>took his watch off?
Yep. Was he showing Tucker the interview was not on the clock? All the time he wanted?
Or was it 6:00 O'clock and Putin was being dangerous??
>took his watch off?
Yep. Was he showing Tucker the interview was not on the clock? All the time he wanted?
Or was it 6:00 O'clock and Putin was being dangerous??
Du kannst leck meich am Arsch
Can you do an ear compare from those dates.
Ukraine is a disposal system for mercenaries.
https://modernhistoryproject.org/Audio/Article/FinalWarning/FinalWarning_7.3.mp3
Nikolai Lenin (Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, 1870-1924) was a Russian revolutionary and student of Marx who was out for revenge after his older brother, Alexander, was hung in 1887 along with four comrades for conspiring to assassinate Czar Alexander II, the grandfather of Nicholas II.
During his teenage years, he admired Mikhail Bakunin (1814-1876), a follower of Weishaupt's principles and a Satanist, who was the driving force behind the initial effort to organize Communism. In 1887, Lenin entered Kazan University, and in 1889 he became a Mason and soon began advocating the philosophies of Marx. He said: "We must combat religion. This is the ABC's of all materialism and consequently of Marxism." In 1891, he passed his law exam. In the early 1900's, he said that Socialism could only be achieved by mobilizing workers and peasants through revolution, since trade unions were not able to bring about any change.
In 1903, in London, he initiated a split in the Russian Social-Democratic Workers Party, which was completed in 1912, and became known as the All Russian Communist Party in 1918. His left-wing faction became known as the Bolsheviks, or "bolshinstvo," which meant "majority" (the Menshevicks, or "menshinstvo," meant "minority"). The movement was slow to catch on, and by 1907, he only had 17 members, but he would soon have over 40,000. He received financial support from the Fabians, including a $15,000 contribution from Joseph Fels, an American soap manufacturer and a Fabian.
George Bernard Shaw, one of the Fabian's founders, called Lenin the "greatest Fabian of them all" and in a speech he made in Moscow in 1931 said:
https://modernhistoryproject.org/mhp?Article=FinalWarning&C=7.3