American Minute with Bill Federer
Rasputin "The Holy Devil," Bolshevik Revolution, & Socialist Russia
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Rasputin,
described as
"The Holy Devil,"
moved to St. Petersburg in 1906 and began to gain access to the royal family of
Tsar Nicholas II.
Posing as a mystic,
Rasputin
was known for strange prophecies, claims of superstitious healing powers, and sexual excesses.
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As the
Tsar
and his family came under
Rasputin's
spell, the monarch's credibility suffered, his authority was undermined, and public distrust spread.
At this time,
Tsar Nicholas
escalated his father's policy of restricting Jews and implementing a full anti-Jewish "pogrom" of cruel persecution.
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More then
2 million Jews fled,
many to the United States.
It was a tragedy, which, in a way, spared them from future Russian tragedies.
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World War I
started in 1914.
Fighting raged from Europe to the Middle East.
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The
Tsar
sent
3 million Russian soldiers
west to fight
Germany's Kaiser Wilhelm II.
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Unprepared to face German heavy artillery,
over 78,000 Russians
were killed
or wounded and over 90,000 captured
at the
Battle of Tannenberg,
August 26-30, 1914.
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Within a year,
over 1.4 million Russian soldiers were killed and nearly a million captured.
Russian General Denikin
described:
"The German heavy artillery swept away whole lines of trenches, and their defenders with them. We hardly replied. There was nothing with which we could reply.
Our regiments, although completely exhausted, were beating off one attack after another by bayonet ...
Blood flowed unendingly, the ranks became thinner and thinner and thinner. The number of graves multiplied."
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Russia's disillusionment with the
Tsar
grew.
This, together with severe cold weather and food shortages, allowed
Vladimir Lenin's
community organizers to agitate and fan unrest, leading to the
Bolshevik Revolution
-- Red October of 1917.
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Lenin
distributed propaganda, incited class warfare, provoked strikes, staged bank robberies, attacked police, and ordered assassinations.
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Democrat President Woodrow Wilson
naively told Congress, April 2, 1917:
"Does not every American feel that assurance has been added to our hope for the future peace of the world by the
wonderful and heartening things that have been happening within the last few weeks in Russia?"
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Wilson
displayed his lack of judgement by sending the
U.S. Army 339th Infantry Regiment
to intervene in
North Russia.
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Lenin
forced the
Tsar
from power, seized control of the government, then proceeded to arrest, imprison, and execute tens of thousands of Russians in a
Red Terror.
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Tsar Nicholas II
and his family were executed.
There were relatively few revolutionaries, but because they used
terror
as
a coercive tactic,
people panicked and unwittingly surrendered their freedoms to a totalitarian government.
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Lenin
wrote:
"It is necessary -- secretly and urgently to prepare the
terror."
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To his socialist revolutionaries in the city of Nizhny Novgorod,
Lenin
ordered in a telegram:
"to introduce mass terror."
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Lenin
instructed on how to treat "kulak" farmers:
"Comrades! The kulak uprising in your five districts must be crushed without pity ...
You must
make example of these people.
Hang
(I mean hang
publicly,
so that people see it)
at least 100 kulaks, rich bastards, and known bloodsuckers.
Publish their names. Seize all their grain.
Single out the hostages per my instructions in yesterday's telegram.
Do all this
so that for miles around people see it all,
understand it,
tremble,
and tell themselves that we are killing the bloodthirsty kulaks and that we will continue to do so ... Yours,
Lenin.
P.S. Find tougher people."
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The policy of "dekulakization" -- the
intentional killing off of millions of independent middle-class "kulak" farmers
-- removed the only ones who could challenge
Lenin's power.
It also had the unanticipated consequence of devastating food production, resulting in the horrendous national famine of 1921-22, where an estimated
5 million died.
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Bolsheviks
replaced the Christian religion with a
materialistic atheism.
Church property
was
confiscated
or
destroyed.
Free speech and free press were prohibited.
Private property was abolished.
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Centralizing power,
Vladimir Lenin
made it clear:
"The goal of socialism is communism."
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C.S. Lewis
warned in the final chapter of
The Abolition of Man,
1943:
"I am very doubtful whether history shows us one example of a man who, having stepped outside traditional morality and attained power, has used that power benevolently."
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In 1924, as
Lenin
lay dying, suffering from incessant headaches,
Joseph Stalin
usurped power, even circulating a fake photo doctored to have him sitting next to
Lenin.
