Anonymous ID: 28adbc Jan. 31, 2026, 1:11 p.m. No.24200110   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

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In 1924, Beckwith Press published a book titled Reds in America. Just two years earlier, Convention of the Communist Party at Bridgman, Michigan, was raided by federal agents. The book states that two barrels full of documents were seized, containing โ€œnames, records, checks from prominent people in this country, instructions from Moscow, speeches, theses, questionnaires โ€“ indeed, the whole machinery of the underground organizationโ€ all aiming at the overthrow of the US Government.

 

It seems a bit odd that the newly formed Soviet Union should set its sights so keenly on a country literally on the other side of the world just seven years after coming into existence. At this time, the United States possessed the worldโ€™s strongest and fastest-growing economy. But even after just seven years of existence, the burgeoning Soviet Empire had already exported agent provocateurs to the US with the express intention of grinding the economy to a complete halt while instilling Bolshevik ideologies among the people.

 

Reds in America explains that the seized documents reveal plans:

 

โ€œfor inciting the negroes, the farmers, the clerks, the workmen in industry, members of Congress, employees in Government departments everywhere, to violence against the constituted authorities, [and these plans] have been drawn with almost uncanny appreciation of the psychology of each group, with facts and figures so manipulated as to appeal to those approached, with false premises so cleverly drawn as to fool almost anyone.โ€

 

Perhaps the most shocking revelation from the opening of the book is the depth to which the communists had infiltrated our country by 1922 โ€“ only FIVE years after the Soviet Revolution! It reads:

 

โ€œIt is known that agents of the Communists are working secretly, through "legal" bodies, in labor circles, in society, in professional groups, in the Army and Navy, in Congress, in the schools and colleges of the country, in banks and business concerns, among the farmers, in the motion picture industry-in fact, in nearly every walk of life.โ€