I look around and all I can see is the world gone mad, increasingly so since the Obuma Administration. It is easy to see why the put him in. Trained as an organizer and public speaker, raised by communists, of the Muslim persuasion, his appearance being a mixture of white and color, and pleasing to the eye. Perfect candidate. And with all the political clout of the Globalists and an endless supply of financing, and gangs of subversives out to destroy all nations are seeing the fruits of their labor blossoming.
Most of the world has been totally oblivious to the aspirations of the ruling elite. With the struggling masses finding it harder and harder to obtain even their physiological needs, they have little time to stay on top of their daily schedule let alone to discern the agendas of their controllers. The education system has been so engineered as to remove even the most basic skills, putting the educational focus on the very technology that will one day make our lives a living hell.
In the face of all the manufactured disasters and diseases, what little folks have has been gobbled up leaving them hopeless and helpless desperate for something or someone who can set their world right again. Young adults, who have no comprehension of what life was like in the past, are quick to accept the promises fed to them by this society based on illusion and fantasy.
WE ARE RIPE for the coming New World Order and its TOTALITARIAN DICTATOR!
IT is so UNBELIEVABLE to me that HERE in the USA people are working toward and calling for COMMUNISM! Seriously, after 77 years of fighting the tyranny of Communism all over the World in the hope that our beloved FREE REPUBLIC could spread so that others could enjoy what we have been blessed to receive, it has been so forgotten that people believe Communism is the answer to their problems.
That is what we get for putting the education of our children in the hands of the GOVERNMENT. This should have NEVER BEEN!! NOT WITHOUT STRICT AND DILIGENT OVERSIGHT and SCRUTINY!!
We should have been so much more dedicated to improving and protecting our election process. Our main focus in education should have been to assure that every citizen could not only read but comprehend. We should have held on tight to control of the ballots so that we knew that EVERY SINGLE voter was verified and every single ballot was visually confirmed by a living, breathing person, counted and recorded. VOTING is nothing to take for granted. We should have demanded that the issues and candidates on the ballots were written in language that guaranteed everyone understood their meaning and what they represented. We allowed those who rule over us to play the tricks of devil, making themselves appear to be so high above us that we could not possibly comprehend what they put before us. All the professions deliberately use coded language to protect themselves and maintain the power they have over us and protect the incomes they receive for it.
What good does it do for people to cast their votes when they don’t really understand who or what they are voting in?
I am wandering off topic, but I said all this to cause folks to realize that WE are CULPABLE in what is happening to not only our nation, but the WORLD. As you will see in the following post, this is not just a political issue. THIS IS SPIRITUAL WAR!
The forces behind the GLOBAL PUSH for COMMUNISM comes right out of the pit of HELL. Watch the tactics being used to usher in their communist regime. There is nothing new about it. This story has been replayed throughout history. VIOLENCE, DESTRUCTION, BLOODSHED spreading misery, fear, slavery and terror, ultimately bring famine and death!
Most of the world is so distracted they don’t even see what is happening right now, let alone what is coming. I hope this post will shed light, bring awareness and help people to prepare.
Its critical American conservatives continue to advocate against all forms of collectivism. History has shown collectivism leads to oppression and death. Vladimir Lenin, Kim Jong-il, Adolf Hitler, Mao Zedong, Pol Pot are just a fews names linked to collectivist societies. These men all share a common theme, they were evil oppressive dictators who murdered and imprisoned people who were opposed to the “collective good”.
While greed leads to the destruction of a collectivist society, in a free society, greed is actually good. Greed in a capitalist society leads to job creation, wealth creation and overall improvements to standards of living. Greed is slightly regulated through limited government in most capitalist societies.
Collectivism has killed and oppressed more people than most wars and diseases. With so much historical evidence illustrating the disfunction of collectivism. Why does the left continue to insist collectivism will work? Listen to Rob North, Bernie North and myself answer this question via an in depth conversation regarding the romanticizing of communism. and myself answer this question via an in depth conversation regarding the romanticizing of communism. Listen here No longer available
Opinion: The Danger of Romanticizing Marxism in the Humanities

While hiking last October in Seoul, a North Korean refugee shared her story with me of how she gained freedom from an oppressive regime. First, she escaped to Laos. However, even once she arrived there, she had to carefully hide her identity. Laos and North Korea are close allies, and if discovered, she would have been sent back to the country, or simply killed. She then ventured on to China, evading authorities while learning Chinese. Finally, she made it to South Korea and found the non-profit, Liberty in North Korea (LiNK). They helped her gain citizenship, make connections, and learn English. I was interning as an English tutor for LiNK while studying abroad at Kyung Hee University when we met.
