often find themselves on the fast track to greater fame and fortune.

Prior to the actual establishment of the CFR, these globalists had worked to destroy the tsar. Today their successors seek to destroy Putin. Chapter three the rise of Stalin after Lenin’s death in 1924, Joseph Stalin, secretly or secretary of the Communist Party central committee, skilfully outmaneuvered Red army leader Lev Trotsky to take leadership of the USSR. Stalin later expelled Trotsky from the party and then from the USSR itself.

Finally, he had his marxist rival axed through his brain by a soviet agent in Mexico. That’s true, he did. He was. Stalin was paranoid and he wanted Trotsky killed. He did not trust that he was going to stay away. And ultimately, he did what he had to have him executed so that he would never have to deal with him again anyway. The Stalin Trotsky rivalry was more than just about power.

The two Reds held conflicting and irreconcilable visions. For Trotsky, world revolution was the primary and immediate goal. Stalin, on the other hand, put forth a theory known as socialism in one country. This policy held that given the defeat of all communist revolutionaries in Europe in 1970 to 1921, except Russia, the Soviet Union should strengthen itself internally. This was a shift from the previously held marxist position that socialism must be established globally and was in opposition to Trotsky’s theory of permanent revolution.

Socialism in one country maintained that socialism can exist within a single country, socialism can exist within a single country, despite a capitalist global market. In short, Trotsky was a globalist communist, whereas Stalin was a nationalist communist. Stalin did indeed continue to support communists throughout the world. But his vision of a future world government, if there was ever going to be one, was one in which Moscow reigned supreme, not the big bankers of London and New York.

Stalin’s brutality instilled fear not only in the enslaved people of the Soviet Union, but also in the hearts of fellow communists that the paranoid Stalin believed could challenge his leadership. The egomaniac renamed the city after himself, Stalingrad, and he erected statues of himself in small squares, small town squares. From time to time, Stalin purged many of his own communist comrades, as well as wives. He dumped his first wife and drove his second, as well as one of his sons, to suicide.

In years to come, Stalin’s chilling crimes against humanity will make Lenin’s red terror and red famine seem like minor infractions by comparison. As part of Stalin’s first five year plan, the small farmers of the Soviet Union were forced into a collectivization scheme. The soviet government controlled production and prices. Land, livestock and equipment became state property. Reluctant farmers, or kulaks, were smeared in the soviet press as greedy capitalists.

Those who continued to resist the state’s directive were murdered or imprisoned in Stalin’s infamous gulags though thousands of private farmers were killed. But the reality massive death tolls occurring during the early 1930s. Like all centrally planned economic schemes, in which experts think they know better than the actual farmer, Stalin’s collectivization schemes yielded a low living senator for the soviet people. Recall our earlier discussion of the 340 foot tall Catherine, or cathedral of Christ the Savior church in Moscow.

Commissioned by Alexander I, it had taken more than 40 years to build and decorate its marble, granite and gold plated interior. In 1931, the Antichristian Soviets chose the location of the cathedral to be the site of the monument to Lenin and communism, known as the palace of the Soviets. On December 531, by order of Stalin’s minister and brother in law, Lazar Kaganovich, the cathedral was dynamited and reduced to rubble.

Russian Christians grieved in silence over the cruel destruction of their religious and cultural icon. Ironically, due to poor planning and lack of funds, the palace of the Soviets never materialized. The site was turned into a huge swimming pool. Instead, we will once again return to this site of Christ the sabreal cathedral later on in the narrative suicide or did he kill them? Yarn. Are you asking about Stalin’s wife and son? Because if that’s what you’re asking his first ones, that they actually did commit suicide.

Let’s see. In 1932, the same Lazar Kaganovich, or the Wolf of the Kremlin, initiated a deliberate famine targeting farmers of the Ukrainian Republic of the Soviet Union. Or the Holodemor. Translation? Killing by hunger was caused partially by the folly of Stalin’s latest communist scheme and partially due to a deliberate strategic terror plan engineered by Kaganovich. Encyclopedia Britannica estimates that seven to 8 million people, 5 million of them ukrainian, were starved to death by Stalin’s famine.

