Page 216 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
P. 216

Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1

            of them survived. The principal reason for such a high survival rate of derelicts was
            the fact that in most cases they were not banished empty-handed, but with some sup-
            ply of meal and, which is most important, with hunting equipment, in other words
            they were armed. Not strangers, but sons and daughters, were banished (mainly sons,
            certainly) which, nevertheless, continued to be loved and spared.

                  No  one  could  lift  his  hand  and  take  their  lives.  Everyone  remembered  their
            child's laughter and pure eyes, and subconsciously did not want to believe that what
            had happened with their beloved child was irreversible. Unfortunately, in most cases,
            these changes were irreversible. And this pity (although, totally understandable from
            the human point of view) appeared to be a mortally dangerous error for human civili-
            zation. Although this error “bore fruit” much later, numerous “grains” were “sown”
            into the “fertile soil” of social parasitism, which, being weak sprouts in the begin-
            ning, gradually grew into the “cancer tumour” of Midgard-earth’s civilization in the
            end. But how could this happen? Why did no one do anything? Let us try to under-
            stand it...


                  2.19. Outcasts of the white race create the first parasitic systems

                  As I already mentioned before, the majority of spongers, killers and rapists ban-
            ished from clans and communities of the white race did not die in “nature’s lap”, but
            having iron and later steel weapons could successfully hunt which they did because
            of necessity, not because they were willing to work. They united in bands under the
            powerful leadership of a fugleman who established strict discipline and controlled his
            accomplices using cruelty and fear. Initially small bands attacked small settlements,
            robbing and killing their inhabitants. Gradually they were united under the leadership
            of the “coolest” leader, often after bloody battles, and began to do very serious harm
            to  people  who  were  their  relatives  and,  until  recently,  fellow  tribesmen.  All  clans
            united to repel the attacks of these large bands and, in most cases, outcasts had no
            other option but to abandon their native lands.

                  Very often the bands of outcasts of the white race came to unknown lands about
            which they had never heard before. Frequently new places were already occupied by
            other tribes which often consisted of people of other races. The bands of outcasts had
            an indisputable advantage over the aborigines — they had “cast-iron” discipline and
            good organization; also more sophisticated weapons made of iron and steel which the
            people of the black, yellow or red races who inhabited these new places did not have.
            All this put the outcasts of the white race on an incomparably higher level and very
            often resulted in the pitiless destruction of those who were able to use weapons and
            could resist, and then the subsequent conversion of all the rest into slaves. Pretty of-
            ten the inhabitants of new places had enough warriors to destroy these bands. It could
            happen when the outcasts of the white race were exhausted and weakened by the long
            journey along impassable roads in unknown places without enough food and water,
            but also pretty often well-armed bands of outcasts, built on the principles of strict dis-
            cipline, defeated the natives and after their victory became slave-holders and the new
            nobility for them. They retained power by force and cruelty which they applied to the
            rebels and, thus, created a new military “elite”.


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