Through her and others, I learned about the dark reality of life in North Korea. Their lived experience seemed to be in complete discordance with the Marxist ideology I learned about as a freshman in the English major at BYU. According to my professors, Marxism fights for the under-privileged and disadvantaged. But if this were true, why were these people risking their lives to escape a system that promised so much? Apparently, my academic introduction to communism failed to answer this crucial question, and instead of mentioning how the system actually functions, advocated for a supposedly benign, justice-seeking Marxism that has never materialized in the real world.
After the Korean War, when the Soviets aided Kim Il-Sung’s establishment of the regime, a census report was done on every single North Korean. Real-estate-owning families and those with positive attitudes towards America or democracy were immediately sentenced to life at the bottom of a caste system. Even now, regardless of caste placement, every home is required to have photos of their current leader, Kim Jung-Un.
Additionally, every home must have a state-run radio that is required to be on at all times. The only information legally available to North Koreans comes straight from the regime. If anyone is overheard and reported as being critical, they are sent to re-education camps. To quote Yeonmi Park, a North Korean refugee living in the US, “North Koreans, in effect, are abducted at birth – and made slaves to the regime.”
During an English lesson I was teaching, I learned their currency only goes up to 5,000 won which is roughly 3 USD. They also have in circulation Chinese Yuan and American USD that North Koreans use on the black market. No new US dollars have come into North Korea since the 1950s, but they’re still using them because the government put limitations on their own financial system. This limitation and their tightly controlled command economy make it impossible to prosper financially.
My friend from the hike is now South Korean and visits China and Laos periodically to see friends. However, the injustices given to her at birth by the regime aren’t magically fixed by having papers declaring legality. When in Seoul, she’s nearer to her North Korean family than BYU students are to their families in St. George, but a field of landmines prevents her from ever seeing them.
Until I had spent time with refugees like her, I had a typical Gen-Z view of Marxism: it’s the only ideology that offers equality. As an English major, I’d grown comfortable with Marxism being painted as “the gospel of the underdog.” My professors gave pretexts before teaching Marxist theory that would go as follows: “This man has been misrepresented. He wrote in solidarity for the marginalized.” They would then explain that Marx wrote the Communist Manifesto as a reaction against injustices in England in 1848.
The kind-looking, grandfatherly Marx wrote the rhetoric that inspired the Soviet Union and North Korea. Governments established on his ideas are responsible for the Holodomor and push thousands of North Koreans yearly, including my friends, to leave everything to escape a regime with working conditions worse than the poor, unfortunate English of the 19th century. As for equality, Kim Jung Un gorges himself while commanding the poor to collect human feces to use as fertilizer.
Exploring ideas and influential ideologies in academia should not stop, but students need to be taught the real-life outcomes of those ideas. Across academia, Communism and Socialism are painted with rainbow colors while the people living under those respective governments don’t have a word for love.
In the English major specifically, understanding the history of rhetorical theory and interpretation is foundational for a clear conception of modern critical theory. This term describes ways of interpreting various texts and stands as the method of reading with different “lenses.” Lenses help readers get outside their biases and see the text more completely.
While it may seem that academia and critical theory are far removed from normal society, pop culture and film reflect the same ideas that are taught at the university. For example, my critical theory textbook (Lois Tyson’s Critical Theory Today) teaches that:
“Marxism, a non-repressive ideology, acknowledges that it is an ideology. Marxism works to make us constantly aware of all the ways in which we are products of material/historical circumstances and of the repressive ideologies that serve to bind us to this fact in order to keep us subservient to the ruling power system.”
Today’s academics consider Marxism to be a non-repressive ideology while critiquing the supposedly repressive system of capitalism. The Oxford Dictionary defines “repressive” as “cultural or political oppression, esp. when sanctioned or carried out by the state.” In essence, Tyson argues that Marxism gives freedom while capitalism culturally and politically oppresses. The inability to criticize the regime, the lockdown of borders, and the complete censorship of public information in North Korea suggest that this theory is completely contradicted by reality.
