Posted on 05/06/2012 8:59:15 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Stress, family medical history or possibly even poison led to the death of Vladimir Lenin, contradicting a popular theory that a sexually transmitted disease debilitated the Soviet Unions founder, a UCLA neurologist said.
Dr. Harry Vinters and Russian historian Lev Lurie reviewed Lenins records Friday for an annual University of Maryland School of Medicine conference that examines the deaths of famous figures.
The conference is held yearly at the school, where researchers in the past have re-examined the diagnoses of figures including King Tut, Christopher Columbus, Simon Bolivar and Abraham Lincoln.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
Communism killed Lenin just as surely as Zero plans to kill the American Republic.
Whoever it was and whatever it was, give them a fricking medal, NOW.
Calling Mr. Putin, calling Mr. Putin, your glowing Vodka Martini is ready.
Allegedly Beria had poisoned Stalin, since he learned Stalin was about to purge the entire Politburo.
What if Lenin had lived, and blocked Stalin’s path to power?
Not much difference, really. He was just as ruthless as Stalin, just in a slightly different way.
” - - - possibly even poison led to the death of Vladimir Lenin - - - “
Maybe it was arsenic? It seems to be a Commie poison of choice - - - .
I read someplace that Stalin had three doors to his quarters. His cooks left his meals outside each door. Stalin would take one meal at random for himself, and the cooks had to eat the other two.
The accounts of Stalin’s stroke and his last few hours alive are telling. They let him lie on the floor and smirked as he wet his pants. He could only stare up at them.
Lenin was smarter than Stalin. Stalin was more brutal than Lenin, if that was possible. However, I think that Russia would have been different by some degree if Lenin has kept Stalin from power. The same for the way the Soviet Bloc would have been formed.
Also, Lenin would have to deal with Trotskyite. Stalin did, by killing him.
All theoretical constructs. Was is, is.
Lenin was smarter than Stalin. Stalin was more brutal than Lenin, if that was possible. However, I think that Russia would have been different by some degree if Lenin has kept Stalin from power. The same for the way the Soviet Bloc would have been formed.
Also, Lenin would have to deal with Trotskyite. Stalin did, by killing him.
All theoretical constructs. What is, is.
This conjecture provides yet another avenue of rationalization for the socialist left: ‘If Lenin hadn’t been poisoned by Bush - er I mean Stalin - communism would have worked and the world would be a workers paradise’. Or something like that.
Shot in the head would not seem to be a controversial diagnosis.
Overdosing on the treatment for syphilis?
His treatment was controversial. The doctors removed the bullet and probed the wound with unwashed hands. It is not certain he would have lived much longer if left less attended, but the doctors, on balance, probably did more hard (unintentionally) than good. Some speculate he might have recovered.
One of the more intriguing cases is Tycho. Tychoâs death benefited Kepler enormously. Not only did Kepler get Tychoâs job as the Holy Roman Emperor’s astronomer (a pretty lucrative gig) but he usurped (Kepler’s words) his twenty odd years of observations. Tycho had the first set of reliable, accurate, reasonably long term set of planetary observations in history. Their collection had been a major undertaking, comparable in terms of cost to Renaissance Denmark to the cost of the Apollo Program to 1960’s America. By luck they fell into the hands of one of the few people in the world with the skill and patience to exploit them. Kepler overturned both Copernicus and Ptolemy, and can be said to the first real advance in astronomy since Ptolemy. (Ptolemy was a scientific giant, by the way.)
Tycho was reported to have died of burst bladder after refusing to excuse himself to relieve himself at a royal banquet. But in fact, the human bladder is extraordinarily tough and one would urinate involuntarily long before one could burst it. Some suspect he was poisoned and Kepler alone stood to gain.
It’s not exactly controversial. The bullet entered the rear of his skull, transited the brain and ended up behind his eye. I’ve read a number of books about the assassination and none seriously contended there was any chance of his survival.
In particular, there was no way unwashed hands contributed to his death, since there was not sufficient time for this to have caused infection.
Here’s an article by a trauma physician who believes he would have died even with modern trauma center or battlefield emergency care.
http://showcase.netins.net/web/creative/lincoln/education/medical.htm
I wonder if you’re confusing his case with that of Garfield, who would almost certainly have survived with proper treatment.
Also, the bullet was not removed till the autopsy.
Well, we can't blame Castro...or can we?
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