The NWO Files - THE RISE OF KARL MARX

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Subject: THE RISE OF KARL MARX
Title: The New World Order Files
Author: David Allen Rivera

Heinrich Karl Marx (Moses Mordecai Marx Levy, 1818-83) was born of
wealthy parents (his father was a lawyer), and much of his personal life
has never been revealed. Professor M. Mtchedlov, Vice-Director of the
Marx Institute, said that there were 100 volumes in his collection, but
only thirteen have ever been reprinted for the public. When he was six,
his family converted to Christianity, and although he was once a
believer in God, after attending the Universities of Bonn and Berlin,
Marx wrote that he wanted to avenge himself "against the One who rules
above." He joined the Satanist Church run by Joana Southcott, who was
said to be in contact with the demon Shiloh. His early writings
mentioned the name "Oulanem," which was a ritualistic name for Satan. A
friend of Marx wrote in 1841, that "Marx calls the Christian religion
one of the most immoral of religions." His published attacks against the
German government caused him to be ejected from the country.

He received a Doctorate in Philosophy in 1841/, /but was turned down
for a teaching position, because of his revolutionary activities. In
1843, he studied Economics in Paris, where he learned about French
communism. Again he was expelled for revolutionary activities. In 1844,
he wrote the book _A World Without Jews_ even though he was Jewish. In
1845, he moved to Brussels, where, with German philosopher, Friedrich
Engels (the son of a wealthy textile manufacturer, 1820-95), who he met
in Paris in 1844, they reorganized the Communist League.

Engels had joined the "Young Germany" group (which had been established
by Giuseppe Mazzini) in Switzerland in 1835. He later became a 32nd
degree Mason (as did Marx). In 1842 he was sent to England to manage the
family's mill in Manchester. A journalism student, in 1843 he published
a treatise on economics called _Outlines of a Critique of Political
Economy_; and in 1844, wrote a review of Thomas Carlyle's _Past and
Present_, and also a booklet called _The Condition of the Working Class
in England in 1844_. It was Engel's philosophy that established the
basis for the ideas which were developed by Marx.

In 1848, Marx published his _Communist Manifesto_ (which he was working
on from 1830-47), from an Engels draft (which was an extension of
Engel's _Confessions of a Communist_), which also borrowed heavily from
Clinton Roosevelt's book, _The Science of Government Founded on Natural
Law _(which echoed the philosophies of Weishaupt). It had been
commissioned by the Communist League in London. The League, formerly
known as the League of the Just (or the League of Just Men), which was
an off-shoot of the Parisian Outlaws League (which evolved from the
Jacobin movement), was founded by Illuminati members who fled from
Germany. The League was made up of rich and powerful men from different
countries who were behind much of the turmoil that engulfed Europe in
1848. Many researchers consider them either a finger organization of the
Illuminati, or an inner circle. Originally introduced as the _Manifesto
of the Communist Party_ in London, on February 1, 1848, the name was
changed to the _Communist Manifesto_, and the name of Karl Marx was
added as its author twenty years later, after a series of small
revolutions failed.

Marx wrote in 1848: "The coming world war will cause not only
reactionary classes and dynasties, but entire reactionary peoples, to
disappear from the face of the earth." Friedrich Engels, that same year,
wrote: "The next world war will make whole reactionary peoples disappear
from the face of the earth."

The Manifesto was described by Marxians as "The Charter of Freedom of
the Workers of the World," and it was the platform of the Communist
League. It advocated the abolition of property in land, and the
application of all land rent to public purposes; a heavy progressive or
graduated income tax; abolition of all rights of inheritance; the
confiscation of all the property of immigrants and rebels;
centralization of credit in the hands of the State with a national bank;
centralization and State control of all communication and
transportation; expansion of factories to cultivate waste lands, and
create industrial armies, especially for agriculture; gradual abolition
of the distinction between town and country to have a more equitable
distribution of the population over the country; the elimination of
child factory labor and free education for all children in public schools.

This revolutionary plan for socialism, which included the abolition of
all religion, was reminiscent of the doctrines of Weishaupt. It was,
basicaIly, a program for establishing a "perfect" state, and it called
for the workers (proletariat) to revolt and overthrow capitalism (the
private ownership of industry), and for the government to own all
property. Marx, felt, that by controlling all production, the ruling
power could politically control a country, After the communist regime
would take over, the dictatorship would gradually "wither away" and the
result would be a non-government. The final stage of communism, is when
the goods are distributed on the basis of need. Leonid Brezhnev, when
celebrating the 50th anniversary of the U.S.S.R., said: "Now the Soviet
Union is marching onward. The Soviet Union is moving towards communism."

