Be sure to listen to the Leonard Patterson sound track at the bottom of this page.
(Vladimir Putin Vows to Defend Christianity Worldwide dated April 5, 2014) but its not. We have known for a long time that Russian Communist plans for world domination are seated deep within their philosophy and anything that furthers their goals over the long run is welcomed. Perhaps one should refresh their memories regarding the long term by re-reading Dr. Cuddy's Chronological History of the new world order, paying particular attention to:
1931 -- Students at the Lenin School of Political Warfare in Moscow are taught:"One day we shall start to spread the most theatrical peace movement the world has ever seen. The capitalist countries, stupid and decadent ... will fall into the trap offered by the possibility of making new friends. Our day will come in 30 years or so... The bourgeoisie must be lulled into a false sense of security." 1931 -- In a speech to the Institute for the Study of International Affairs at Copenhagen) historian Arnold Toyee said: "We are at present working discreetly with all our might to wrest this mysterious force called sovereignty out of the clutches of the local nation states of the world. All the time we are denying with our lips what we are doing with our hands...."Whether we have proven ourselves to be stupid will be determined by the outcome of the final conflict but we cannot deny that decadence has gained a strong foothold. ~ Norman E. Hooben
Source: NEW ZEAL shining the torch for liberty
Modern-Day Russian “Dupes”
By: Cliff Kincaid Accuracy in Media
Pat
Buchanan’s column, “Is God Now on
Russia’s Side?,” is difficult to read and almost laugh-out-loud funny, as
Buchanan was once a staunch anti-communist who served President Reagan as his
communications director during the Cold War. Buchanan’s opposition to the Evil
Empire, as Reagan correctly called it, has given way to an unseemly embrace of
former Soviet KGB colonel Vladimir Putin, the virtual dictator of Russia who
served the “Evil Empire” for decades. Once
a sharp thinker, Buchanan argues that Putin is a Christian and Russia is now a
Christian nation. We are apparently supposed to ignore, or forgive, Putin’s
violations of human rights, including murders of journalists, and the invasion
of Ukraine.
There
is absolutely no evidence, aside from rhetoric, to suggest that Russia in
general and Putin in particular have been converted to Christianity. Instead,
what we are witnessing is a massive Russian “active measures” campaign that has
ensnared many American conservatives, convincing them that Putin is somehow a
legitimate alternative to President Obama’s decadent worldview. It is troubling
to see some of these conservatives endorse Russia’s invasion and occupation of
Ukraine.
The
term “active measures” refers to influence operations that use agents of
influence, disinformation and propaganda.
The
main flaw in Buchanan’s argument is the lack of any real evidence that Russia
has come to grips with—and disavowed—its Soviet past. To the contrary, Putin
laments the passing of the USSR and has put the former KGB, now the FSB, in
charge of the power centers in Russia. He celebrates Russian spying on America.
Lt.
Gen. Ion Mihai Pacepa, the highest-ranking Soviet bloc defector, says that
Russia is “the first intelligence dictatorship in history.” Two brave Russian
investigative journalists, Andrei Soldatov and Irina Borogan, have captured the
nature of the problem in their book, The
New Nobility: The Restoration of Russia’s Security State and the Enduring
Legacy of the KGB.
Buchanan
cites pro-family statements by Putin, and anti-gay and pro-life laws passed in
Russia. But like the Soviet propaganda and disinformation that Buchanan fought
to expose when he worked for Reagan, the Russian rhetoric and legislative
maneuvers cannot be considered legitimate. It is a show, designed to mask the
dangerous path Russia is on, both domestically and internationally.
Rather
than embrace Christianity, the evidence shows Russia has embraced the Russian
Orthodox Church, always a tool of Soviet intelligence. As we noted in an AIM
Report back in 1984, John Barron’s authoritative book, KGB, said that the KGB’s
Directorate 5 is assigned to “clandestinely control religion in the Soviet
Union” and to “insure that the Russian Orthodox Church and all other churches
serve as instruments of Soviet policy.” Barron added, “The directorate placed
KGB officers within the Russian Orthodox Church hierarchy and recruits bonafide
clergymen as agents. Much of its work is accomplished through the Council on
Religious Affairs, which is heavily staffed with retired and disabled KGB
officers.”
Nothing
has really changed. In fact, the Russian Orthodox Church is even closer to the
regime these days, and is still so morally bankrupt that it published a 2014
calendar in honor of Soviet mass murderer Joseph Stalin. Former KGB officer
Konstantin Preobrazhensky has called it “Putin’s Espionage Church,” and devotes
a major portion of his book, KGB/FSB’s
New Trojan Horse, to its use by the Russian intelligence service.
The
scholarly paper, “The
Occult Revival in Russia Today and Its Impact on Literature,” demonstrates
the existence of something as sinister as the regime’s domination of the church
for its own political purposes. It describes how “post-Soviet Russia” has
embraced New Age and occult ideas, even what the author, German academic Birgit Menzel, calls
“dark” or “evil forces.”
“The
occult has always been used for different ends, for purposes that range from
benignly spiritual to totalitarian or fascist,” she writes.
Menzel’s
detailed article notes the impact of Theosophy on Russia and Russian Marxists.
Founded by a Russian mystic named Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891), who
wrote The Secret Doctrine,
Theosophy teaches that man can become God through mystical experiences, and can
even perform miracles.
