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10
26th October 13:38
External User
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Latvian Hitler loyalists video, prior to, and during Waffen SS
I'm going to play your game, and sink you at it by overwhelming you
with data obtained from books from the library, as you directed me to
use.
Ok, ready? Try this (and please apologize to me for being accurate yet
you insisted I was not). Also please review the excerpt from the
official Communist Marxist site, which Trotsky states "love live the
unity with all internationalists!" - Jews by public record are the
official internationalist bankers, over the entire world, yet you
called me a liar. :
http://www.jewwatch.com/jew-leaders-trotsky.htm
Article on Trotsky appearing at Boise State University's
http://www.idbsu.edu/surveyrc/Staff/jaynes/marxism/bios/trotsky.htm on
June 26, 1998
Originally named Lev Davidovich Bronstein, Trotsky was born on
November 7, 1879, in Kherson Province in Ukraine, the son of Russified
Jews. He was educated in Odesa and in Mykolayiv and was a star pupil
with enormous intellectual capabilities.
Trotsky's political involvement began in 1896 in a circle of Mykolayiv
Populists, but he soon converted to Marxism. After a brief stay at
Odessa University, he returned to Mykolayiv in 1897 to organize the
Southern Russian Workers Union. For this he was arrested, jailed, and
exiled.
He escaped from Siberian exile in 1902, fleeing to Europe and adopting
the pseudonym Trotsky. Abroad he joined Lenin, L. Martov, Ge****
Plekhanov, and other Russian Social-Democrats, who were publishing
Iskra (The Spark). By vitue of his flair for polemic writing and
oratorical brilliance, he quickly rose in the party.
At the party's Second Congress in 1903 Trotsky opposed Lenin and the
Bolsheviks, siding with the Mensheviks. His characteristic
independence, however, kept him from cementing any organizational
ties. Alone of the major party leaders, he rushed back to Russia to be
an active participant in the 1905 Revolution, where he gained
practical experience as chairman of the Saint Petersburg Soviet of
Workers Deputies. Jailed in December 1905 and later exiled to Siberia,
Trotsky used his time to reconsider the paradoxes of revolution in
backward Russia. He synthesized his thoughts in two books, 1905 and
Results and Prospects.
Escaping from Siberia in 1907, Trotsky spent the next decade defending
his ideas and engaging in émigré squabbling. The March Revolution of
1917 caught him by surprise in New York City, where he wrote for a
Russian newspaper. Trotsky reached Russia in May, quickly assumed
leadership of the independent left Social-Democratic Interdistrict
Group, and joined the Petrograd (as St. Petersburg was renamed)
Soviet. Within weeks, he had gained enormous popularity as the most
eloquent agitator of the Soviet left. In July, after being courted by
Lenin, he joined the Bolshevik party and was elected to its Central
Committee.
As a Bolshevik, Trotsky was elected chairman of the Soviet in
September. He sided with Lenin on the need to overthrow the
provisional government and devoted all his energies to marshaling
support for the armed uprising of the Bolsheviks. With Lenin in
hiding, Trotsky was the general in charge, and he successfully
directed the masses of workers and soldiers in the November
revolution.
In the ensuing Soviet government Trotsky first became commissar of
foreign affairs, negotiating a separate peace with Germany at Brest-
Litovsk. Later, as a ruthlessly practical commissar of war, he is
credited with creating, inspiring, and directing the Red Army that
gained a great victory in the civil war and saved the Revolution.
Trotsky was second only to Lenin in the Politburo, and Lenin viewed
him as exceptionally able. He backed Lenin's major policy innovations,
but had his own plans for industrializing Russia. When a stroke
removed Lenin from active politics in May 1922, Trotsky was not in a
position to take over. Never particularly adept at party politics, he
failed to outmaneuver the troika of Grigory Zinovyev, Lev Kamenev, and
Stalin that took power. Although he put himself at the head of a
loosely knit left opposition, Trotsky's polemic salvos were no match
for Stalin's bureaucratic party machine. In 1925 his adversaries
removed him from the Commissariat of War; in 1926 they expelled him
from the Politburo; and in 1928 Stalin exiled him to Central Asia and
in 1929 expelled him from the USSR.
Trotsky spent the rest of his life seeking a safe place to compose his
savage critiques of Stalinist Russia. In Turkey, France, Norway, and
finally Mexico he produced a flood of publications, including an
autobiography, My Life (1930; trans. 1930); an unmatched History of
the Russian Revolution (3 vol., 1931-33; trans. 1932-33); an
insightful The Revolution Betrayed (1937); and searing articles on the
major issues of his day (Stalinism, Nazism, fascism, the Spanish civil
war). A Stalinist agent fatally wounded Trotsky on August 20, 1940, in
Coyoacán, Mexico. He died the following day.
And here from a formal Communist site: "...long live the unity of all
internationalists!" very clearly Jews by Communism, using subversion
to controal all countrys by controlling all countrys financing, are
Communists are the Jews.
http://www.marxists.org/archive/lunachar/works/silhouet/trotsky.htm
My final meetings with Trotsky were even more prolonged and more
intimate. These took place in Paris in 1915. Trotsky joined the
editorial board of Our Word, which was naturally accompanied by the
usual intrigues and unpleasantness: someone was frightened by his
joining us, afraid that such a strong personality might take over the
newspaper altogether. But this aspect of the affair was of minor
importance. A much more acute matter was that of Trotsky's attitude to
Martov. We sincerely wanted to bring about, on a new basis of
internationalism, the complete unification of our Party front all the
way from Lenin to Martov. I spoke up for this course in the most
energetic fashion and was to some degree the originator of the slogan
'Down with the 'defeatists', long live the unity of all
Internationalists!' Trotsky fully associated himself with this. It had
long been his dream and it seemed to justify his whole past attitude.
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