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			PROTOCOL 10
 
			
			PREPARING FOR POWER
 
			
			Camouflaged political freedom – Universal suffrage – The rise of 
			republics – Transition to masonic despotism – Proclamation of the 
			"Lord of all the World" – Inoculation of diseases  
				
				1. To-day I begin with a repetition of what I said before, and I beg 
			you to bear in mind that governments and people are content, in the 
			political, with outside appearances. And how, indeed, are the goyim 
			to perceive the underlying meaning of things, when their 
			representatives give the best of their energies to enjoying 
			themselves? For our policy, it is of the greatest importance to take 
				cognizance of this detail; it will be of assistance to us, when we 
			come to consider the division of authority of property; of the 
			dwelling; of taxation (the idea of concealed taxes); of the reflex 
			force of the laws. All these questions are such as ought not to be 
			touched upon directly and openly before the people. In cases where 
			it is indispensable to touch upon them, they must not be 
			categorically named; it must merely be declared, without detailed 
			exposition, that the principles of contemporary law are acknowledged 
			by us. The reason; of keeping silence in this respect; is that, by 
			not naming a principle, we leave ourselves freedom of action, to 
			drop this or that out of it, without attracting notice; if they were 
			all categorically named, they would all appear to have been already 
			given.
 2. The mob cherishes a special affection and respect for the 
			geniuses of political power and accepts all their deeds of violence 
			with the admiring response: "rascally, well, yes, it is rascally, 
			but it’s clever!...a trick, if you like, but how craftily played, 
			how magnificently done, what impudent audacity!".…
 
 
				OUR GOAL - WORLD POWER 
				3. We count upon attracting all nations to the task of erecting the 
			new fundamental structure, the project for which has been drawn up 
			by us. This is why, before everything, it is indispensable for us to 
			arm ourselves and to store up, in ourselves, that absolutely 
			reckless audacity and irresistible might of the spirit which; in the 
			person of our active workers; will break down all hindrances on our 
			way.
 4. When we have accomplished our coup d’etat we shall say then to 
			the various peoples: "Everything has gone terribly badly, all have 
			been worn out with sufferings. We are destroying the causes of your 
			torment – nationalities; frontiers; differences of coinages. You are 
			at liberty, of course, to pronounce sentence upon us, but can it 
			possibly be a just one, if it is confirmed by you, before you make 
			any trial of what we are offering you."….Then will the mob exalt us 
			and bear us up in their hands in a unanimous triumph of hopes and 
			expectations. Voting; which we have made the instrument which will 
			set us on the throne of the world, by teaching even the very 
			smallest units of members of the human race to vote, by means of 
			meetings and agreements by groups; will then have served its 
			purposes and will play its part then, for the last time, by a 
			unanimity of desire to make close acquaintances with us before 
			condemning us.
 
 5. To secure this we must have everybody vote without distinction of 
			classes and qualifications, in order to establish an absolute 
			majority, which cannot be got from the educated propertied classes. 
			In this way, by inculcating in all a sense of self-importance, we 
			shall destroy among the goyim the importance of the family and its 
			educational value and remove the possibility of individual minds 
			splitting off, for the mob, handled by us, will not let them come to 
			the front, nor even give them a hearing; it is accustomed to listen 
			only to us who pay it for obedience and attention. In this way we 
			shall create a blind, mighty force, which will never be in a 
			position to move in any direction, without the guidance of our 
			agents, set at its head, by us, as leaders of the mob. The people 
			will submit to this regime, because it will know, that upon these 
			leaders will depend its earnings, gratifications and the receipt of 
			all kinds of benefits.
 
 6. A scheme of government should come ready made from one brain, 
			because it will never be clinched firmly if it is allowed to be 
			split into fractional parts in the minds of many. It is allowable, 
			therefore, for us to have cognizance of the scheme of action but not 
			to discuss it, lest we disturb its artfulness; the interdependence 
			of its component parts; the practical force of the secret meaning of 
			each clause. To discuss and make alterations in a labour of this 
			kind, by means of numerous votings, is to impress upon it the stamp 
			of all reasoning and misunderstandings which have failed to 
			penetrate the depth and extent of its plottings. We want our schemes 
			to be forcible and suitably concocted. Therefore we ought not to 
			fling the work of genius of our guide to the fangs of the mob, or 
			even to a select company.
 
 7. These schemes will not turn existing institutions upside down 
			just yet. They will only effect changes in their economy and 
			consequently in the whole combined movement of their progress, which 
			will thus be directed along the paths laid down in our schemes.
 