Traditional
Christians have a different view. Theosophy, writes
Dr. Peter Jones, one of the world’s foremost experts on paganism and the
occult, is part of a movement which “plans to eat the Christian church alive in
the days ahead.” He says Theosophy is at “the spiritual heart” of the United
Nations and notes that the Lucis Trust (originally the Lucifer Trust) is an
occult Theosophist group in charge of the United Nations’ Meditation Room.
In
Russia, Menzel cites evidence that the Soviet secret police had “special agents
for occult matters” who monitored the theosophical society in Russia, several
esoteric orders, and even a “secret society” of some kind.
One
of many fascinating revelations from Menzel’s well-researched 2007 article is
that Aleksandr Dugin, now an adviser to Putin, has incorporated some of these ideas
into his theory of “geopolitical Eurasianism,” a revival of the Russian empire
that includes Islamic Iran. She writes, “Since 2000, Dugin has moved to the
center of political power close to the Putin administration by a deliberate
strategy of veiling his mystic-esoteric ideology…”
This
is the same Dugin who was photographed
meeting with former American Ku Klux Klan leader and neo-Nazi David Duke in
Russia. Duke argues, like many Russian nationalists, that communism was imposed
on Russia by a Jewish banker conspiracy.
Robert
Zubrin, the
author of several articles about Dugin, points out the similarities between
the National Socialism of Hitler and Dugin’s original National Bolshevism. He
says Dugin gave up on the idea of his own political party so he could become an
adviser to Putin’s United Russia Party. For a time, he worked with the Russian
Communist Party, the second largest political party in the country next to
Putin’s United Russia.
As
part of this transformation, Zubrin says, Putin himself became a spokesman for
tradition and morality, even though the Russian government “runs the biggest
organized human trafficking operation in the world,” kidnapping Russian girls
and selling them around the world as prostitutes. “Nobody should be fooled by
Putin’s claim of being a defender of conservative morality,” Zubrin says.
“There’s
far more depravity in Russia, including homosexual depravity, than there is
here,” he says. “In the Russian army, boyish recruits are subject to homosexual
rape by officers as a form of hazing, and the regime protects this.”
Equally
troubling, there are reports that Dugin’s vision of a resurgent Russia is built
in part on the ideas of Aleister Crowley (1875-1947), a Satanist who described
himself as the “Beast 666,” or Antichrist, of the Book of Revelation. “It [is]
worth mentioning that in early 90s the National Bolsheviks and their main
ideologist Aleksandr Dugin tried to bring Aleister Crowley’s ideas to wide
popular masses in Russia with enviable persistence,” one observer of the
Russian political scene noted.
Some
analysts say Crowley, who visited Russia twice (in 1898 and in 1913), was a
mastermind of an international conspiracy rooted in Satanism, and that he
helped the Communists in Russia and his philosophy played a role in the
subsequent rise of the Nazis in Germany.
His
associates included Walter Duranty, the correspondent for The New York Times
who achieved notoriety—and a Pulitzer Prize—for helping cover up the crimes of
Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, such as his murder of millions of Ukrainians.
As
incredible as it seems, S.J. Taylor writes in her book about Duranty, Stalin’s
Apologist, that Duranty and Crowley participated in drug-taking
Satanic orgies. In a series of rituals conducted in Paris in 1913, Crowley
received a “sacrament” from “a certain priest, A.B.,” who Taylor says was
Duranty. The sacrament was semen. Taylor said that, during these orgies, verses
were chanted, including one consisting of “Blood and semen! Blood and semen!”
In
his column on Putin’s alleged Christ-like qualities, Buchanan writes that he
was “startled to read” that the newsletter from the social conservative World
Council [sic] of Families had hailed Russia as a “pro-family leader” and that
the group’s conference this fall was being held in Moscow.
Buchanan
asked, “Will Vladimir Putin give the keynote?”
Buchanan
failed to notice that the conference has been “suspended,” in the wake of the Russian
invasion of Ukraine.
The
World Congress of Families says, “The
situation in the Ukraine and Crimea (and the resulting U.S. and European
sanctions) has raised questions about the travel, logistics, and other matters
necessary to plan” the Moscow event.
In
other words, the Americans planning to go to Moscow and attend services at
Christ the Savior Cathedral of the Russian Orthodox Church would not be able to
spend the Russian rubles that were coming their way.
Those
rubles were supposed to be provided by Putin crony Vladimir Yakunin, a former
KGB officer like Putin who reportedly stole millions, if not billions, from
public expenditures on construction projects related to the Sochi Olympic
Games. Some of the stolen
funds were used to build a fancy estate for Yakunin that includes a guest
house, a servants quarters, a garage for 15 cars, sauna, swimming pool and
prayer room.
The
World Congress of Families (WCF) has been collaborating with the Russians since
at least 2008, when it participated
in the World Public Forum, another group founded by Yakunin. Larry Jacobs of
the WCF said at the time, “Much credit should be given to Vladimir Yakunin, who
has invested his time and resources for the betterment of world civilizations.”
Tell
that to the people of Ukraine.
Cliff
Kincaid is the Director of the AIM Center for Investigative Journalism and can
be contacted at cliff.kincaid@aim.org.
View the complete archives from
Cliff Kincaid.
________________________________
The following is presented because the very same organizations that trained Mr. Patterson were highly influential in the community organizing efforts that still exist to this very day...the same community organizing bragged about by Barack Husein Obama.
I Trained In Moscow For Black Revolution – Leonard Patterson (Video)
A former communist who trained in Moscow discusses his experience in the Communist party and how the Communist Party infiltrated the Civil Rights Movement. Mr. Patterson was on the Speaker’s Bureau of The John Birch Society.
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