Stalin
then ruled with an iron fist as an absolute dictator of the Soviet Union.
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Franklin Roosevelt
described the Union of Soviet
Socialist
Republics in his address to the American Youth Congress, February 10, 1940:
"The Soviet Union ... is run by
a dictatorship
as
absolute
as any other
dictatorship in the world."
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Stalin's "Great Purge of 1936-38" executed
an estimated
1.2 million Communist Party members, government officials, military leaders,
and
peasants
who were accused of being
disloyal.
Simply a rumor of holding
politically incorrect views
or associating with "enemies of the people," could result in someone losing their job, being arrested and executed, or being one of the
4.5 million sentenced to "gulag" labor camps.
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One of those arrested was
Alexander Solzhenitsyn,
who was born in
Russia
on DECEMBER 11, 1918.
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Solzhenitsyn
was detained for writing a letter criticizing
Joseph Stalin.
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He spent 11 years in
"gulag" labor camps.
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Alexander Solzhenitsyn
began secretly compiling horror stories of
life in the gulags.
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For several years of his
imprisonment,
1947-52, he was denied pen and paper, so he composed and
memorized chapters as poems.
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He put these accounts into his book
The First Circle,
1968, and then
The Gulag Archipelago.
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An
"archipelago"
is a chain of islands in the ocean.
Solzhenitsyn
used this metaphor to describe a chain of FEMA-style
citizen detention camps
across Russia.
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Horrendous camps were used during the:
- Indian Removal Act;
- Civil War;
- Second Boer War;
- Spain crushing Cuban Revolts;
- Imperial Japan Bataan Death March;
- Hitler's National Socialist Workers Party;
- Pol Pot's Communist Khmer Rouge; and
- Chinese and North Korean labor camps.
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Democrat President Franklin Roosevelt
issued Executive Order 9066 in 1942, which forcibly relocated an estimated 120,000 to
Japanese internment camps.
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Under FDR, the Federal government also drove thousands off their lands to establish the
Great Smokey Mountain National Park
in 1934, condemning and evicting entire communities, forcing them to abandon generational homes, farm buildings, mills, schools, and churches.
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Accounts of these Federal evictions are in Wayne Caldwell's
Requiem by Fire
(Random House, 2009) and memorialized in Carol Elizabeth Jones's ballad, "Leaving Cataloochee."
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Alexander Solzhenitsyn's
writings were smuggled out of the
Soviet Union
and translated.
They quickly became internationally popular, leading him to receive the
Nobel Prize for Literature
in 1970, even though he was still in the U.S.S.R.
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In his
Nobel Prize
acceptance letter,
Solzhenitsyn
wrote:
"During all the years until 1961, not only was I convinced I should never see a single line of mine in print in my lifetime, but, also, I scarcely dared allow any of my close acquaintances to read anything I had written because I feared this would become known."
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International pressure led to
Solzhenitsyn
being
expelled from Russia
on February 12, 1974.
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Warning naive American students of the horrible realities of socialism,
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
stated in Washington, D.C., June 30, 1975:
"In pre-revolutionary Russia ... there were attempts on the
Tsar's
life ...
During these years
about 17 persons a year were executed ...
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The
Cheka
(Lenin's Communist Secret Police) ... in 1918 and 1919 ...
executed,
without trial,
more than a thousand persons a month! ...
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... At the height of
Stalin's terror
in 1937-38 ... more than
40,000 persons were shot per month!
Here are the figures:
17 a year ...
1,000 a month,
more than 40,000 a month!"
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Solzhenitsyn
wrote in
The Gulag Archipelago
(1973):
"A state of war only serves as an excuse for domestic tyranny."
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He continued:
"Roosevelt,
in
Tehran,
during one of his toasts, said ...
'I do not doubt that the three of us' (meaning
Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin)
'lead our peoples in accordance with their desires' ...
We were astonished. We thought, 'when we reach Europe,
we will meet the Americans, and we will tell them.'"
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He added:
"I was among the troops that were marching towards the Elbe (River) ...
A little bit more and I would have ... shaken the hands of your American soldiers. But just before that ...
I was taken off to prison
and my meeting did not take place ...
After a delay of 30 years, my Elbe is here today.
I am here to tell you
... what ... we wanted to tell you then."
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Stalin
used a tactic called "psychological projection" or blame-shifting, where
a politician publicly accuses his opponents of what he himself is privately guilty of.
Karl Marx
stated: "Accuse others of what you do."