 
				POISON OF LIBERALISM 
				8. Under various names there exists, in all countries, approximately 
			one and the same thing: Representation; Ministry; Senate; State 
			Council; Legislative and Executive Corps. I need not explain to you 
			the mechanism of the relation of these institutions to one another, 
			because you are aware of all that; only take note of the fact that 
			each of the above-named institutions corresponds to some important 
			function of the State, and I would beg you to remark that the word 
			"important" I apply not to the institution but to the function, 
			consequently it is not the institutions which are important but 
			their functions. These institutions have divided up among themselves 
			all the functions of government – administrative; legislative; 
			executive; wherefore they have come to operate as do the organs in 
			the human body. If we injure one part in the machinery of State, the 
			State falls sick, like a human body, and ...will die.
 9. When we introduced into the State organism the poison of 
			Liberalism its whole political complexion underwent a change. States 
			have been seized with a mortal illness – blood poisoning. All that 
			remains is to await the end of their death agony.
 
 10. Liberalism produced Constitutional States, which took the place 
			of what was the only safeguard of the goyim, namely, Despotism; and 
			a constitution , as you well know, is nothing else but a school of 
			discords, misunderstandings, quarrels, disagreements, fruitless 
			party agitations, party whims – in a word, a school of everything 
			that serves to destroy the personality of State activity. The 
			tribune of the "talkeries" has; no less effectively than 
				the Press; 
			condemned the rulers to inactivity and impotence, and thereby 
			rendered them useless and superfluous, for which reason indeed they 
			have been, in many countries, deposed. Then it was that the era of 
			republics became a possibility that could be realized, and then it 
			was that we replaced the ruler by a caricature of a government – by 
			a president, taken from the mob, from the midst of our puppet 
			creatures, or slaves. This was the foundation of the mine which we 
			have laid under the goy people, I should rather say, under the goy 
			peoples.
 
 
				WE NAME PRESIDENTS 
				11. In the near future we shall establish the responsibility of 
			presidents.
 12. By that time, we shall be in a position to disregard forms, in 
			carrying through matters for which our impersonal puppet will be 
			responsible. What do we care if the ranks of those striving for 
			power should be thinned, if there should arise a deadlock from the 
			impossibility of finding presidents, a deadlock which will finally 
				disorganize the country? ....
 
 13. In order that our scheme may produce this result we shall 
			arrange elections in favor of such presidents as have in their past 
			some dark, undiscovered stain, some "Panama" or other – then they 
			will be trustworthy agents for the accomplishment of our plans, out 
			of fear of revelations and from the natural desire of everyone who 
			has attained power, namely, the retention of the privileges, 
			advantages and honor connected with the office of president. The 
			chamber of deputies will provide cover for, will protect, will elect 
			presidents, but we shall take from it the right to propose new, or 
			make changes in existing laws, for this right will be given by us to 
			the responsible president, a puppet in our hands. Naturally, the 
			authority of the presidents will then become a target for every 
			possible form of attack, but we shall provide him with a means of 
			self-defense in the right of an appeal to the people, for the 
			decision of the people over the heads of their representatives, that 
			is to say, an appeal to that some blind slave of ours – the majority 
			of the mob. Independently of this we shall invest the president with 
			the right of declaring a state of war. We shall justify this last 
			right on the ground that the president as chief of the whole army of 
			the country must have it at his disposal, in case of need for the 
				defense of the new republican constitution, the right to defend 
			which will belong to him as the responsible representative of this 
			constitution.
 
 14. It is easy to understand, that; in these conditions; the key of 
			the shrine will lie in our hands, and no one outside ourselves will 
			any longer direct the force of legislation.
 
 15. Besides this we shall, with the introduction of the new 
			republican constitution, take from the Chamber the right of 
			interpolation on government measures, on the pretext of preserving 
			political secrecy, and, further, we shall, by the new constitution, 
			reduce the number of representatives to a minimum, thereby 
			proportionately reducing political passions and the passion for 
			politics. If, however, they should, which is hardly to be expected, 
			burst into flame, even in this minimum, we shall nullify them by a 
			stirring appeal and a reference to the majority of the whole 
			people....Upon the president will depend the appointment of 
			presidents and vice-presidents of the Chamber and the Senate. 
			Instead of constant sessions of Parliaments we shall reduce their 
			sittings to a few months. Moreover, the president, as chief of the 
			executive power, will have the right to summon and dissolve 
			Parliament, and, in the latter case, to prolong the time for the 
			appointment of a new parliamentary assembly. But, in order that the 
			consequences of all these acts; which in substance are illegal; 
			should not; prematurely for our plans; fall upon the responsibility, 
			established by us, of the president: we shall instigate ministers 
			and other officials of the higher administration about the president 
			to evade his dispositions, by taking measures of their own, for 
			doing which they will be made the scapegoats in his place....This 
			part we especially recommend to be given to be played by the Senate; 
			the Council of State; or the Council of Ministers; but not to an 
			individual official.
 
