Page 254 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
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Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1

                  A – Primitive-communal society;

                  B – Communal society;

                  C – Slave-owning society.

                  Periodically parasitic elements of one or another empire or state could take pow-
            er and control, but in most cases their domination did not last long. The healthy social
            organism of people and tribes was able to get rid of the control of parasitic elements
            pretty quickly, destroying or banishing them from its lands. This social equilibrium
            lasted for a pretty long time until... the dispersion of the Israelites began.
                  After they left Ancient Egypt, they began to fulfill the plan imposed by Dark
            Forces to capture and control Midgard-earth. The first phase of this plan was that of
            capital  accumulation.  They  abandoned  Ancient  Egypt  with  quite  a  “tight-filled
            purse”.  However,  even  three  hundred  tons  of  gold,  silver  and  bronze  jewelry
            which they took from the Country of Artificial Mountains was only the initial capital.
            After they left Egypt and roamed around the lands of the Arabian Peninsula, the Isra-
            elites settled on either the free or poorly protected semi-deserted lands of the Middle
            East. In those times the Arabian Peninsula was mainly desert with pretty scarce oases
            near rivers and lakes, or places where underground waters came to the surface. In an-
            cient times every oasis, be it large or small, was densely populated.

                  That is why the forty-year wandering of the Israelites about the Sinai desert
            was not caused by the necessity to be rid of the “slave” spirit — a “legacy” of the
            four hundred-year “slavery” of the Israelites, which had never been; there was a more
            prosaic reason: all more or less worthy oases were occupied by other tribes which
            were not going to leave them voluntarily. Therefore, initially the Israelites settled on
            the semi-deserted  “promised land”, i.e. the land that God had promised them for one
            simple reason — nobody hankered after it then and nomadic tribes did not “sit” on it
            constantly, which besides, were not numerous and could be easily defeated, if neces-
            sary.

                  As for the lands promised to the Israelites by their God Jehovah and how they
            got them, one can easily find enough references in the Old Testament:

                  1. Now Jericho was straitly shut up because of the children of Israel: none went
            out and none came in.

                  2. And the LORD said unto Joshua, See, I have given into thine hand Jericho,
            and the king thereof, and the mighty men of valour.
                  3. And ye shall compass the city, all ye men of war, and go round about the city
            once. Thus shalt thou do six days.

                  4. And seven priests shall bear before the ark seven trumpets of rams' horns:
            and the seventh day ye shall compass the city seven times, and the priests shall blow
            the trumpets.

                  5. And it shall come to pass, that when they make a long blast with the ram's
            horn, and when ye hear the sound of the trumpet, all the people shall shout with a
            great shout; and the wall of the city shall fall down flat, and the people shall ascend


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