Rainbow Stalin Returns!!! With more Rainbow!!!!

Rainbow stylin audio + ytmnd rainbow stalin pics and gifs !!! Audio link: content.ytmnd.com also 1 rainbow hitler cameo appearance!!!!

Rainbow stylin audio + ytmnd rainbow stalin pics and gifs !!! Audio link: content.ytmnd.com also 1 rainbow hitler cameo appearance!!!!

The Democratic Republic of Georgia was a stronghold of the Mensheviks. In parliamentary elections held on February 14, 1919 they won 81.5 percent of the votes, Noe Zhordania became Prime minister.

Alexander Parvus, Russian revolutionary (Menshevik) and a German Social Democrat, as well as a German intelligence agent. In December of 1905 Parvus authored a provocative article on behalf of the St. Petersburg Soviet, The Financial Manifesto, which described the Russian economy as being on the verge of collapse. In turn the article was dispatched to other communist agents in the more mainline newspapers who published it as well. In combination with this propaganda, Parvus coordinated an agitation of locals to feign a run on the banks. As the news of the article and the subsequent "rush" was spread, the consequent hysteria managed to upset the economy and enrage prime minister Sergei Witte, but did not cause a financial collapse. In connection with this provocation and Parvus' involvement in the organization of anti-government actions during the 1905 revolution, Parvus (together with other revolutionaries such as Leon Trotsky) was arrested by the Russian police. While in prison he became close with other revolutionaries, and was visited by Rosa Luxemburg. Sentenced to three years exile in Siberia, Parvus escaped and ran away to Germany. While in Turkey, Parvus became close with German ambassador Baron Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim who was known to be partial to establishing revolutionary fifth columns among the allies. Consequently, Parvus offered his plan via Baron von Wangenheim to the German General Staff: the paralyzing of Russia via general strike, financed by the <b>...</b>

The 5th Congress of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party was held in London between May 13 and June 1, 1907. The congress was the largest in attendance of the congresses of the unified RSDLP. Thirty-five session of the congress were held in the Brotherhood Church in London, during which stormy debates took place. In total 338 delegates attended the congress. The delegates represented around 150000 party members (43000 Mensheviks, 33000 Bolsheviks, 33000 Bundists, 28000 Polish Social Democrats and 13000 Latvian Social Democrats). 300 of the delegates had voting rights. There were 105 Bolsheviks, 97 Mensheviks, 59 representatives of the General Jewish Labour Bund, 44 delegates of the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL), 29 delegates of the Latvian Social Democracy and 4 'non-faction' delegates. Lenin was a delegate, representing the Upper Kama region. The congress was a site of clashes between the Bolshevik and Menshevik factions of the party. The Bolsheviks argued in favour of preparations for an armed uprising against Czarist rule, a position which the Menshevik leader Julius Martov denounced as 'putschist'. Another issue of disagreement was the debates on how the party should relate to the labour movement.[6] The Mensheviks argued in favour of creating a 'Workers' Congress', seen as a first step towards reforming the party into a West European-style legal Social Democratic party. On both of these issues the Bolsheviks were able to <b>...</b>

Alexander Parvus, Russian revolutionary (Menshevik) and a German Social Democrat, as well as a German intelligence agent. In December of 1905 Parvus authored a provocative article on behalf of the St. Petersburg Soviet, The Financial Manifesto, which described the Russian economy as being on the verge of collapse. In turn the article was dispatched to other communist agents in the more mainline newspapers who published it as well. In combination with this propaganda, Parvus coordinated an agitation of locals to feign a run on the banks. As the news of the article and the subsequent "rush" was spread, the consequent hysteria managed to upset the economy and enrage prime minister Sergei Witte, but did not cause a financial collapse. In connection with this provocation and Parvus' involvement in the organization of anti-government actions during the 1905 revolution, Parvus (together with other revolutionaries such as Leon Trotsky) was arrested by the Russian police. While in prison he became close with other revolutionaries, and was visited by Rosa Luxemburg. Sentenced to three years exile in Siberia, Parvus escaped and ran away to Germany. While in Turkey, Parvus became close with German ambassador Baron Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim who was known to be partial to establishing revolutionary fifth columns among the allies. Consequently, Parvus offered his plan via Baron von Wangenheim to the German General Staff: the paralyzing of Russia via general strike, financed by the <b>...</b>