 16. The president will, at our discretion, interpret the sense of 
			such of the existing laws as admit of various interpretation; he 
			will further annul them when we indicate to him the necessity to do 
			so, besides this, he will have the right to propose temporary laws, 
			and even new departures in the government constitutional working, 
			the pretext, both for the one and the other, being the requirements 
			for the supreme welfare of the State.
 
 
				WE SHALL DESTROY 
				17. By such measure we shall obtain the power of destroying, little 
			by little, step by step, all; that at the outset, when we enter on 
			our rights, we are compelled to introduce into the constitutions of 
			States; to prepare for the transition to an imperceptible abolition 
			of every kind of constitution, and then the time is come to turn 
			every form of government into our despotism.
 18. The recognition of our despot may also come before the 
			destruction of the constitution; the moment for this recognition 
			will come when the peoples, utterly wearied by the irregularities 
			and incompetence – a matter which we shall arrange for – of their 
			rulers, will clamor: "Away with them and give us one king over all 
			the Earth who will unite us and annihilate the causes of disorders – 
			frontiers; nationalities; religions; State debts – who will give us 
			peace and quiet which we cannot find under our rulers and 
			representatives."
 
 19. But you yourselves know perfectly well, that to produce the 
			possibility of the expression of such wishes, by all the nations, it 
			is indispensable, to trouble, in all countries, the people’s 
			relations with their governments, so as to utterly exhaust humanity 
			with dissension; hatred; struggle; envy and even by the use of 
			torture; by starvation; by the inoculation of disease; by want, so 
			that the goyim see no other course open to them than to take refuge 
			in our complete sovereignty in money and in all else.
 
 20. But if we give the nations of the world a breathing-space the 
			moment we long for is hardly likely ever to arrive.
 
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			PROTOCOL 11  
			 THE TOTALITARIAN STATE
 
			The new constitution – Abolition of the rights of man – "Show" army 
			of masonic lodges  
				
				1. The State Council has been, as it were, the emphatic expression 
			of the authority of the ruler: it will be, as the "show" part of the 
			Legislative Corps, what may be called the editorial committee of the 
			laws and decrees of the ruler.
 2. This, then, is the program of the new constitution. We shall make 
			Law, Right and Justice (1) in the guise of proposals to the 
			Legislative Corps; (2) by decrees of the president under the guise 
			of general regulations, of orders of the Senate and of resolutions 
			of the State Council in the guise of ministerial orders; (3) and in 
			case a suitable occasion should arise – in the form of a revolution 
			in the State.
 
 3. Having established approximately the modus agendi, we will occupy 
			ourselves with details of those combinations by which we have still 
			to complete the revolution in the course of the machinery of State 
			in the direction already indicated. By ’those combinations’, I mean 
			the freedom of the Press; the right of association; freedom of 
			conscience; the voting principle; and many another that must 
			disappear for ever from the memory of man, or undergo a radical 
			alteration the day after the promulgation of the new constitution. 
			It is only at the moment that we shall be able at once to announce 
			all our orders, for, afterwards, every noticeable alteration will be 
			dangerous, for the following reasons: if this alteration be brought 
			in with harsh severity and in a sense of severity and limitations, 
			it may lead to a feeling of despair caused by fear of new 
			alterations in the same direction; if, on the other hand, it be 
			brought in a sense of further indulgences it will be said that we 
			have recognized our own wrong-doing and this will destroy the 
			prestige of the infallibility of our authority, or else it will be 
			said that we have become alarmed and are compelled to show a 
			yielding disposition, for which we shall get no thanks because it 
			will be supposed to be compulsory ... Both the one and the other are 
			injurious to the prestige of the new constitution. What we want is 
			that from the first moment of its promulgation, while the peoples of 
			the world are still stunned by the accomplished fact of the 
			revolution, still in a condition of terror and uncertainty, they 
			should recognize once and for all that we are so strong, so 
			inexpugnable, so super-abundantly filled with power, that in no case 
			shall we take any account of them, and so far from paying any 
			attention to their opinions or wishes, we are ready and able to 
			crush with irresistible power all expression or manifestation 
			thereof at every moment and in every place, that we have seized at 
			once everything we wanted and shall in no case divide our power with 
			them ... Then in fear and trembling they will close their eyes to 
			everything, and be content to await what will be the end of it all.
 
