The Communist Manifesto was written by Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx in February 1848. Engels was a Jewish industrialist from Manchester, and Karl Marx’s “family was Jewish and had converted to Christianity shortly before his birth. Karl was later baptized into the Protestant faith” [1]. In early adulthood, he became a Satanist.
The two gentlemen allegedly responsible for introducing Karl Marx to Satanism were his friends Mikhail Bakunin (a Russian anarchist) and Pierre Proudhon. After joining Satanism, his views were that “we must war against all prevailing ideas of religion, of the state, of country, of patriotism. The idea of God is the keynote of a perverted civilization. It must be destroyed.” [1].
Lenin, who also came from a religious family, is considered the father of the Russian Revolution, and his opinion was that “Atheism is an integral part of Marxism. Marxism is materialism. We must combat religion.” Nikita Khrushchev, another dictator, wrote, “Do not think that the Communists have changed their minds about religion. We remain the atheists that we have always been; we are doing as much as we can to liberate those people who are still under the spell of this religious opiate.” [1]
Communism may have been many things, but one thing it was not was humane. Millions were killed and murdered all over the globe in the name of communism. Humanity suffered under communism. The Communist Revolution in Russia, led by Bolshevik Jews, resulted in the world’s first Communist state; however, within a few decades, it is alleged over 40 million Russians lost their lives because of a flawed ideology, mostly under Joseph Stalin.
The flawed ideology had a purpose: to bulldoze the pre-existing cultural, political, religious, and socioeconomic system. After having succeeded in Russia, the Bolshevik Jews decided to apply the same model in China.
China and Communism
In China, the Qing dynasty ruled over the empire from 1636 to 1912. Their failure to modernise China and confront foreign aggressions (e.g., the Opium Wars and others) resulted in the revolution of 1911. Thus, the Republic of China (1912–1949) was born, but internal conflicts for power between rival groups continued unabated. In 1927, General Chiang massacred Communists in Shanghai whilst trying to overthrow the government. This started the 20-year civil conflict in China, where the Communists won and established the People’s Republic of China in 1949.
Before the Communists took over, China was ruled by warlords, where the poor suffered and women had no equal rights. In rural areas, the situation was much worse. One can argue that communism within a brief period changed China. It bulldozed the system. But at what cost? Over 64 million people died as a direct result of the Communist Revolution in China.
On August 10, 1973, an American banker, David Rockefeller, wrote about Marxism in China in the New York Times newspaper: “Whatever the price of the Chinese Revolution [as many as 64,000,000 killed,] it has obviously succeeded not only in producing more efficient and dedicated administration but also in fostering high morale and community purpose.” [1]
Bolshevik Jews played a major role in exporting communism from the Soviet Union to the Chinese. Mikhail Borodin, a Bolshevik revolutionary, was sent to China to advise the Chinese elite on how to roll out and implement communism [2]. Under the guise of the Cultural Revolution, the Communist elite attempted to control every aspect of the lives of their people. The question worth pondering here is: who brought totalitarianism to China? Was it Chairman Mao Zedong or his Western advisers? “In fact, 85 to 90% of the foreigners helping the Chinese at the time of the Communist takeover were Jewish.” [3]
A training camp for Chinese revolutionaries was established in Moscow, the Sun Yat-sen Communist University, which operated from 1925 to 1930. Many of the early Chinese Communist leaders were indoctrinated there.
“After Mao’s victory over Chiang Kai-Shek’s Nationalists (who were supported by the so-called Jews and the Americans), his first act was to expel all the so-called Jews from China and expropriate all their opium-financed properties that included virtually all of Shanghai and the mainland branches of the HSBC. History written by the so-called Jews simply states that the Jews “left quickly after the war”, without specifying exactly why they left.” [4]
Shortly after the Chinese swallowed whole the Marxist ideology, in the early 1970s the Western capitalists decided it was time to transform China into a capitalist economy. Henry Kissinger, the famous Jewish Secretary of State under the Nixon Administration, travelled to convince the Chinese ruling elite of the capitalists’ plan to transfer manufacturing to mainland China.
Now fifty years on, China has become the world’s largest economy. Big enough to challenge American hegemony. It can be argued that the globalists have influenced all corners of the earth, but the impact on China has most certainly been extraordinary. What is extraordinary is that globalists continue to have a huge influence on the Chinese Communist leadership and the policymakers there.
One of the problems with communism is that the Communist Manifesto demands the abolition of private property. Without private ownership, everything belongs to the state, and this creates a huge risk of abuse. Those at the top of the hierarchy, e.g., state representatives’, control and manage the resources. Being at the bottom of the hierarchy means you are at the mercy of governing officials; thus, abuse of power should be expected.
Communists, when promoting their ideology, portray a noble vision of a harmonious world, but in reality, the result is poverty for those at the bottom of the hierarchy [5].
It seems the Antichrist, using communism, tried to imitate what Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) succeeded in doing in Arabia over 1400 years ago by unifying the Arabs and bulldozing the old pagan religion and system. But whereas in Islam the wealth flows in both directions and poverty is virtually eliminated, in communism, the system exploits the poor while the top elites live luxurious lives.
References
[1] A. R. Epperson, The New World Order, Independently published, 1989.
[2] “Mikhail Borodin,” [Online]. Available: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikhail_Borodin.
[3] L. Goldman, “A Jew in Mao’s China,” 09 July 2012. [Online]. Available: https://forward.com/schmooze/159051/a-jew-in-maos-china/.
[4] L. Romanoff, “Democracy, The Most Dangerous Religion,” 06 November 2022. [Online]. Available: https://www.moonofshanghai.com/2022/11/en-larry-romanoff-democracy-most_8.html.
[5] E. i. Chief, “15 Major Advantages and Disadvantages of Communism,” 01 01 2019. [Online]. Available: https://connectusfund.org/15-major-advantages-and-disadvantages-of-communism.