Alexander Parvus, Russian revolutionary (Menshevik) and a German Social Democrat, as well as a German intelligence agent. In December of 1905 Parvus authored a provocative article on behalf of the St. Petersburg Soviet, The Financial Manifesto, which described the Russian economy as being on the verge of collapse. In turn the article was dispatched to other communist agents in the more mainline newspapers who published it as well. In combination with this propaganda, Parvus coordinated an agitation of locals to feign a run on the banks. As the news of the article and the subsequent "rush" was spread, the consequent hysteria managed to upset the economy and enrage prime minister Sergei Witte, but did not cause a financial collapse. In connection with this provocation and Parvus' involvement in the organization of anti-government actions during the 1905 revolution, Parvus (together with other revolutionaries such as Leon Trotsky) was arrested by the Russian police. While in prison he became close with other revolutionaries, and was visited by Rosa Luxemburg. Sentenced to three years exile in Siberia, Parvus escaped and ran away to Germany. While in Turkey, Parvus became close with German ambassador Baron Hans Freiherr von Wangenheim who was known to be partial to establishing revolutionary fifth columns among the allies. Consequently, Parvus offered his plan via Baron von Wangenheim to the German General Staff: the paralyzing of Russia via general strike, financed by the <b>...</b>

The short-term events leading to Stalin's rise to power. Script written by Russel Tarr: Inside the Politburo, Stalin formed a three man team (known as the 'Triumvirate' or the 'Troika') with Zinoviev and Kamenev. These three were "old Bolsheviks" - in other words, they had been behind Lenin and the Bolshevik cause right from the very start. Trotsky, in contrast, had been a Menshevik before 1917. ▪ The triumvirate resisted Trotsky's demands for party reform, depicting it as a betrayal of Lenin's final wish to preserve the unity of the party. Any Trotsky supporter within the party was assigned a post as far from Moscow as possible. Early in 1925 Stalin and his allies forced Trotsky to resign as Minister of War. Stalin then allied himself with Bukharin and other right-wing members of the Politburo and struck against his former allies on all questions of policy. ▪ As a result, Zinoviev and Kamenev patched up their differences with Trotsky in 1926. ▪ Stalin then accused Zinoviev and Kamenev of plotting against the party and expelled them both from the Politburo. The following year, Trotsky was sent into exile.(1927) In late 1927, Stalin then turned against the Right, dismissing local officials who were known to supporters of Bukharin and rejecting the NEP in favour of a programme of agricultural collectivisation and massive industrialisation. ▪ Bukharin refrained from criticising Stalin in public, but secretly attempted to form an alliance with Kamenev and Zinoviev <b>...</b>

Footage of Stalin in his later years, going through his morning routine.
funny soviet ussr stalin russia russian music video kwantlen park inter-a jordan gruenhage dictator lenin red army bolshevik menshevik cccp 1984 nathanael tonn nate mustache communist commie october crisis november Совет Россия revolution soviétique l'URSS Soviétiques soviets Sowjet Sowjets Russland Russisch Russe La Russie comrade kommunistisch communiste коммунистическо WWI WWII Stalingrad Leningrad vodka trench coat sickle hammer ushanka stelin trenchcoat staline

How to spot someone infected with deadly Communism.
Giant Communist Movie 1950's Educational Marxism Socialism Medicare Hollywood Liberal Conservative Extremist Propaganda Healthcare obamacare Capitalism suspenders tie election Ohio congress Russia China Korea Soviet Mao Kim Lenin Stalin Cold War Trotsky Bolshevik Menshevik Muslim Christian Tea Party Revolution Obamneycare Palin Bachmann GOP Beck Fox Fear Paranoia reason gay moral creativecommons