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Marx
and
Friedrich Engels
explained further
(Marx and Engels Collected Works,
Vol. 10, p. 318):
"Conspirators by no means confine themselves to organizing ...
Their business
consists in ...
spurring it in to artificial crises
... They are the
alchemists of the revolution."
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In
Communism-A History
(Random House, 2001) author Richard Pipes described how Stalin used
a government fabricated crisis
-- which he blamed on his opponents --
as an excuse for the government to seize more power:
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"Stalin's
regime needed another crisis ... as
Fidel Castro,
the leader of
Communist Cuba,
would explain ...
'The revolution needs the enemy
... The revolution needs for its development its antithesis' ...
And
if enemies were lacking,
they had to be
fabricated ..."
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Pipes continued:
"In 1934, a prominent
Bolshevik, Sergei Kirov,
the party boss of Lenningrad, was assassinated under mysterious conditions ... evidence points to
Stalin ...
Kirov
was gaining too much popularity in party ranks for
Stalin's
comfort.
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...
His assassination
brought
Stalin
two advantages:
it
rid him of a potential rival
and provided a rationale for
instigating a vast campaign against alleged anti-Soviet conspirators ..."
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Pipes
concluded:
"Purges
of the 1930's were
a terror campaign
that in indiscriminate ferocity and number of victims had no parallel in world history ...
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... Authorities ... beat them
until they confess to their crimes they have not committed."
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Solzhenitsyn
warned Americans not to trust mainstream media, June 30, 1975:
"There is a ... Russian proverb:
'The yes-man is your enemy, but your friend will argue with you' ... I am the friend ... I have come to tell you ...
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... One of your leading newspapers, after the end of Vietnam, had a full headline: 'The Blessed Silence.'
I would not wish that kind of 'blessed silence' on my worst enemy ... I spent 11 years in the Archipelago (labor camps)."
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As to trusting government,
Solzhenitsyn
was quoted in
The Observer,
December 29, 1974, as stating:
"In our country the lie has become not just a moral category but a pillar of the State."
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Solzhenitsyn
explained how
government-run healthcare
provided a cover for
Stalin's political opponents
to be "diagnosed" with psychiatric problems and
given compulsory "treatment":
"It is not detente (a lessening of tension) if we here ... can spend our time agreeably while over there
people are groaning and dying and in psychiatric hospitals.
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...
Doctors are making their evening rounds ... injecting people with drugs which destroy their brain ...
There are tens of thousands of
political prisoners
in our country ... under
compulsory psychiatric treatment."
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This is similar to the Federal government's 40 year long
Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment,
where black men infected with syphilis were allowed to die, all the while being regularly examined by
government health-care workers
who simply documented the progression of the deadly disease.
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Solzhenitsyn
went on:
"You know the words from the Bible: 'Build not on sand, but on rock' ...
Lenin's teachings
are that anyone is considered to be a fool who doesn't take what's lying in front of him. If you can take it, take it. If you can attack, attack.
But if there's a wall, then go back ...
Communist leaders respect only firmness
and have contempt and laugh at persons who continually give in to them."
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This is similar to the Islamic concept of "hudna," namely, when you are strong, attack; when you are weak, make treaties until you can get strong enough to attack.
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Solzhenitsyn
concluded his speech in Washington, D.C., June 30, 1975, with
a warning about the "social justice" movement:
"I ... call upon America to
be more careful with its trust ...
Prevent those ... who are attempting to establish even finer ... legal shades of equality -- because of their distorted outlook ... short-sightedness and ... self-interest -
from
falsely using
the
struggle
for peace and
for social justice to lead you down a false road ...
They are trying to
weaken you;
they are trying to
disarm
your strong and magnificent country in the face of this fearful threat -- one that has never been seen before in the history of the world ...
I call upon you:
ordinary working men of America
...
do not let yourselves become weak."
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He stated:
"If we don't know our own history, we will simply have to endure all the same mistakes, sacrifices, and absurdities all over again."
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Solzhenitsyn
wrote in
The Gulag Archipelago
(1973):
"If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them.
But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?"
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Solzhenitsyn
stressed the importance of the life-changing influence of the gospel in an interview with Joseph Pearce
(St. Austin Review
2 no. 2, February, 2003):
"Untouched by the breath of God, unrestricted by human conscience, both capitalism and socialism are repulsive."
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In 1983,
Solzhenitsyn
received the Templeton Prize for Progress in Religion, stating:
"We can only reach with determination for the warm hand of God, which we have so rashly and self-confidently pushed away."
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American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
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