Some estimates run as high as 10 million. The famine genocide was aimed at starving anticommunist peasants in Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan and the Russia itself. Unlike Lenin and the Trotsky terror famine of 1921, this time around there would be no outside assistance permitted into the Soviet Union. Millions died a slow death as people resorted to cannibalism. With this famine, Stalin and his henchmen destroyed any last remaining resistance to the red revolution.

Despite soviet denials of the famine and new blackouts and a news blackout in most of the western press, the truth of the Holodem War was indeed known to America’s financial, academic, journalist and political elite. Due to their sympathies toward the misguided ideal of Marxism globalism, major american press outlets such as the New York Times, RCA, NBC radio, and CBS Radio turned a blind eye to Stalin’s brutality. Rather than condemn Stalin, much of the western intelligentsia longed for the opportunity to partner up with the Soviet Union and build a more integrated new world together.

Alexander Solzhenitsen, the revered literary giant and survivor of Stalin’s gulags, shed some much needed light on the west’s complicit silence towards bolshevik atrocities. You must understand, the leading Bolsheviks who took over Russia were not Russians. They hated Russians. They hated christians. Driven by ethnic hatred, they tortured and slaughtered millions of Russians without a shred of human remorse. More of my countrymen suffered horrific crimes at their bloodstained hands than any people or nation ever suffered in the entirety of human history.

It cannot be overstated. Bolshevism committed the greatest human slaughter of all time. The fact that most of the world is ignorant and uncaring about this enormous crime is proof that the global media is in the hands of its perpetrators. Digressing a moment from Stalin, it is critical that we again reinforce the fact that this movement to create an economically and politically integrated world is not so much a conspiracy theory as it is an open secret.

Indeed, in 1928, famed british writer H. G. Wells authored a book on the subject called the Open Conspiracy, blueprints for a world revolution. The well connected author of the War of the World time machine and the invisible man then followed up on his theme in 1939 with another nonfiction creature treatise entitled the New World Order. Unlike most globalists, Wells, a member of Britain’s elite Fabian society, spoke openly about his utopian dream.

Wells revealed, the new and complete revolution we contemplate can be defined in a very few words. It is outright world socialism, scientifically planned and directed, Wells continues. The term internationalism has been popularized in recent years to cover an interlocking financial, political, and economic world force for the purpose of establishing a world government. Great. Countless similar quotes from some of the biggest political, financial, artistic, literary, and scientific luminaries of the 20th century would be enough to fill an entire volume.

There is simply no denying the existence of this self perpetuating drive towards centralization of global economic and political power. Yes, creed, they have been planning this for a very long time. This is not new. We are kind of told that it’s new, or they just don’t really tell us much, and we have to figure this stuff out on our own. People like me, we’ve been studying a lot of this stuff for a long time and saying that’s been going on, and we’ve been lembasted as conspiracy theorists and crazy and, oh, that’s too fanciful.

That’s never going to happen here. This is the United States. It’s not going to happen here. It can happen here. And we’ve just been called crazy forever. And that’s by design. The whole notion of calling people crazy is purposeful to keep people kind of fenced in within the confines of a belief system, using society to keep us in line, because people don’t want to be called crazy, and people don’t want to be called.

They don’t want to be called crazy. They don’t want to be shunned by society. And most people are so fearful of being shunned by society that they will go back and adopt thoughts that they don’t may necessarily agree with, but because society believes it, they will conform to it. Because they don’t want to be ostracized. They don’t have the backbone or the courage to stand up for what’s right, for the conviction of what they know they’ve read or understand.

And there’s a word for that, it’s called peer pressure. But I digress. This is certainly not to suggest that every starry eyed idealist promoting this vision is an evil, conspiratorial bloodsucker, though some indeed are. The vision of a peaceful world where diverse nations come together to facilitate travel, commerce and ideas among themselves is a noble ideal, one that Putin himself shares, by the way. The problem with the new world order that has been advancing over the past century is that it works toward an intense global centralization of financial, political, cultural, and military power that will ultimately reduce all peoples into a proletarian mass of rootless, cultural alienated worker be taxed and debt slaves.

