Page 312 - Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors, Vol. 1
P. 312
Nicolai Levashov. Russian History Viewed through Distorted Mirrors. Vol. 1
ment presupposed the possibility of war and created enormous reserves, including
that of food. Therefore, if everything was as it should have been, no revolution would
have ever happened. This time the Israelites did not have such luck with the weather
th
conditions, as happened in Persia in the 5 century A.D. during the Vizier Mazdak’s
revolt, behind which was the Judaic Diaspora of Persia.
Then they used natural calamities which brought hunger to the population and
set the distraught people against the Persian aristocracy, skillfully creating hysteria
related to the famine and inciting poor people to violence, declaring the aristocrats to
be the culprits in this. They put forward slogans saying that all people were brothers
and equal, that wealth was evil and should be taken away from the rich and divided
among the poor equally.
The fact that this required the murder of thousands of people, including women
and children, was not taken into account, because the “higher” aim “justified” any
sacrifice (which for “some” reason does not concern the Israelites: however, if some-
one for one or another reason kills the Israelites, they immediately begin to yell about
genocide). The result of these machinations was described before. During the Judaic
revolution in Persia, the Israelites worked out methods of manipulating the masses.
They figured out that it was much easier to manipulate people and to make them act
in the “necessary” way only when people were suffering natural disasters, wars or so-
cial instability and were forced to fight for survival; when instincts began to prevail
and control their conduct. Exactly in such situations the masses are the most vulnera-
ble and easily controlled. Exactly then it is possible to apply a psi-weapon effectively
on them.
The Israelites succeeded in unleashing the war and involving the Russian Em-
pire in it, but unexpected successes at the south-western front in the spring-summer
of 1916 spoiled the whole game. Before the Brusilov Offensive and events related to
it, the “Russian” liberal press (which, in fact, was Judaic) threw mud at the tsar's gov-
ernment, blaming all sins on it, citing temporal failures at the fronts at the beginning
of World War I; their dirty propaganda did not work after it. They then decided to ac-
tivate the Judaic revolution earlier than planned. The years of World War I were quite
good for crops; there were no natural cataclysms which the Israelites could and would
have used for their ends, but this did not stop them. They controlled the majority of
the Russian Empire’s railways, as well as the dispersal of cargoes and, as I mentioned
before, most supplies for the front and the civilian population. The inhabitants of big
cities, like Saint Petersburg and Moscow, depended especially on their supplies.
Then the Israelites decided to create the necessary situation artificially. If nature
did not want to “help” them, they decided to help themselves. The autumn was over
and the beginning of winter approached. The first victim was the urban population of
Saint Petersburg, which especially depended on external supplies being delivered
there by railway, as the surrounding countryside was unable to produce enough food
to feed all the inhabitants. As the delivery of food was controlled by the Israelites,
they decided to get what they wanted using a very simple method: the Israelite-
owners gave the order to stop the food containers which went to the capitals (Saint
Petersburg and Moscow) and other large cities of the Empire... and the problem was
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