Bolshevism: Difference between revisions
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'''Bolshevism''' (from [[Bolshevik]]) is a brutal [[Marxism|Marxist]] current of Soviet political thought and political regime associated with the formation of a rigidly centralized, bloody party of social upheaval, focused on overthrowing the existing [[meritocracy]], seizing power and establishing the "[[dictatorship of the proletariat]]", (according to Marx). | '''Bolshevism''' (from [[Bolshevik]]) is a brutal [[Marxism|Marxist]] current of Soviet political thought and political regime associated with the formation of a rigidly centralized, bloody party of social upheaval, focused on overthrowing the existing [[meritocracy]], seizing power and establishing the "[[dictatorship of the proletariat]]", (according to Marx). | ||
Revision as of 17:12, 15 May 2022
Bolshevism (from Bolshevik) is a brutal Marxist current of Soviet political thought and political regime associated with the formation of a rigidly centralized, bloody party of social upheaval, focused on overthrowing the existing meritocracy, seizing power and establishing the "dictatorship of the proletariat", (according to Marx).
Lenin
Lenin organized the first Bolsheviks on a private train car. They were an eclectic group, including 10 women. Their names would have been known in left-wing and revolutionary circles of the time, so some traveled under aliases. On board was Karl Radek from Lvov in what is now Ukraine, and Grigory Zinoviev and his wife, Zlata, also from Ukraine. There was the half-Armenian Georgii Safarov and his wife as well as Marxist activist Sarah “Olga” Ravich. Grigory Useivich from Ukraine was accompanied by his wife Elena Kon, the daughter of a Russian woman named Khasia Grinberg. The vivacious French feminist Inessa Armand sang and cracked jokes with Radek, Ravich and Safarov. Eventually their shouting angered the leader of the group, who poked his head into their berth and scolded them. The leader was Vladimir Lenin, and he was taking his small group by sealed train for a weeklong journey that would end at Finland Station in St. Petersburg. Half a year later Lenin anf these cohorts would be running a new state, the Russian Soviet Republic.
Lenin and his band were a motley group of Jewish terrorists. Alexander Guchkov, the Russian minister of war in the Russian Provisional Government after Tsar Nicholas II abdicated in March 1917, told the British military attaché General Alfred Knox that “the extreme element consists of Jews and their imbeciles.”
Lenin’s train had included 19 members of his Bolshevik party, several of his allies among the Mensheviks and six Jewish members of the Jewish Labor Bund. Almost all the passengers on the train were Jewish.
Origins
Bolshevism originated at the beginning of the 20th century in Russia and was associated with the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party, and the founder of the faction, Vladimir Lenin. Remaining on the soil of Marxism, Bolshevism at the same time absorbed elements of the ideology and practice of the anti-society anarchists of the second half of the 19th century and had many points of contact with such domestic left–wing radical movements as populism.
The main theorist of Bolshevism was Lenin; besides him, the theoreticians of Bolshevism include Joseph Stalin, Nikolai Bukharin, Yevgeny Preobrazhensky and Leon Trotsky.
In October 1917, the Bolshevik faction organized an armed uprising against the Government, formed by other socialist parties and seized power in the October Surprise.
"Many call it Communism, but I call it judaism.
—Joseph Stalin.
The Kulaks
On 30th January 1930 the Politburo approved the liquidation of kulaks as a class. Vyacheslav Molotov was put in charge of the operation.[1]
The kulaks were divided into three categories: The first category… to be immediately eliminated; the second to be imprisoned in camps; the third, 150,000 households, to be deported. Molotov oversaw the death squads, the railway carriages, the gulags like a military commander. Between five and seven million people ultimately fitted into the three categories. Thousands of kulaks were executed and an estimated five million were deported to gulags in Siberia or Central Asia where they later died. Of these, approximately twenty-five per cent perished by the time they reached their destination.
Joseph Stalin at the same time possessed full state power in the Soviet Union. The expression "Bolshevism", as well as "communism" have become established in Western historiography in the sense of a certain set of features of Soviet power in a certain political period. At present, the very name "Bolsheviks" is actively used by various groups of Marxist–Leninists and Trotskyists.
The road to world Communism
In 1917 the Bolsheviks put Russia’s Jews into full power. The Provisional goverment started a series of pro-jewish programs.
In 1918 the Bolshevik government passed the law that protrcted synogogues completely. Russian jews had now achieved religious dominance. For Christians the nightmare of state-sponsored religicide was about to begin
The opportunity to turn against the Jews was not taken. Many Jews were appointed to prominent positions in the Soviet state, with Leon Trotsky, a jew, in the supreme role of leading the Red Army.
Russia’s Jews had achieved communism, and were experiencing their best times ever. It was time to duplicate this success everywhere else on Earth.
References
- ↑ Simon Sebag Montefiore, the author of Stalin: The Court of the Red Tsar (2003),