Meanwhile, Professor Carl Ritter (1779-1859), of the University of
Berlin, a co-founder of modern geographical science, was writing a
contrasting view, under the direction of another group of Illuminists.
The purpose of this was to divide the people of the world into opposing
camps with differing ideologies. The work started by Ritter, was
finished after he died, by German philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm
Nietzsche (1844,-1900), who founded Nietzscheism, which later developed
into Fascism, and then into Nazism, which was later used to ferment
World War II. Although the Nazis, in quoting from Nietzsche, considered
themselves to be the Master Race, Nietzsche did not. Nietzsche tried to
stir things up at the top of the social order, while Marx hammered away
at the bottom, concentrating on the lower class and working people.
Nietzsche wanted to keep the uneducated in a state of slavery, while
Marx wanted to neutralize the elite, and pushed for the rights of the
people.

Marx worked as a correspondent for the _New York Tribune_ (whose Editor
was Horace Greeley, 1852-61), covering the 1848/ /European revolutions.
One source has reported that even these articles were written by Engels.
In 1857 and 1858, Marx wrote a few articles for the New American
Cyclopedia.

On September 28, 1864, Marx and Engels founded the International
Workingmen's Association at St. Martin's Hall in London, which consisted
of English, French, German, Italian, Swiss, and Polish Socialists, who
were dedicated to destroying the "prevailing economic system." It later
became known as the First Socialist International, which eight years
later spread to New York and merged with the Socialist Party. The
statutes they adopted were similar to Mazzini's, and in fact, a man
named Wolff, the personal secretary of Mazzini, was a member, and pushed
Mazzini's views. Marx wrote to Engels: "I was present, only as a dumb
personage on the platform." James Guillaume, a Swiss member, wrote: "It
is not true that the Internationale was the creation of Karl Marx. He
remained completely outside the preparatory work that took place from
1862 to 1864..." Again, we find evidence that the Illuminati did in fact
control the growing communist movement, but not to deal with the
problems of workers and industry, rather it was to instigate riot and
revolution. The Marxist doctrine produced by the Association was
accepted and advocated by the emerging labor movement, and soon the
organization grew to 800,000 dues-paying members.

Even though Marx publicly urged the working class to overthrow the
capitalists (the wealthy who profited from the Stock Exchange), in June,
1864, "in a letter to his uncle, Leon Phillips, Marx announced that he
had made 400 pounds on the Stock Exchange." It is obvious that Marx
didn't practice what he preached, and therefore didn't really believe in
the movement he was giving birth to. He was an employee, doing a job for
his Illuminati bosses.

Nathan Rothschild had given Marx two checks for several thousand pounds
to finance the cause of Socialism. The checks were put on display in the
British Museum, after Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild, a trustee, had
willed his museum and library to them.

In 1867, Marx wrote the first volume of _Das Kapital_, which became
known as the "Bible of the Working Class." Marx felt, that as the
workers achieved various reforms, there would be a possibility for the
peaceful evolution towards socialism. A little known fact, is that Marx'
beliefs were gleaned from the writings of Weishaupt, Babeuf, Blanc ,
Cabet, Owen, Ogilvie, Hodgkin, Gray, Robert Thompson, William Carpenter,
and Clinton Roosevelt; which he discovered from his hours of research in
the Reading Room of the British Museum. Volume two appeared after Marx'
death, edited by Engels from Marx' notes, in 1885; and volume three
appeared in 1894.

When Marx died in March 14, 1883, only six people attended his funeral.
He never supported his family, which had produced six children. Three of
them died of starvation in infancy, and two others committed suicide.
Actually, Engels supported Marx with income from his father's cotton
mills in England. Marx was buried in London, at Highgate Cemetery.

The Social Democratic Party in Germany, in 1869, was the first Marxist
aligned political Party. They favored an independent working class. It
grew rapidly, despite the effort of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck to
break it up through the enactment of anti-socialist legislation. In
1877, they elected a dozen members to the Reichstag. In 1881, they had
312,000 members; and by 1891, 1,427,000. In 1891, they eliminated their
earlier leanings toward State-aid for co-ops, and aligned themselves
with the Marxist goal of "the abolition of class rule and of classes
themselves."

Some of the early Socialist Parties were: Danish Social Democratic
Party (1870's), Swedish Socialist Party (1889), Norwegian Labor Party
(1887), Austrian Social Democratic Party(1888), Belgian Labor Party
(1885), Dutch Socialist-Democratic Workers Party (1894), Spanish Social
Labor Party (1879), Italian Socialist Party (1892), and the Social
Democratic Federation of Great Britain (1880's).

In 1889, the Second International was formed, with their headquarters
in Brussels, Belgium. Their main responsibility was to create some sort
of unity within its ranks. It was totally organized along Marxist
philosophies.


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"The only statement I care to make about the Protocols [of Learned
Elders of Zion] is that they fit in with what is going on.
They are sixteen years old, and they have fitted the world situation
up to this time. They fit it now."

-- Henry Ford
February 17, 1921, in New York World

In 1927, he renounced his belief in them after his car was
sideswiped, forcing it over a steep embankment. He interpreted
this as an attempt on his life by elitist Jews.
 
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