A REVOLUÇÃO RUSSA Após os acontecimentos de domingo sangrento (1905), Trotsky secretamente retornou para a Rússia, em Fevereiro de 1905. Na primeira, ele escreveu panfletos de um metro imprensa em Kiev, mas logo se mudou para a capital, São Petersburgo. Lá ele trabalhou com ambos os bolcheviques como membro Leonid Krasin Comité Central, bem como os locais Menshevik comissão, que ele empurrou em um sentido mais radical. Esta última, porém, foi traído por um agente da polícia secreta em maio Trotsky teve de fugir para zonas rurais da Finlândia, onde trabalhou em dar a sua teoria da revolução permanente até outubro, quando uma greve nacional tornou possível para ele voltar a São Petersburgo. Depois de regressar à capital, Trotsky e parvus assumiu o jornal russo Gazeta e aumentou sua tiragem para 500.000. Trotsky também co-fundou Nachalo ( "The Beginning") com parvus, que provou ser muito bem sucedida. Trotsky e de outros dirigentes soviéticos foram colocados em julgamento em 1906 sob acusação de apoiar uma rebelião armada. No julgamento, Trotsky entregar alguns dos melhores discursos de sua vida e solidificou a sua reputação como um orador público eficaz, que ele confirmou, em 1917-1920. Ele foi condenado e sentenciado a deportação. Em 7 de agosto de 1917 (New Style) Trotsky foi preso novamente após uma revolta vencida pró-bolchevique, em Petrogrado, mas foi libertado 40 dias mais tarde, na sequência do fracasso do levante contra-revolucionário Lavr Kornilov. Depois de os <b>...</b>
Lenin Leon Trotsky Engels Marx CMI Esquerda Marxista revolução Russa 1917 revolution URSS socialismo comunismo trotskysmo stalinismo Stalin socialism marxism

A REVOLUÇÃO RUSSA Após os acontecimentos de domingo sangrento (1905), Trotsky secretamente retornou para a Rússia, em Fevereiro de 1905. Na primeira, ele escreveu panfletos de um metro imprensa em Kiev, mas logo se mudou para a capital, São Petersburgo. Lá ele trabalhou com ambos os bolcheviques como membro Leonid Krasin Comité Central, bem como os locais Menshevik comissão, que ele empurrou em um sentido mais radical. Esta última, porém, foi traído por um agente da polícia secreta em maio Trotsky teve de fugir para zonas rurais da Finlândia, onde trabalhou em dar a sua teoria da revolução permanente até outubro, quando uma greve nacional tornou possível para ele voltar a São Petersburgo. Depois de regressar à capital, Trotsky e parvus assumiu o jornal russo Gazeta e aumentou sua tiragem para 500.000. Trotsky também co-fundou Nachalo ( "The Beginning") com parvus, que provou ser muito bem sucedida. Trotsky e de outros dirigentes soviéticos foram colocados em julgamento em 1906 sob acusação de apoiar uma rebelião armada. No julgamento, Trotsky entregar alguns dos melhores discursos de sua vida e solidificou a sua reputação como um orador público eficaz, que ele confirmou, em 1917-1920. Ele foi condenado e sentenciado a deportação. Em 7 de agosto de 1917 (New Style) Trotsky foi preso novamente após uma revolta vencida pró-bolchevique, em Petrogrado, mas foi libertado 40 dias mais tarde, na sequência do fracasso do levante contra-revolucionário Lavr Kornilov. Depois de os <b>...</b>
Lenin Leon Trotsky marx engels CMI Esquerda Marxista comunismo socialismo 1917