Academic views of Marxism are often reflected in the media, as seen recently in Netflix’s 2019 hit Korean series, Crash Landing on You. It was widely praised for humanizing North Koreans. It tells the story of a rich South Korean woman paragliding on a windy day, getting blown over the 38th parallel, and landing indirectly in the North Korean protagonist’s arms.
Publicly, the North Korean regime describes itself as a “Socialist Fairyland,” and the show mostly goes along with that propagandistic presentation. When the heroine is introduced to a small North Korean village, she observes well-fed children in perfect matching uniforms heading off in lines to school, and when a villager is caught with a South Korean rice cooker, a government official gives her a warning look and takes it for herself.
“Humanizing” North Koreans is not accomplished by downplaying their suffering. Downplaying their suffering reinforces the regime’s façade that Marxism is still working. It doesn’t work. While Netflix romanticized life in a small North Korean village in Crash Landing on You, they simultaneously depicted South Korea’s capitalistic society as hell in “Squid Game.” In this series, 456 South Koreans subject themselves to physical and psychological torture (all dying except one) in their wish of pulling themselves out of capitalism’s greedy grip.
In contrast, when North Koreans make it to South Korea, they feel like they’re time-traveling. They have a saying: “it feels like going 50 years into the future when you get to Seoul.” In the 1950s, South Korea’s per capita income was less than $100 a year. Today it is nearly $33,000. Meanwhile in North Korea, only the party leaders prosper.
There is actual real danger in romanticizing Marxism without explaining how it currently operates in the world. Pop culture and academia are the first eager entities to jump on the train with bleeding white letters on the side declaring, “CAPITALISM IS THE ROOT OF ALL EVIL,” but turn a blind eye when governments inspired by Marxist ideology force indigenous groups into concentration camps, sterilize those seen as unfit for reproduction, break treaties, incite genocide through pre-meditated famine, and unify their parties by murdering 750,000 people.
I learned how heartbreaking the effects of Marxist theory in North Korea are, not from humanities professors with PhDs, but from kids my age who went through hell and back just to not have to wonder what it feels like to have a full belly. Another North Korean refugee friend posted on his Instagram story a photo of the stars above him in Seoul, saying how it comforts him that his mom is staring at those same stars only 200 miles away.
During an English lesson, when asked where she would travel if she could, my tutee responded, “North Korea.” She told me explicitly that it wasn’t the government she wanted to return to; it was her family. She has no possible way of communicating with them. The barrier between her family and her is like the barrier between the dead and the living.
As a student studying the humanities, I had completely missed real humanity. It’s blatantly obvious that students and professors in my major and various other humanities departments are there because they care about people and creating just societies. That’s why it’s so dangerous to advocate for idealized Marxism, which has proven to inevitably create perpetual human inequality, without describing how it has functioned and continues to function in the world. If professors in the humanities are genuinely interested in the equality of underprivileged, lower-class minorities, it is imperative that they start teaching the reality of the nature of Marxism. This is not a political issue; it’s a human rights issue. Stop sweeping human greed enabled by faulty systems under the rug while my friends’ families starve north of the 38th parallel. Written by: Eva Terry
spacer
The Dangers of Romanticizing Communism
spacer
spacer
Communism is characterized by a lack of private property
Communism
123 Views – 1 week ago
The quote “Those who don’t study history are doomed to repeat it” is often attributed to philosopher George Santayana, emphasizing the importance of learning from past mistakes to avoid making them again.
Origin of the Quote
Meaning and Implications
Variations and Misattributions
In summary, the quote serves as a powerful reminder of the value of historical knowledge and the lessons it imparts, urging individuals and societies to reflect on their past to build a better future.
This is exactly why those who rule over us now and throughout history, have done everything in their power to rewrite history and/or erase all memory of the portions of our past that do not suit the agenda! They have been very successful in this effort, and they know that once they rid themselves of remainder of those who still remember life as it was, they will secure their control over the bodies, minds and souls of those who have been programmed appropriately. The baby-boomer generation is still hanging on but death comes to all. Soon there will be none of us left.
spacer
spacer
Communism Isn’t Cool, It’s Deadly
To dispel the myth of communism as some utopian, hip, climate-friendly alternative to free-market capitalism, it’s critically important to distinguish between the idealized version of communism presented in popular culture and the harsh reality of its implementation in real life.
