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"When does the attack on Russia begin," asked a quiet man from Poland, from among the delegates that Anibal had invited to hear him. "Does it begin with Napoleon's 1812 invasion?"
"The real 'invasion' of Russia began much later," said Anibal. "It began after the Empire had failed to destroy America. Everything the Empire had thrown at America had been rebuffed. It had been rebuffed even when the Empire mobilized the slavery centered southern states against the Union. This desperate mobilization of its so-called friends eventually unleashed the bitter American Civil War. But the imperials had lost that war too. As far as the Empire was concerned, America seemed undefeatable, and worse than that, America's renaissance-founded system of economics suddenly received attention in Russia and in Western Europe. A great railway link had been planned on the basis of the American model, to connect Western Europe to China right across Russia. It was this 'invasion' of the world by the American systems of economics. That was made possible by national sovereignty, which the Empire was determined to stop. The world, especially Russia, became 'infested' with ideas of freedom and development, as the imperials saw it. The imperials hated America's profound idea of humanist development. They were afraid of it and still are. The Empire had no choice, therefore, but to step in and stop this 'invasion' of the freedom-ideology of the renaissance spirit that was sweeping the world. If the imperials hadn't intervened at this 'dangerous point, the Empire would have ceased to exist. But how do you stop and idea? You can't stop an idea with starting a war, especially if can't win the war. So how they did stop it? They did it in the typical Venetian Empire fashion with the dual approach if instigating war among its opponents and building up subversion from within at the same time. World War I was set up for this purpose. It was staged to engulf all of continental Europe to destroy it economically. The second component was an even more-typical Venetian tactic. The tactic was to create an ideology as weapon to destroy Russia from within. Communism was set up for this purpose and was foisted on Russia through the back-door by way of the great October Revolution in 1917 at the end of World War I."
"You really can't say that communism was 'foisted' on Russia," said a Russian from the back row. "Karl Marx started his intellectual work on the communist idea as far back as the mid-1800s, long before the great October Revolution began," said a Russian man. The man wore no nametag. He introduced himself as Ivanov, a history teacher. "Karl Marx's work was chosen by us, not foisted on us."
"That's where you are wrong," said Anibal. "Marx and his college Friedrich Engles believed that philosophy ought to be deployed to change the world. In fact he and Engels specifically tailored their work, The Communist Manifest, for the express purpose to cause a social revolution. The Empire latched onto them and made their dream come true, but on its own terms and for its own purposes. Marx and Engles were courted and 'groomed,' beginning at approximately the time when the transcontinental railway project was put on the agenda in continental Europe. Marx was chosen by the Empire as an agent to destroy Russia from within. The destruction of Russia became especially imperative for the Empire since Russia was to be the key element in the Eurasian railway project. Marx was 'hired' to foment his coveted deep reaching revolution that would throw Russia into chaos, and disable it thereafter, Venetian style."
"No, no, we chose that revolution," said Ivanov.
"You chose what had been handed to you on a silver platter, gift-wrapped from London," Anibal replied. "Marx was 'endorsed' by the Empire. When you selected Marx, you chose with all your heart what Marx had been instructed to bring to you. You accepted a Trojan Horse. Communism was designed to be a Trojan Horse. Karl Marx created it, perhaps unwittingly, in collaboration with David Urquhart who was one of the Empire's top agents. Marx and Urquhart had direct ties to Lord Palmerston whose chief interest was to increase the power of the British Empire in the world, or should I call it the New Venetian Empire? What you received in Russia on the silver platter wasn't a gift to the Russian people. The Empire never bestows any such gifts. It was a unique brand of poison that you were handed, that Marx lend his name to. Urquhart had acted as an imperial agent for the 'education' of Karl Marx. Marx, in turn maintained close ties to Lord Palmerston whom he referred to in his letters, affectionately, as Pam. So you see Mr. Ivanov, communism was in its essential key aspects a British imperial creation, designed primarily for the destruction of Russia. Naturally, it took some time for the poison to become active. Cultural warfare takes time. Social overturning takes time. It takes time to foment public thinking. Unfortunately for Russia, it responded precisely as it was coerced to respond. The Russian people latched on to Karl Marx's Trojan Horse during times of a deep overturning in Russia when the conditions were ripe for it's poisoning. And so, my friend, it was intended."
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