Page 295 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
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Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1

                  Midgard-earth’s economic system in the Middle Ages.

                  B – Communal society;

                  C – Slave-owning society;

                  D – Feudal society.
                  Red rectangle in the middle – “the Jews”.

                  1 – Active niches;

                  2 – Social niches;

                  3 – Passive niches;
                  4 – Parasitic niches.

                  The planetary parasitic social organism gradually grew: it became bigger and
            stronger with the capture of parasitic economic niches of each next country. A people
            or nation had enough healthy forces to prevent their own social parasites getting a
            dominant position in the country; however, there was no state which would individu-
            ally be able to resist the united power of the planetary parasitic social organism creat-
            ed by the Israelites. Although one or another state leader periodically carried out ac-
            tions  to  restrict  Judaic  parasitism  in  his  country,  it  did  not  seriously  influence  the
            whole parasitic organism.

                  There always were neighbours which owed tremendous sums of money to the
            Israelites, who always found the way to make them to protect the “poor” wanderers.
            Certainly, it was not an official reason for many wars, but it was the real reason. The
            Israelites could not permit somebody to wake up from delusion and help others to see
            the light for they would loose the opportunity to achieve world domination which
            was the reason for their dispersion. Very often the rulers who began to understand
            the true essence of events unexpectedly died of an “unknown” illness or at the hand
            of a hired assassin, or were dethroned by someone from their circle who had a lot of
            ambition, but little right and large secret debts to the Israelites and got their sponsor-
            ship.

                  The Israelites have never requited with good the good which other people did
            for  them.  They  always  betrayed  those  who  gave  them  shelter  and,  using  various
            methods, they took away their possessions and often life. The fact that there was not a
            single nation amongst which the Israelites lived, which sooner or later, understanding
            their parasitic nature, would not drive the Israelites away, speaks for itself. The rea-
            son for this was the Israelites themselves. The proof of this statement is quite simple:
            every people accepted them with open-heart, granting asylum to the “poor” wander-
            ers who were  “forced” to  abandon their Motherland. Only when the  Israelites had
            showed their true nature, were they asked to leave the country, as was done by Byz-
                                                                        th
            antine  emperor  Heraclius  II  in  the  middle  of  the  7   century  and  by  English  king
            Richard I “the Lionheart”:

                  «The King, impelled more by love of military glory than by superstition, acted
            from the beginning of his reign, as if the sole purpose of his government had been the
            relief of the Holy Land, and the recovery of Jerusalem from the Saracens. This zeal

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