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originally posted by: RussianTroll
a reply to: stonerwilliam
One fact, the Russians are not 110 million, as you write, but 140 million.
Also, I never comment on Wikipedia. I am a researcher of historical documents, not the opinions of Vicky's moderators - snotty youths working for money.
According to Chabad. He is one of the towers of the Kremlin, which was represented in power by Prime Minister Medvedev. Now the power of this "tower" is greatly shaken. The main bank of the group was closed and the main asset - the Summa group of companies. The owners are under investigation and will face long sentences. But Chabad is still one of the "towers of the Kremlin", their power and influence are enormous.
originally posted by: RussianTroll
originally posted by: surfer_soul
a reply to: RussianTroll
What about the Balfour declaration? Have you not heard of that?
Of course I know the Balfour Declaration and its entire history. If the Jews relied on only one Declaration, of which there were many, then there would still be no Israel.
The declaration was adopted in 1926. What prevented the creation of Israel immediately?
Great Britain held a mandate over Palestine. Legally, it could create the state of Israel, but did not do it, limited itself to the Declaration.
In 1947, Britain abandoned the mandate, thereby making all declarations null and void. Britain handed over powers to the UN, and the UN has already made a legal decision.
Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn[a] (11 December 1918 – 3 August 2008)[6][7] was a Russian novelist, philosopher, historian, short story writer and political prisoner. Solzhenitsyn was an outspoken critic of the Soviet Union and Communism and helped to raise global awareness of the Soviet Gulag forced-labor camp system.
After serving in the Soviet Army during World War II, he was sentenced to spend eight years in a labour camp and then internal exile for criticizing Josef Stalin in a private letter