Over the last few decades, there has been a resurgence of interest in — and support for — communism among America’s younger generations.
In 2019, the Independent reported that “More than a third of millennials in the US now approve of communism, while the popularity of capitalism has plummeted since 2018, according to YouGov polling. The survey found just 57 percent of 23 to 38-year-olds believe the Declaration of Independence better ‘guarantees freedom and equality’ than the Communist Manifesto, with only 50 percent viewing capitalism favorably.” huh, and just how do you think that came to be? THROUGH OUR ‘PUBLIC’ School System, that is how. Our taxpayer dollars going to brainwash our children.
Or, as Glenn Beck asked in 2010, “How did communism become cool?”
There’s no doubt that communism has been given a facelift over the last few decades. But behind the glamorized red mask is the same hammer and sickle — and mountains of skeletons.
In this article, I want to consider how communism became cool, remind readers of the truth about communism’s failures, and encourage college students to reject communism — because when you know the truth, you know it’s not cool, it’s deadly. “You shall know the truth and the truth will set you free!”
How Communism Became Cool
For much of the 20th century, communism was rightly recognized as the antithesis of American values. The Cold War pitted the capitalist and Christian West against the communist and atheistic East, and anti-communist sentiment was deeply ingrained in American society. However, with the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, the direct opposition to communist ideology began to wane, particularly among those who did not live through the era.
Also to blame are the public education system and mainstream media for not adequately educating young people about the historical and moral failings of communism. A report by the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation highlights a lack of understanding among young Americans about the atrocities committed under communist regimes. This lack of history contributes to the romanticized view of communism as a “fairer” system than capitalism.
Compounding their failure to teach the truth about communism, the American public education system and our institutions of higher education have instead brainwashed students into seeing all of life through a critical theory and cultural Marxist lens of the “oppressors” vs. the “oppressed.” This is drawn directly from Karl Marx’s teaching and is the philosophical basis of communism in all of its forms, both economic and ideological.
Other cultural and political influences have helped popularize this disastrous system. Icons like Che Guevara, with his revolutionary spirit and iconic image, have been romanticized and turned into fashionable symbols on T-shirts and posters. The Occupy Wall Street movement, which protested corporate greed and “income inequality,” also drew attention to the flaws of capitalist systems, leading some to seek alternatives like communism.
Moreover, political figures like Bernie Sanders, a self-proclaimed democratic socialist, have gained popularity among young voters by advocating for progressive (i.e. communist) policies such as free healthcare and education. While Sanders’ platform may not be strictly communist, his socialist-leaning ideas have sparked conversations about wealth redistribution and social welfare programs, which are core tenets of communist ideology. Feel the Bern? You definitely will when the famine hits.
Finally, there is a direct link between communism and the growing radical “climate change” agenda, which has captured youth across the world. Climate alarmists have convinced the newest generations that the world is dying (it isn’t) or that it’s “overpopulated (it’s not), and the false perception that capitalism is responsible for these issues has driven many Millennials and Zoomers to consider communism as a viable alternative (it’s not).
To dispel the myth of communism as some utopian, hip, climate-friendly alternative to free-market capitalism, it’s critically important to distinguish between the idealized version of communism presented in popular culture and the harsh reality of its implementation in real life.
The Truth About Communism’s Death Toll
One of the most chilling aspects of communism is its staggering death toll. From the Soviet Union under Stalin to Mao Zedong’s China, communist regimes have been responsible for the deaths of millions of people through forced labor camps, political purges, and mass starvation. The oppressive nature of these regimes, which sought to control every aspect of society, led to widespread suffering and loss of life on an unprecedented scale.
Stalin’s Great Purge in the 1930s resulted in the deaths of an estimated 700,000 to 1.5 million people, including political opponents, intellectuals, and ordinary citizens deemed disloyal to the regime. The forced collectivization of agriculture in the Soviet Union under Stalin’s rule also led to the man-made famine known as the Holodomor, which claimed the lives of millions of Ukrainians.
