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There is a substratum of truth in all dangerous errors which is why they so often flourish. Marxian Communism, which today enslaves a third of the world's population, continues to gain adherents among idealists who see in it a society which will end poverty and bring about a more equal distribution of wealth.
'World Revolution' does not set out to catalogue events but to show the causes of such events. At the time of the First Edition of this work, Winston Churchill pointed out in a newspaper article that there was a "world wide conspiracy for the overthrow of civilization and for the reconstruction of society on the basis of arrested development, of envious malevolence, and impossible equality... It played, as a modern writer, Mrs. Webster, has so ably shown, a definitely recognizable part in the tragedy of the French Revolution, and it has been the mainspring of every subversive movement during the Nineteenth Century; and now this band of extraordinary personalities from the underworld of the great cities of Europe and America have gripped the Russian people by the hair of their heads and have become practically the undisputed masters of that enormous Empire."
In this new and entirely revised edition of 'World Revolution' Nesta Webster has had access to material not available in the past. Every Revolution has to have its "heroes" and "gods" and with a wealth of evidence she shows what frauds and imposters are the gods of Communism. Mrs. Webster shows how Marx took up Socialism as a profession. The proletariat was simply the raw material for revolution; he felt no more for the workers than the blacksmith feels for the metal he works into shape. The deadly correspondence between Marx and his rich friend Engels shows the utter hypocrisy of this pair of socialists. Marx writes to Engels about "these lousy little shopkeepers - a deplorable class" who want payment for the goods supplied to him! "My children appear to have inherited a lust for drink from their father" and he explains that "I think after all Bordeaux and port" are best for them. In the first 6 months of 1863 Marx received £610 - not too meager an income for the champion of the working class in those days. Engels, who lived quite well and augmented his income by robbing the till of the firm in which he was a partner. Mrs. Webster also shows that Lenin was no real lover of the workers but a paid Agent of the German government sent to Russia to stir up revolt. Today, the mass murderer Chairman Mau, proclaims the imposters Marx and Lenin to have been heroes of the workers. These myths are exposed in this new edition of 'World Revolution'. The whole history of the revolutionary movement is meticulously traced from the earliest times to the present day, with its heavily financed and planned riots, chaos and corruption.
'World Revolution' is the only scientific investigation pointing the way to intelligent counter action. It is an essential textbook for all security services and for anti-Communist workers.
Table of Contents
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Author's Foreword to First Edition Author's Preface to Sixth Edition Editor's Foreword to Sixth Edition
I - Mirage II - Illuminism III - The First French Revolution IV - The Conspiracy of Babeuf V - The Golden Age of Socialism VI - The Revolution of 1848 VII - The Internationale VIII - The Revolution of 1871
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IX - The Course of Anarchy X - Syndicalism XI - Marxian Socialism XII - Bolshevism XIII - Backed by Gold XIV - The Second World War XV - The Chinese Revolution XVI - The African Revolution XVII - World Chaos
Bibliography Index
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