FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: The Communist Agenda


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. The second
volume 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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