 
				WE ARE WOLVES 
				4. The goyim are a flock of sheep, and we are their wolves. And you 
			know what happens when the wolves get hold of the flock?....
 5. There is another reason also why they will close their eyes: for 
			we shall keep promising them to give back all the liberties we have 
			taken away as soon as we have quelled the enemies of peace and tamed 
			all parties...
 
 6. It is not worth to say anything about how long a time they will 
			be kept waiting for this return of their liberties...
 
 7. For what purpose then have we invented this whole policy and 
			insinuated it into the minds of the goy, without giving them any 
			chance to examine its underlying meaning? For what, indeed, if not 
			in order to obtain, in a roundabout way, what is, for our scattered 
			tribe, unattainable by the direct road? It is this which has served 
			as the basis for our organization of secret Masonry which is not 
			known to, and aims which are not even so much as suspected by these 
			goy cattle, attracted by us to the "show" army of Masonic Lodges, in 
			order to throw dust in the eyes of their fellows.
 
 8. God has granted to us, His Chosen People, the gift of the 
			dispersion, and in this which appears in all eyes to be our 
			weakness, has come forth all our strength, which has now brought us 
			to the threshold of sovereignty over all the world.
 
 9. There now remains not much more for us to build up upon the 
			foundation we have laid.
 
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			PROTOCOL 12 
 
			CONTROL OF THE PRESS 
			Masonic "freedom" – Control of printing and publishing – Vishnu, 
			idol of the Press  
				
				1. The word "freedom," which can be interpreted in various ways, is 
			defined by us as follows -
 2. Freedom is the right to do that which the law allows. This 
			interpretation of the word will at the proper time be of service to 
			us, because all freedom will thus be in our hands, since the laws 
			will abolish or create only that which is desirable for us, 
			according to the aforesaid program.
 
 3. We shall deal with the press in the following way: what is the 
			part played by the press to-day? It serves to excite and inflame 
			those passions which are needed for our purpose, or else it serves 
			selfish ends of parties. It is often vapid; unjust; mendacious; and 
			the majority of the public have not the slightest idea what ends the 
			press really serves. We shall saddle and bridle it with a tight 
			curb: we shall do the same also with all productions of the printing 
			press, for where would be the sense of getting rid of the attacks of 
			the press if we remain targets for pamphlets and books? The produce 
			of publicity, which nowadays is a source of heavy expense owing to 
			the necessity of censoring it, will be turned by us into a very 
			lucrative source of income to our State: we shall law on it a 
			special stamp tax and require deposits of caution-money before 
			permitting the establishment of any organ of the press or of 
			printing offices; these will then have to guarantee our government 
			against any kind of attack on the part of the press. For any attempt 
			to attack us, if such still be possible, we shall inflict fines 
			without mercy. Such measures as stamp tax, deposit of caution-money 
			and fines secured by these deposits, will bring in a huge income to 
			the government. It is true that party organs might not spare money 
			for the sake of publicity, but these we shall shut up at the second 
			attack upon us. No one shall with impunity lay a finger on the 
			aureole of our government infallibility. The pretext for stopping 
			any publication will be the alleged plea that it is agitating the 
			public mind without occasion or justification. I beg you to note 
			that among those making attacks upon us will also be organs 
			established by us, but they will attack exclusively points that we 
			have pre-determined to alter.
 
 
				WE CONTROL THE PRESS 
				4. Not a single announcement will reach the public without our 
			control. Even now this is already being attained by us inasmuch as 
			all news items are received by a few agencies, in whose offices they 
			are focused from all parts of the world. These agencies will then be 
			already entirely ours and will give publicity only to what we 
			dictate to them.
 5. If already now we have contrived to possess ourselves of the 
			minds of the goy communities to such an extent that they all come 
			near, looking upon the events of the world through the colored 
			glasses of those spectacles we are setting astride their noses; if 
			already now there is not a single State where there exist for us any 
			barriers to admittance into what goy stupidity calls State secrets: 
			what will our positions be then, when we shall be acknowledged 
			supreme lords of the world in the person of our king of all the 
			world...
 
