Page 16 - Jim Marrs - The Rise of the Fourth Reich: The Secret Societies That Threaten to Take Over Americ
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10      THE  RISE  OF  THE  FOURTH  REICH



            funds, had instigated a successful revolt and seized the Rus sian govern-
            ment for the Bolsheviks.
              But the communist grip on Rus sia was not secure. Internal strife be-
            tween the “reds” and the “whites” lasted until 1922 and cost some 28 mil-
            lion Rus sian lives, many times the war loss. Lenin died in 1924 from a
            series of strokes after establishing the Third International, or Comintern,
            an organi zation formed to export communism worldwide. Trotsky fl ed
            Rus sia when Joseph Stalin took dictatorial control, and, in 1940, was
            murdered in Mexico by an agent of Stalin’s.
              Some conspiracy authors have seen a dual purpose to the funding of
            the Bolsheviks. It is clear that revolutionaries like Lenin and Trotsky  were
            being used to get Rus sia out of the war, to the benefit of Germany. And
            communism was being supported by the globalists to advance their plan
            of creating tension between the capitalist West and socialist East.
              A. K. Chesterson, a  right-wing British journalist and politician, who in
            1933 joined Oswald Moseley’s British  Union of Fascists, observed that to
            understand politics, one must make a study of power elites. “Th ese elites,
            preferring to work in private, are rarely found posed for photographers,
            and their influence on events has therefore to be deduced from what is
            known of the agencies they employ.” He once wrote in his magazine, Can-

            dour, “At times capitalism and communism would appear to be in con-
            flict, but this writer is confident that their interests are in common and
            will eventually merge for  one-world control.”
              Because of the warring factions in post-revolution Rus sia, sending an of-
            ficial delegation to Rus sia was problematic. Therefore, American fi nanciers
            came in the form of the American Red Cross Mission. One head of this
            group was Raymond Robins, described as “the intermediary between the
            Bolsheviks and the American government” and “the only man whom Lenin
            was always willing to see and who even succeeded in imposing his own per-
            sonality on the unemotional Bolshevik leader.” Lenin apparently came to
            understand that he was being manipulated. “The state does not function as
            we desired,” he once wrote. “A man is at the wheel and seems to lead it, but
            the car does not drive in the desired direction. It moves as another force
            wishes.” This other “force” was the globalists behind the birth of commu-
            nism itself, “monopoly finance capitalists,” as Lenin described them.
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