Jos
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- Feb 6, 2010
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Crimes of the Bolsheviks
Crimes of the Bolsheviks, by Isabella Fanfani (ed.) | DarkmoonAfter Nicholas I, his son Alexander II mounted the throne, a true friend of his people. In 1861 he abolished serfdom and gave the peasants land. This reform happened through the mir arrangement of village communities an institution far closer to true and sincere communism than the capitalistic, tax-exploitative system we see in Soviet Russia today.
This same tsar, Alexander II, who in 1864 gave his people a whole new trial procedure for their court system then the fairest and most progressive in Europe underwent seven attempts to assas*sinate him, until finally, in an eighth attempt perpetrated by Goldmann, Liebermann and Zuckermann can anyone mistake their race? successfully carried out the wishes of London.
[Great Britain was by this time in the control of the Jewish bankers of the City of London.]
Alexander II, the great benefactor of his nation, was dynamited on March 1, 1881 the very day that he was to bestow on his country a new, constitutional form of government.
Alexander II was gone.
Alexander III now became tsar. With respect to this monarch who preserved Euro*pean peace, we Russians were all convinced that when he died in 1894, he had succumbed to a normal illness in this case an acute kidney infection. How great was afterward our amazement when we learned on the run, in exile, and from Jewish sources that this tsar too had fallen victim to the criminal minds of the tribe of Judah.