Posted on 07/19/2024 7:48:57 PM PDT by conservative98
On Friday’s Mark Levin Show, you are watching a Communist battle taking place within a Marxist party.
The Democrat party and the media have brought us to this point. 14 million Democrats cast their votes for Biden, millions of dollars were contributed to get Biden the nomination and now they are calling for a mini primary.
A mini-primary in which there is no primary, in which the real primary voters are disenfranchised, and the man who was saving democracy and abortion-on-demand is kicked to the curb.
Like other Marxist political parties, the civil war within the Democrat Party, between the modern-day Stalinists and Trotskyites, is getting uglier by the hour.
The back-and-forth is getting increasingly vicious.
For the good of the nation and the Democrat Party, we should speak up for the 14 million disenfranchised Democrat primary voters who were deceived.
We can start a group called, Donald Trump supporters for the nomination of Joe Biden.
(Excerpt) Read more at open.spotify.com ...
I’m enjoying the lamentations of their women.
We’ve got a BIG TENT with room for many more (if they wise up).
So am I.
Yuri Andropov and Konstantin Chernyenko are getting ready for the Politburo National Convention.
And by wise up, we mean they have to abandon whatever leftist ideologies and beliefs they had, take the red pill and experience the truth for themselves.
Mark’s opening remarks:
“Well, America. That was a hell of a convention. A HELL OF A CONVENTION! And I thought the President was fantastic. People don’t understand this man. They expect him to to give a written speech or speech that’s in the teleprompter. That’s not how he rolls. He is just fantastic at it. He does what he does with the people or the Establishment or the establishment media or the radical left media, like it or not. And people started to analyze his speech after he gave it, did you see that Mr. Producer? Well I thought that - why do I need (Brit Hume and Karl Rove?) them to analyze what I just watched? I don’t. We don’t. So I texted him about a half hour later to say how fantastic, how proud we were, no need to reply. So he picks up the phone and he calls me...”
Biden is the nominee.
Isn’t replacing him.... illegal? Weren’t people arrested for being ‘alternate electors’ for Trump?
How undemocratic of the Democrats!
Classic stalin vs trotsky power struggle.
The right way to do it is to get rid of Joe Biden via the 25th Amendment.
I want Joe Potato to be the nominee!
Easier to beat. Was a mistake to debate him so early and expose what we all knew.
A Modern version of “The Death of Stalin”? Time for popcorn and a soda.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4686844/
Yuri, he got a cold and disappeared.
Father, Donald Trump Jr., in the background.
Not to worry, Comrade. We know how to do this.
I am bathing in their tears.
You can learn a lot from Russian history.
The Bolshevik-Menshevik Split
The Russian socialist movement divided on November 16th, 1903.
The 57 delegates to the Second Congress of the minuscule, quarrelsome and apparently ineffectual Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party assembled in a flea-ridden flour warehouse in Brussels on July 30th, 1903. Georgi Plekhanov, the respected veteran Russian Marxist, was elected chairman, but the delegates felt uneasy in Belgium and moved to London, where the authorities could be relied on to ignore them. Their sessions were held in an angling club with fishing trophies on the walls and in rooms in pubs and cafes. The meetings were extremely fractious, with much violent argument, barracking and interminable hair-splitting as every tiny point was dissected and analysed. It became clear that the party was split between two groups, the Bolsheviks (‘majority’) and the Mensheviks (‘minority’).
The Bolsheviks claimed the name after getting their way in a wrangle over the editorial board of the Party newspaper Iskra (‘the Spark’ – which was to ‘start a big blaze’). The Mensheviks unwisely accepted the appellation, though they were actually more often in the majority. Both groups were enthusiasts for the destruction of capitalism and the overthrow of the Tsarist regime, but the Mensheviks, led by Martov, favoured a large, loosely organised democratic party whose members could agree to differ on many points. They were prepared to work with the liberals in Russia and they had scruples about the use of violence. The Bolsheviks, led by Lenin, were hardline revolutionaries who would not have known a scruple if it bought them a drink.
Lenin had no time for democracy and no confidence in the masses. He wanted a small, tightly organised, strictly disciplined party of full-time members who did what they were told, followed the party line in every particular and would be far more difficult for the Tsarist police to infiltrate. (One of the congress’s own organising committee, as it happened, was an agent of the Russian secret police.)
In his notes at the time Lenin called his group ‘hards’ and his opponents ‘softs’. When a delegate lamented that uncomradely attitudes were spoiling the congress, Lenin sharply replied that, on the contrary, he relished a good open fight instead of endless inconclusive talk. His attitude was attacked as elitist and tyrannical. The youthful Trotsky, now and for years to come a Menshevik, reportedly told Lenin at one point, ‘That’s dictatorship you’re advocating,’ to which Lenin replied, ‘There is no other way.’
Lenin, who was now 33 (Martov was 29, Trotsky 23), had started Iskra in collaboration with Plekhanov in Munich in 1900 and he was the principal editor of the paper, to which he, Martov and Plekhanov were the main contributors. The congress decided to set up a central committee, which would oversee a new party council and a new editorial board of Iskra. Lenin was determined to gain complete control of this apparatus and succeeded in getting three Mensheviks thrown off the Iskra board. At this Martov angrily withdrew from any further involvement with the paper, leaving Lenin for the moment in command.
The congress ended on August 23rd, and on the following day Lenin, who knew London pretty well, took some of the delegates to the Natural History Museum and the Zoo, followed by a respectful visit to Karl Marx’s grave in Highgate Cemetery.
Lenin’s triumph soon turned to humiliation. At a conference of the party’s Foreign League in Geneva at the end of October Martov launched a devastating personal attack on him. The meeting had a built-in Menshevik majority and Lenin, who had tried to prevent it being held and then unsuccessfully to pack it, stormed out of the room and slammed the door behind him. On November 16th he announced his resignation from the editorial board and the party council. Iskra was henceforth a Menshevik organ. The split was now irrevocable. All attempts to mend it broke on Lenin’s intransigent hatred of the Mensheviks and he concentrated on creating an efficient machine for his obedient followers, with fateful consequences.
My comment.
As a side note, Lenin wrote Trotsky a letter before his death to at no means let Stalin become president
See post #19
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