A REVOLUÇÃO RUSSA Após os acontecimentos de domingo sangrento (1905), Trotsky secretamente retornou para a Rússia, em Fevereiro de 1905. Na primeira, ele escreveu panfletos de um metro imprensa em Kiev, mas logo se mudou para a capital, São Petersburgo. Lá ele trabalhou com ambos os bolcheviques como membro Leonid Krasin Comité Central, bem como os locais Menshevik comissão, que ele empurrou em um sentido mais radical. Esta última, porém, foi traído por um agente da polícia secreta em maio Trotsky teve de fugir para zonas rurais da Finlândia, onde trabalhou em dar a sua teoria da revolução permanente até outubro, quando uma greve nacional tornou possível para ele voltar a São Petersburgo. Depois de regressar à capital, Trotsky e parvus assumiu o jornal russo Gazeta e aumentou sua tiragem para 500.000. Trotsky também co-fundou Nachalo ( "The Beginning") com parvus, que provou ser muito bem sucedida. Trotsky e de outros dirigentes soviéticos foram colocados em julgamento em 1906 sob acusação de apoiar uma rebelião armada. No julgamento, Trotsky entregar alguns dos melhores discursos de sua vida e solidificou a sua reputação como um orador público eficaz, que ele confirmou, em 1917-1920. Ele foi condenado e sentenciado a deportação. Em 7 de agosto de 1917 (New Style) Trotsky foi preso novamente após uma revolta vencida pró-bolchevique, em Petrogrado, mas foi libertado 40 dias mais tarde, na sequência do fracasso do levante contra-revolucionário Lavr Kornilov. Depois de os <b>...</b>

A REVOLUÇÃO RUSSA Após os acontecimentos de domingo sangrento (1905), Trotsky secretamente retornou para a Rússia, em Fevereiro de 1905. Na primeira, ele escreveu panfletos de um metro imprensa em Kiev, mas logo se mudou para a capital, São Petersburgo. Lá ele trabalhou com ambos os bolcheviques como membro Leonid Krasin Comité Central, bem como os locais Menshevik comissão, que ele empurrou em um sentido mais radical. Esta última, porém, foi traído por um agente da polícia secreta em maio Trotsky teve de fugir para zonas rurais da Finlândia, onde trabalhou em dar a sua teoria da revolução permanente até outubro, quando uma greve nacional tornou possível para ele voltar a São Petersburgo. Depois de regressar à capital, Trotsky e parvus assumiu o jornal russo Gazeta e aumentou sua tiragem para 500.000. Trotsky também co-fundou Nachalo ( "The Beginning") com parvus, que provou ser muito bem sucedida. Trotsky e de outros dirigentes soviéticos foram colocados em julgamento em 1906 sob acusação de apoiar uma rebelião armada. No julgamento, Trotsky entregar alguns dos melhores discursos de sua vida e solidificou a sua reputação como um orador público eficaz, que ele confirmou, em 1917-1920. Ele foi condenado e sentenciado a deportação. Em 7 de agosto de 1917 (New Style) Trotsky foi preso novamente após uma revolta vencida pró-bolchevique, em Petrogrado, mas foi libertado 40 dias mais tarde, na sequência do fracasso do levante contra-revolucionário Lavr Kornilov. Depois de os <b>...</b>
Leon Trotsky Marx Engels CMI Alan Woods Esquerda Marxista socialismo comunismo

Leon Trotsky[2] (Russian: Лев Троцкий, pronounced [ˈlʲef ˈtrot͡skʲɪj] ( listen); 7 November [OS 26 October] 1879 -- 21 August 1940), born Lev Davidovich Bronshtein, was a Russian Marxist revolutionary and theorist, Soviet politician, and the founder and first leader of the Red Army. Trotsky was initially a supporter of the Menshevik Internationalists faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party. He joined the Bolsheviks immediately prior to the 1917 October Revolution, and eventually became a leader within the Party. During the early days of the Soviet Union, he served first as People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs and later as the founder and commander of the Red Army as People's Commissar of Military and Naval Affairs. He was a major figure in the Bolshevik victory in the Russian Civil War (1918--20). He was also among the first members of the Politburo. After leading a failed struggle of the Left Opposition against the policies and rise of Joseph Stalin in the 1920s and the increasing role of bureaucracy in the Soviet Union, Trotsky was successively removed from power, expelled from the Communist Party, deported from the Soviet Union and assassinated on Stalin's orders. An early advocate of Red Army intervention against European fascism, Trotsky also opposed Stalin's non-aggression pact with Adolf Hitler in the late 1930s. As the head of the Fourth International, Trotsky continued in exile to oppose the Stalinist bureaucracy in the Soviet Union, and was <b>...</b>
Leon Trotsky Лев Троцкий Lev Davidovich Bronshtein Russian Marxist revolutionary theorist video tv docu film Television

