wonder who his handler is...
>Besides the weapons and ammo, investigators found $509,000 in cash (believed to be Treisman's inheritance, there were also survival, bomb-making, weapon, and Islam books, along with drawings of swastikas and planes crashing into buildings.
>Before his arrest, Treisman was facing child pornography charges. At the moment, he only faces child pornography charges, but a federal magistrate judge outlined he should remain in custody because of his plans to carry out possible acts of terrorism.
Sounds like the average bolshtard...
so is it safe to say that actual bolshevism is alive and well, here in 2020. I havent really thought much about it, seeing how i am firmly biased and not willing to change my mind..
"The last german kaiser literally sent lenin with a trainload of cash in russia to overthrow his adversary. And then some..."
That's a comment I've read on ZH recently, I haven't verified the info myself (going to do just that right now)
>The top Communist leaders have never been as hostile to their counterparts in the West, as the rhetoric suggests. They are quite friendly to the world's leading financiers and have worked closely with them, when it suits their purposes. As we shall see in the following section, the Bolshevik revolution actually was financed by wealthy financiers in London and New York. Lenin and Trotsky were on the closest of terms with these moneyed interests both before and after the Revolution. Those hidden liaisons have continued to this day and occasionally pop to the surface, when we discover a David Rockefeller holding confidential meetings with a Mikhail Gorbachev in the absence of government sponsorship or diplomatic purpose.
The Creature from Jekyll Island, Page 123
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https://www.dw.com/en/how-germany-got-the-russian-revolution-off-the-ground/a-41195312
>The Russian Revolution has gone down in history as the victory of the workers and peasants over the czarist rulers. Few people realize the German kaiser was also involved: He gave aid to the Bolsheviks in 1917.
>Zurich, April 9, 1917: 32 Russian emigrants are at the train station, waiting to depart. But they're not the only ones there. Shouts of "traitors, scoundrels, pigs" ring out at the travelers. Supporters of the group are also there, singing "The Internationale." The tracks are blocked for a short while, then train moves off.
>The German chartered train was provided by Kaiser Wilhelm II with the aim of furthering the Russian Revolution. In one of the wagons sat none other than Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known as Lenin. With German help, Lenin left his exile in Switzerland and, a week later, reached his destination: Petrograd, which would later be renamed to Leningrad then changed back to today's Saint Petersburg.
...
So it seems there's indeed a story about a train and a kaiser and lenin....
>"He is working according to our wishes," German military leadership said of Lenin
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>The Russian communist, with his journalistic background in Germany and business success in Constantinople, wrote the script of a revolution for the Foreign Office. It was a roadmap for what actually happened just a few months later. Over 23 typed pages, Gelfand detailed how a foreign-backed coup could be successful. For him, it was a question of money, sabotage, and toppling the government. One month later the German imperial treasury approved 2 million marks "to support revolutionary propaganda in Russia."
Hmmmmmm....
Close enough for me
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They say, "History doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes"
I believe this is true
(post is archived)