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Binary code Mystery number three - стр. 3

The speaker fell silent and after a few seconds continued:

– If the authors of "The Call" and "The Warrior" had read the so-called foreign press, and even in English, one might have thought that they had simply rewritten a document called "The Communist Rules of the Revolution". These "Rules," supposedly discovered by Allied troops in Germany in 1919, appeared in English newspapers in February, 1946, and were reprinted hundreds of times thereafter: "1. To corrupt the youth; to lead them away from religion. To instill in them an interest in sex. 2. Destroy old moral values by false arguments… 5. Distract minds from politics by turning their attention to sports, sex books, games, and other unimportant pursuits. 6. Put all media under their control. 7. Destroy people's faith in their natural leaders by portraying them in a shameful, ridiculous and offensive way." There were other documents of the same nature. On August 24, 1960, the Los Angeles Herald published excerpts from the pamphlet "Brainwashing. An Outline of the Russian Guide to Psychopolitics." The pamphlet was published in New York in 1955 by the Ron Hubbard Foundation, science fiction writer and founder of the Church of Scientology. The Russian Guide to Psychopolitics stated, "By making drugs of all kinds available, by giving the adolescent alcohol, by praising his wildness, by feeding him sexual literature, the psychopolitician can cultivate in him the tendency to disorder, idleness, and useless pastimes that we need, and induce him to choose the solution that will give him complete freedom in all things – that is, Communism. If you can kill national pride and patriotism in the rising generation, you will conquer this country." The publication became the subject of FBI correspondence. A memo on the case ended: "The April 24, 1951 issue of the Times Herald reported that Hubbard's wife testified in divorce proceedings that he was 'hopelessly insane' and subjected her to 'torture under the guise of a scientific experiment.'" According to the article, competent medical professionals recommended that Hubbard go to a private clinic for psychiatric observation and treatment of his mental disorder known as paranoid schizophrenia." This conclusion should have been shared with anyone quoting the Dulles Plan. Although, in principle, it may be of no use to schizophrenics. They don't know they're schizophrenics. So somehow this is how Kremlin propaganda works. Draw your conclusions, and I'm done. Thank you for your attention.

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