World renown author, communist and historian Harpal Brar responds to questions following his 45-minute presentation on the theory and practice of Trotsky and 'Trotskyites', at the CPGB-ML's Party Study School, November 2011. See his original presentation here: www.youtube.com In which Harpal summarizes his book on the different political and organizational ideas of Lenin and Trotsky. Trotsky was and remains counter-revolutionary, he says. Lenin's ideas still form the basis of sound leadership and orientation for workers in their struggle against capitalist imperialism. Watch it and pass it on... ______________________________ A CPGB-ML Party School production ______________________________ RELATED READING 1. Lies concerning the history of the Soviet Union, by Mario Susa: www.stalinsociety.org.uk 2. Trotskyism or Leninism (book), by Harpal Brar: www.cpgb-ml.org Preface on-line: www.mltranslations.org Table of Contents: www.mltranslations.org Buy the book: mailto:books@cpgb-ml.org 3. Lenin on the slogan "for a united states of Europe" www.marxists.org 4. Lenin: The Military Programme of the Proletarian Revolution www.marxists.org 5. Trotsky's "United States of Europe" article: www.marxists.org 6. JV Stalin: Trotskyism or Leninism (Article): www.marxists.org 7. Grover Furr's website (Khruhschev Lied -- Links to buy) chss.montclair.edu ______________________________ RELATED VIDEO PRESENTATIONS ______________________________ What does the Soviet Union mean to our generation <b>...</b>
Trotskyism Leninism Harpal Brar CPGB-ML Revolution World socialism in one country Grover Furr Khruhschev Lied Liquidator Menshevik Bolshevik Social Democrat RSDLP Communist Socialist Imperialism

Christianity, first preached by the Apostles Simon and Andrew in the first century, became the state religion of Kartli (Iberia) in 327, making Georgia the second oldest Christian country after Armenia.The final conversion of Georgia to Christianity in 327 is credited to St. Nino of Cappadocia. She was the only daughter of pious and noble parents, the Roman general Zabulon, a relative of the great martyr St. George, and Susanna, sister of the Patriarch of Jerusalem. The Georgian Orthodox Church, originally part of the Church of Antioch, gained its autocephaly in the 5th century during the reign of Vakhtang Gorgasali, and the Bible was also translated into Georgian in the 5th century. Notably, the oldest example of Georgian writing is an asomtavruli inscription in a church in Bethlehem from AD 430. The Georgians' new faith, which replaced pagan beliefs and Zoroastrianism , was to place them permanently on the front line of conflict between the Islamic and Christian worlds. As was true elsewhere, the Christian church in Georgia was crucial to the development of a written language, and most of the earliest written works were religious texts. After Georgia was annexed by the Russian Empire, the Russian Orthodox Church took over the Georgian church in 1811. The colorful frescoes and wall paintings typical of Georgian cathedrals were whitewashed by the Russian occupiers. The Georgian church regained its autonomy only when Russian rule ended in 1918. Neither the Georgian <b>...</b>

Politicians commemorate Georgian Cadets 25.02.11 Georgian politicians assembled at the memorial of Georgian Cadets in the Tabakhmela Settlement outside Tbilisi to commemorate young heroes who died in the last fight for Georgia's independence on February 25, 1921. The representatives of the ruling party National Movement, the members of the party's Youth Wing, students and the representatives of various opposition parties laid wreaths at the memorial, where a special church service was conducted. Politicians said on this day the political views and positions were of less important, because it was a day of unity of Georgia, where all were one. On 25 February 1921, Soviet troops crossed Georgian border. It was a military campaign by the Soviet Russian (RSFSR) Red Army against the Democratic Republic of Georgia (DRG) aimed at overthrowing the local Social-Democratic (Menshevik) government and installing the Bolshevik regime in the country. The last fight was held in Kojori settlement near Tbilisi, where Cadets battled against groups of Red Army. Almost 300 cadets fell on battle field. Daughter of the author of the national anthem of Georgia, Maro Makashvili was among the young cadets, who were brutally killed and then buried in the yard of current parliament.