Similarly, Mao Zedong’s Great Leap Forward in China, aimed at rapidly industrializing the country, resulted in a catastrophic famine that killed an estimated 15 to 45 million people between 1959 and 1961. The brutal tactics used by the Chinese Communist Party to maintain control and suppress dissent led to widespread human rights abuses and a climate of fear and distrust among the population. This eventually led to the Cultural Revolution, an effort by Mao to “purify the ranks” by manipulating indoctrinated students to inflict a red terror on the populace through struggle sessions, violence, chaos, and mass killings. As many as two million people died as a result, and society gained nothing but “grave disorder, damage, and retrogression.”
The death toll of communism extends beyond these infamous examples to include many other countries that have experienced the devastating consequences of communist rule. From Yugoslavia under Tito to Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge to North Korea’s oppressive regime, the legacy of communism is stained with bloodshed and tyranny. It is vital for college students, who are shaping their political beliefs and values, to be aware of these historical atrocities and reject any romanticized notions of communism.
Why Communism Should Be Rejected by College Kids
Do you like freedom? Affordable food? Good infrastructure? Do you like being alive? Then you should reject communism.
Do you want to be able to raise a family in freedom and prosperity? Own a home? Run a business? Then you should reject communism.
Do you want to be able to speak your mind freely, without fear of being sent to the Gulags?
Then reject communism.
As you embark on your academic and professional journey as a college student, you have a unique opportunity to critically engage with different ideologies and worldviews. While it’s good to explore diverse perspectives and challenge conventional wisdom (while never rejecting biblical truth), communism is not something to flirt with. Or seriously consider. Or celebrate with an edgy T-shirt.
Communism’s commitment to total state control, central planning, and atheistic philosophy are antithetical to the principles of Christianity, individual freedom, innovation, and personal responsibility — all things that are essential for a thriving society. By concentrating power in the hands of a select few, communism invariably stifles freedom of religion, creativity, entrepreneurship, and independent thought, leading to stagnation, economic hardship, purges, and death.
Furthermore, the utopian promises of communism, such as the elimination of social classes and the creation of a classless society, have proven to be unattainable in practice. Instead, communist regimes have perpetuated inequality, corruption, and oppression, creating a privileged ruling class that benefits at the expense of the general population. Because without GOD men’s hearts are bent on only evil all the time.
As you sit in your university lecture halls, immersed in intellectual discourse, I urge you to consider the weight of the ideas that are being presented to you.
If you’re at a strong, conservative, Christian university, like Liberty, I’m confident that your professors won’t be glorifying communism. But some of your classmates might. And the world around you — TikTok, Instagram, the news media — definitely will.
They will try to sell you false gods and fake saviors, wrapped in the form of new ideas. And one of those ideas will be communism, a system that has been responsible for the suffering and death of millions.
Communism, in theory, promises equality and prosperity for all. In practice, however, it has consistently led to the opposite: oppression, poverty, and death. The history of communist regimes is riddled with stories of people who were stripped of their freedom, denied their basic rights, and even executed for daring to think differently.
Young minds, do not be seduced by the allure of communism’s promises. Instead, embrace the values of Christianity, a biblical worldview, freedom, and the pursuit of happiness. These ideas are what have made our society great.
The Berlin Wall fell for a reason. It would be foolish to consider trying to rebuild it — and all it represents — today.
Communism may promise equality, but it does so at the cost of faith and freedom. So do not let the siren song of utopian ideals lure you into a system that has caused so much pain and suffering — no matter how cool the confused world manages to make it look.
spacer
copyright owned by Fox Businessif it’s not on corporate mainstream fake news disinformation media it’s got to be true
spacer
spacer
THE ETERNAL ENEMY OF MANKINDBy DR. JAMES P. WICKSTROM
Communist Satanists are planning to commit a Bolshevik Revolution against Americans. Their plan is to complete the destruction of the USA on or before 2025. Many think the Covid-19 PLANdemic Hoax is their END GAME PLAN.
spacer
“United Nations And Hamas Are In Bed Together” Melanie Phillips | The Winston Marshall Show

Communism






















NBC News
