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Marx never held a regular job. When he submitted articles to the New York Tribune, articles actually written by Engels, he received a pound or two [British money] for each. Marx was paid pennies for another series of Engels' rewrites submitted to the Masonic-trained Foreign Office official David Urguhart (Chaitkin, p.303).
Engels realized that Marx was a potential martyr for the communist cause, so Engels brought Marx to England where his subservience was further enforced by a slave-like existence. Left-wing French Grand Orient Freemasonry [who was in war with British capitalistic Freemasonry] planned to exploit this Jew as their mouthpiece to blame the sad state of affairs of the poor on the British Masonic system of capitalism.
It may come as a surprise to many to learn that Engels did not hate capitalism. After all, he was the product of it. What he loathed was the British Masonic oligarchy. From its inception, left-wing French Freemasonry was determined to destroy right-wing English Freemasonry. Since capitalism was synonymous with the British Brotherhood, one must destroy capitalism to destroy the Masonic oligarchy. Communism would be the tool of that destruction.
Marx was only one in a long line of Jews who would be exploited to help accomplish this task. He was intentionally kept poor. Other than a few pennies for some articles he himself did not write, Marx's only other source of income came by way of philanthropic "contributions" from Engels, which amounted to a measly sum of 70 pounds sterling per year, with a low one year of 10 pounds. In comparison, Engels drew an annual salary from his family firm of 4,000 pounds sterling. If Engels was so fond of Marx, he certainly would have paid him enough to survive, for Marx's family was starving. Two of his children died of malnutrition and another committed suicide.
The most famous work attributed to Karl Marx is the Communist Manifesto Supposedly written in 1848, it was actually a rewrite of an earlier Engels' piece entitled Confessions of a Communist [and old Adam Weishaupt writings]. Of the Marx-Engels relationship, Chaitkin writes: "This was to be the pattern. The Cotton Prince [Engels] would write a draft, or simply make a suggestion for the appropriate theme of a work, and pass it along to Marx to put it in 'good revolutionary form," (Chaitkin, p.303).
The Templar Freemasonic scheme worked. Karl Marx, the Jew, would be called the Father of Communism, NOT Freemason Engels, and definitely NOT Grand Orient Freemasonry. The so-called "evils" of capitalism would be the whipping boy of communism. Jews only would be blamed if the communist conspiracy were ever exposed - NOT Grand Orient Freemasonry headquartered in France
Originally posted by wlord
correct me if I'm wrong here......
Marxism states that capitalism=communism, in other words capitalism will eventually lead to communism when people discover they work for 1-2%,..
Isn't this what is happening as we speak?? the majority protesting against the 1-2%?? so what's the big deal and lengthy OP's?? Marxism is a pretty a straight forward philosophy..
"The interests of the capitalist and those of the worker are... one and the same"- Karl Marx
Originally posted by wlord
Isn't this what is happening as we speak?? the majority protesting against the 1-2%?? so what's the big deal and lengthy OP's??
Originally posted by wlord
Marxism is a pretty a straight forward philosophy..
The European Revolutions of 1848, known in some countries as the Spring of Nations, Springtime of the Peoples[3] or the Year of Revolution, were a series of political upheavals throughout Europe in 1848. It was the first (and only) Europe-wide collapse of traditional authority, but within a year reactionary forces had won out and the revolutions collapsed.
From 1848 to 1852, Europe was convulsed by a series of Revolutions which all ultimately failed by 1852 with the restoration of either dictatorship or the reestablishment of conservative rule. The revolutions started in a part of Italy in 1848, but the real spark was in France in 1848. From there, as news spread, revolutions broke out in other parts of Italy, Prussia, Austria and the German Confederation. However, internal divisions based on nationalism and on a radical/liberal split soon weakened the revolutionaries. By 1852 conservatives had taken advantage of the weaknesses and regained power. In France, Napoleon Bonaparate's nephew, Louis Napoleon took power in a coup d'etat.
The Revolutions first started out in France 1848 where the people wanted universal suffrage which was led by Louis Blanc. King Louis Philippe was overthrown and Louis Blanc's revolution established the second republic. The February revolution in France gave ideas to other countries in Europe which in turn started other revolutions. The February revolution in France also gave to Liberals in the German states the idea to make a proposal for a unified German country with a national parliament. But the old order was restored because the provisional government couldn't decide on a constitution for the new government. The Italian states of Europe also had a revolution which made Pope Pius IX flee Italy. This gave a leader of unification, Gieuseppe Mazzini the chance to unify Italy. This plot of Mazzini was a failure because of the Italians overwhelming protectiveness of their independence.
Within the Austrian Empire there was increased Nationalism among the Czechs, Hungarians, Germans, and other groups. This increased nationalism in March of 1848 led to riots and the ousting of Prince Klemens von Metternich and Ferdinand I, the Hapsburg Emperor. This led to the making of a constituent assembly which freed the peasantry. However, liberals and radicals were soon squabbling and subject nations began to demand autonomy from Vienna. Finally, along with Russian troops, the Hapsburgs restored themselves and regained control.