Allen Dulles, brother of John Foster Dulles, Secretary of State, was a lawyer who helped launder money for Fritz Thyssen in NY, after World War Two. Thyssen had 3 banks holding Hitler's billions, which were moved around under the allies noses, aided by the Dulles brothers who were laundering it. When Harry Truman started the CIA in 1947, Gehlen was telling us that the USSR was going to reinvade Germany, in 1946 he said it was going to reinvade Poland. In 1945, he told us that the Soviets had 175 divisions "battle-ready" to invade Europe, bomb the UK and the US, and, basically, almost-single-handedly started the Cold War that depleted our natural resources and that was ultimately self-defeating. Dulles hired him and 4000 other Nazis to work for CIA. When Gehlen landed in NY, he was handed a check for 200 million dollars which he used to activate an army of spies overseas. These guys were in Italy, Greece, France, the Soviet Union, and everywhere killing democratically-elected leaders. Gehlen started Operation Gladiator, or Gladio, referring to the Roman sword used by Gladiators, which created small armies and arms caches to be used in case of a "soviet invasion". Later, after Gladio was disbanded, after much mayhem and murder had been accomplished, Mossad used the old arms caches to aid right wing operations against communists in europe. Hitler hated communists and Jews, many of whom used to be socialist intellectuals in the days of the Menshevik (minority) party. The US <b>...</b>
Nixon CIA Nazis Dulles Hitler generalgehlen Reinhard 000 forthunt Virginia Mossad Dimona Nukes Iran Ghaddafi Lockerbie trojantransmitter telaviv Framed Libya Blessing Reichstag Bank vonbraun V2 Communists Gladio Gladiator armscaches Elected-Leaders Sabatoge Famine Polish Jewish Holocaust US Congress mayday 1920s redscare Menshiviks socialists intellectuals coldwar self-defeating

A REVOLUÇÃO RUSSA Após os acontecimentos de domingo sangrento (1905), Trotsky secretamente retornou para a Rússia, em Fevereiro de 1905. Na primeira, ele escreveu panfletos de um metro imprensa em Kiev, mas logo se mudou para a capital, São Petersburgo. Lá ele trabalhou com ambos os bolcheviques como membro Leonid Krasin Comité Central, bem como os locais Menshevik comissão, que ele empurrou em um sentido mais radical. Esta última, porém, foi traído por um agente da polícia secreta em maio Trotsky teve de fugir para zonas rurais da Finlândia, onde trabalhou em dar a sua teoria da revolução permanente até outubro, quando uma greve nacional tornou possível para ele voltar a São Petersburgo. Depois de regressar à capital, Trotsky e parvus assumiu o jornal russo Gazeta e aumentou sua tiragem para 500.000. Trotsky também co-fundou Nachalo ( "The Beginning") com parvus, que provou ser muito bem sucedida. Trotsky e de outros dirigentes soviéticos foram colocados em julgamento em 1906 sob acusação de apoiar uma rebelião armada. No julgamento, Trotsky entregar alguns dos melhores discursos de sua vida e solidificou a sua reputação como um orador público eficaz, que ele confirmou, em 1917-1920. Ele foi condenado e sentenciado a deportação. Em 7 de agosto de 1917 (New Style) Trotsky foi preso novamente após uma revolta vencida pró-bolchevique, em Petrogrado, mas foi libertado 40 dias mais tarde, na sequência do fracasso do levante contra-revolucionário Lavr Kornilov. Depois de os <b>...</b>
Lenin trotsky Esquerda marxista Alan Woods Marx Engels socialismo marxismo CMI comunismo revolução Russa 1917