New York City writ large. Pauses here and just kind of just looked for the chat. Yeah, thank you, frosty hue and spartan. Yeah, exactly. CPA. Me, too. And I’ve been doing this for 20 years. And you’re in good company, Creed, if you’re a crazy cat lady, because I’m the crazy cat man. I’ve been the black sheep in my life for 50 years. That’s awesome. That’s awesome, spartan. Awesome.

Me, too. I red pilled probably in 2003, roughly when I realized that I had some red pilledness about me. I didn’t trust the JFK assassination, and there was a few things that I didn’t trust, but I don’t think it really took a life of its own when I realized that 911 was bullshit. And Creed, just FYI, I breed Bengals, so that’ll give you an idea of the crazy cat guy I am.

Let’s see. Oh, here we go. So the new world order isn’t going to be a bunch of diverse young people standing in an open field happily singing, I’d like to buy the world a coke. That may be the romantic delusion of many good people, but it is indeed a delusion, and a dangerous one at that. Wells new world order is about super centralized power, plain and simple. Keep this globalist theme in your memory bank because it will come back to play into play when future events, and ultimately Mr.

Putin himself, are reintroduced later on in the narrative. So. All right. And there we’re in chapter four to World War II. So I’m gonna actually, I’ve been going now for about an hour, guys, and I’m gonna probably kind of cut it short today just because my eyes are giving me a little bit of trouble today. They actually sent me glasses. I went to the VA and got glasses.

And they do actually. That’s not too bad, but I need to get used to them. It’s probably going to cause me a little bit of a headache, but, yeah, I’m having a little bit difficult time reading today, so I’m probably going to cut it short, and I’m just going to cut it short for tonight. So I’ve got an hour in, but I want to thank everybody for joining me tonight.

Welcome to the club. Are you talking about me? If you got 50 years on me, then, yeah, I’m joining your club. But, yeah, it’s funny to me when a lot of people complain about how bad things are and, oh, man, we got to struggle through this. It just keeps going on and on and on. It’s like, oh, I’ve had glasses. I’ve been wearing glasses since I was in fourth grade, but reading glasses is a new one, mostly because of my eye surgery.

Yeah, I’m 54. I’ve had glasses since. I think it was like, what’s fourth grade? Like ten years old. But, yeah, it’s nuts being awake as long as I have. It’s just funny to hear people complain about how long this is going on. We’ve been dealing with this slow, painful process for years. We just haven’t experienced it as much in the United States. 911 is really the catalyzing event, in my opinion, where they hit the gas.

After 911, it took a little bit of time to get everything up and running, but they hit the gas with the Obama administration, and then all of the tools that they used on the Americans were tested in Iraq and Afghanistan, mostly Iraq. And then they were brought over into the United States and turned on to the american people by virtue of the Obama administration. And we just sucked it up and took it because Obama was black.

And if we dared to criticize his policy, then we were labeled as racist. Most of what they were doing in terms of weaponizing the DOJ and all of the intelligence agencies against the american people, that was all done at the same time that we were fighting over Obamacare while everybody was arguing over health care and health insurance, whatnot. During that time is when they really implemented a lot of the changes because people were so focused on Obamacare.

So that was really bad. But it’s not that. Mike Harris said it very well. JFK said it well as well. Our problems are man made and therefore they can be solved by man. Yeah, we are going to kick their ass. I think we have been kicking their ass. And fYi, crit, I generally go live about 04:00 every day. I’m, I’m probably going to go since he’s, since Doug is not going to be here tomorrow, we do the constitution class every Wednesday or every Tuesday at 04:00 p.

m. . Pacific. Since he’s not going to be here tomorrow, probably what I’ll do is I’ll go through another hour or so of this tomorrow and then we’ll have Mike on the show following. So I’ll probably be back tomorrow same time and we’ll get a little bit more of this under our belt. And then I’m going to pause or I’m going to stop this and then do the other stream with Mike.

Anyway, I want to thank everybody for joining me tonight. And sorry it’s just a short hour, but again, my eyesight’s not really doing very well. Some days are better than others. Today is just not a very good day. So if I’m reading it, I want to read it right. And I’m making too many mistakes tonight. So that said, I’m going to cut it off. Again, thank everybody for joining me tonight and I look forward to seeing you, you tomorrow.

Have a great night, everybody. .

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