In the end, the jews gained many things from the French Revolution. They eliminated an enemy: King Louis. They used the execution of King Louis as an example to the kings of other nations to make them much easier to control (which will be seen shortly). The jews also used it to gain power and seize control over large areas France through emancipation, and they contributed to a great Aryan genocide by eliminating vast elements of Nordic blood from the French population. Up to this point, the French Revolution appeared to have lost its way. What had begun as a promise of freedom and equality to all men, and ended up being nothing more than radical jewish terrorism, destruction of hte economy followed by abject poverty, and seemingly never-ending bloodshed of white Aryans.
But all was not lost. From out of the depravity of the revolution, arose a young soldier, Napoleon Bonaparte, who was sincerely faithful to the spirit of the French revolution. He believed that in order to save the republic, he had to take control of it and rule it like a king. On December 13 1799, he did just that, and a new constitution was proclaimed with Bonaparte as the first of three Consuls. Paul Johnson writes: “The new First Consul was far more powerful than Louis XIV, since he dominated the armed forces directly in a country that was now organized as a military state."
Napoleon’s own personal goal for Europe was to create a single European state which he called the “federation of free peoples.” He used the United States of America as his role model in this regard.
In all the lands he occupied, the Napoleonic Code was established as law. Feudalism and serfdom were abolished. Each state had a constitution with universal male suffrage and a parliament containing a bill of rights. French-style administrative and judicial systems were required. Schools were put under centralized administration, and free public schools were envisioned. Higher education was opened to all who qualified, regardless of class or religion. Every state had an academy or institute for the promotion of the arts and sciences. Incomes were provided for eminent scholars, especially scientists.
Napoleon then established the founding principle of nationalism, and that serving and dying for the Nation was the supreme glory. Napoleon asserted. ‘There must be a superior power which dominates all the other powers, with enough authority to force them to live in harmony with one another – and France is the best placed for that purpose. We must have a European legal system, a European appeal court, a common currency, the same weights and measures and the same laws. I must make of all the peoples of Europe one people, and of Paris the capital of the world.’
Initially, Napoleon proclaimed freedom for all men, and this included the jews. On May 22, 1799, the Paris Moniteur published the following report from Constantinople: “Buonaparte has published a proclamation in which he invites all the Jews of Asia and Africa to come and place themselves under his flag in order to re-establish ancient Jerusalem.”
As a result, assassination attempts on Napoleon came to a sudden end as the jews now decided Napoleon's rule could continue unopposed. And just like that, the French stopped killing their brethren, and peace once again took hold in France.
It should be noted that this was not the first time that the Jews had persuaded a Gentile ruler to restore them to Jerusalem. The Roman Emperor Julian the Apostate had allowed the Jews to return to Jerusalem and start rebuilding the Temple, but they were forced to abandon the enterprise.
And just as the jews failed to rebuild their temple under Julian, they likewise failed under Napoleon. It was the British sea-power which prevented Napoleon from reaching Jerusalem and making himself, as was reported to be his intention, king of the Jews. The Jews would have to wait over a century before another Gentile power – this time, ironically, the British – again offered them a return to Zion.
Worse still for the jews, not only had they failed to use Napoleon to rebuild Jerusalem, but Napoleon would prove to be no jewish patsy. After spending time with the jews, Napoleon learned what many rulers before and after had learned: that kindness towards the Jews does not make them more tractable. Nechvolodov writes: “Since the first years of the Empire, Napoleon had become very worried about the Jewish monopoly in France and the isolation in which they lived in the midst of the other citizens, even though they had received citizenship. The reports of the departments showed the activity of the Jews in a very bad light: ‘Everywhere there are false declarations to the civil authorities; jewish fathers declare the sons who are born to them to be daughters to avoid the laws of conscription… Again, there are Jews who have given an example of disobedience to the laws of conscription; out of sixty-nine Jews who, in the course of six years, should have formed part of the Moselle contingent, none has entered the army.’
Historian Thiers describes the entry of the French into Rome in his History of the Revolution, "Some Jews in the rear of the army bought for a paltry price the magnificent objects which the looters were offering them."
It was in 1805, during Napoleon’s passage through Strasbourg, after the victory of Austerlitz, that the complaints against the Jews assumed great proportions. The principal accusations brought against them concerned the terrible use they made of usury. As soon as he returned to Paris, Napoleon judged it necessary to concentrate all his attention on the Jews. In the State Council, during its session of April 30, he said, among other things, the following on this subject:
“The French government cannot look on with indifference as a vile, degraded nation capable of every iniquity takes exclusive possession of two beautiful departments of Alsace; one must consider the Jews as a nation and not as a sect. It is a nation within a nation; I would deprive them, at least for a certain time, of the right to take out mortgages, for it is too humiliating for the French nation to find itself at the mercy of the vilest nation. Some entire villages have been expropriated by the Jews; they have replaced feudalism… It would be dangerous to let the keys of France, Strasbourg and Alsace, fall into the hands of a population of spies who are not at all attached to the country.’
It was not long after this that Weishaupt's Illuminati began to again cause mayhem in France. However, just as Napoleon was no man's patsy, neither was he any man's push over. Bonaparte worked quickly and eliminated Weishaupt's Illuminati threat (aka: jewish threat) by eliminating the Jacobins. He also went on to destroy the jewish-influenced media which was running rampant in France. Bonaparte shutdown a majority of the newspapers, and uncovered several terrorist plots against him. He had the plotters and many of their associates guillotined. Hundreds of heads rolled, and these actions caused the jew to fear.
This fear caused them to unite the entire world against France in their attempt to remove Napoleon. The lesson of King Louis was then applied to the royalty of all nations, and this united them against Napoleon.
In the War of the First Coalition, France fought against an alliance consisting of Austria, Prussia, Great Britain, Spain, the Netherlands, and the kingdom of Sardinia. After defeating them, a second coalition, consisting of Russia, Great Britain, Austria, the kingdom of Naples, Portugal, and the Ottoman Empire was formed to fight France. After defeating them, a new war flared up over the sovereignty of the island of Malta, and Britain joined with Austria, Russia, and Sweden in an anti-French alliance called the Third Coalition. After defeating them, Prussia, aroused by Napoleon’s growing strength in Germany, joined in a Fourth Coalition with Great Britain, Russia, and Sweden. After defeating them, Napoleon was master of all Europe except Russia and Great Britain.
A war between the French and the Spanish followed, known as the Peninsular War. After winning that war, the British, safe from Napoleon’s armies because of their mastery of the sea, organized another alliance against France, known as the Fifth Coalition. This consisted of Britain, Russia, Prussia, and Sweden. Then war again broke out between France and Russia.
By the end of the Napoleonic Wars, France had lost approximately one million men, severely depleting its population. Only 10,000 out of the 422,000 French soldiers who started the campaign against Russia survived to see the end of it. The losses sustained during the Russian campaign broke French military power, and within two years France was invaded and Napoleon deposed.
While the victors of the Fifth Coalition assembled at the Congress of Vienna to restore the monarchies which had been overthrown, Napoleon escaped from Elba and landed in France. There, despite the defeats he had suffered and the staggering population losses caused by his wars, he was welcomed back. Through the sheer power of his personality he raised yet another French army and marched into Belgium to do battle with the stunned British, Prussians, Russians, and Austrians. Initially, Napoleon defeated the combined allied armies at the Battle of Ligny, but he was then defeated twice in succession, first at the Battle of Quatre-Bras, and then at the famous Battle of Waterloo. Captured, Napoleon was exiled to the island of St. Helena in the South Atlantic where he died in 1821, possibly, according to some sources, as a result of (((poisoning))).
Thank you very much, this is exactly the sort of thing I was curious about.
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