 6. Let us turn again to the future of the printing press. Every one 
			desirous of being a publisher, librarian, or printer, will be 
			obliged to provide himself with the diploma instituted therefore, 
			which, in case of any fault, will be immediately impounded. With 
			such measures the instrument of thought will become an educative 
			means in the hands of our government, which will no longer allow the 
			mass of the nation to be led astray in by-ways and fantasies about 
			the blessings of progress. Is there any one of us who does not know 
			that these phantom blessings are the direct roads to foolish 
			imaginings, which give birth to anarchical relations of men among 
			themselves and towards authority, because progress, or rather the 
			idea of progress, has introduced the conception of every kind of 
			emancipation, but has failed to establish its limits.…All the 
			so-called liberals are anarchists, if not in fact, at any rate in 
			thought. Every one of them is hunting after phantoms of freedom, and 
			falling exclusively into license, that is, into the anarchy of 
			protest for the sake of protest.…
 
 
				FREE PRESS DESTROYED 
				7. We turn to the periodical press. We shall impose on it, as on all 
			printed matter, stamp taxes per sheet and deposits of caution-money, 
			and books of less than 30 sheets will pay double. We shall reckon 
			them as pamphlets in order, on the one hand, to reduce the number of 
			magazines, which are the worst form of printed poison, and, on the 
			other, in order that this measure may force writers into such 
			lengthy productions that they will be little read, especially as 
			they will be costly. At the same time what we shall publish 
			ourselves to influence mental development; in the direction laid 
			down for our profit; will be cheap and will be read voraciously. The 
			tax will bring vapid literary ambitions within bounds and the 
			liability to penalties will make literary men dependent upon us. And 
			if there should be any found who are desirous of writing against us, 
			they will not find any person eager to print their productions. 
			Before accepting any production for publication the publisher or 
			printer will have to apply to the authorities for permission to do 
			so. Thus we shall know beforehand of all tricks preparing against us 
			and shall nullify them by getting ahead with explanations on the 
			subject treated of.
 8. Literature and journalism are two of the most important educative 
			forces, and therefore our government will become proprietor of the 
			majority of the journals. This will neutralize the injurious 
			influence of the privately-owned press and will put us in possession 
			of a tremendous influence upon the public mind....If we give permits 
			for ten journals, we shall ourselves found thirty, and so on in the 
			same proportion. This, however, must in no wise be suspected by the 
			public. For which reason all journals published by us will be of the 
			most opposite, in appearance, tendencies and opinions, thereby 
			creating confidence in us and bringing over to us quite unsuspicious 
			opponents, who will thus fall into our trap and be rendered 
			harmless.
 
 9. In the front rank will stand organs of an official character. 
			They will always stand guard over our interests, and therefore their 
			influence will be comparatively insignificant.
 
 10. In the second rank will be the semi-official organs, whose part 
			it will be to attack the tepid and indifferent.
 
 11. In the third rank we shall set up our own; to all appearance, 
			off position; which, in at least one of its organs, will present 
			what looks like the very antipothesis to us. Our real opponents at 
			heart will accept this simulated opposition as their own and will 
			show us their cards.
 
 12. All our newspapers will be of all possible complexions – 
			aristocratic, republican, revolutionary, even anarchical – for so 
			long, of course, as the constitution exists.... Like the Indian idol 
			"Vishnu" they will have a hundred hands, and every one of them will 
			have a finger on any one of the public opinions as required. When a 
			pulse quickens these hands will lead opinion in the direction of our 
			aims, for an excited patient loses all power of judgment and easily 
			yields to suggestion. Those fools who will think they are repeating 
			the opinion of a newspaper of their own camp will be repeating our 
			opinion or any opinion that seems desirable for us. In the vain 
			belief that they are following the organ of their party they will, 
			in fact, follow the flag which we hang out for them.
 
 13. In order to direct our newspaper militia in this sense we must 
			take special and minute care in organizing this matter. Under the 
			title of central department of the press we shall institute literary 
			gatherings at which our agents will, without attracting attention, 
			issue the orders and watchwords of the day. By discussing and 
			controverting, but always superficially, without touching the 
			essence of the matter, our organs will carry on a sham fight 
			fusillade with the official newspapers solely for the purpose of 
			giving occasion for us to express ourselves more fully than could 
			well be done from the outset in official announcements, whenever, of 
			course, that is to our advantage.
 
 14. These attacks upon us will also serve another purpose, namely, 
			that our subjects will be convinced of the existence of full freedom 
			of speech and so give our agents an occasion to affirm that all 
			organs which oppose us are empty babblers, since they are incapable 
			of finding any substantial objections to our orders.
 
 
				ONLY LIES PRINTED 
				15. Methods of 
				organization like these, imperceptible to the public 
			eye but absolutely sure, are the best calculated to succeed in 
			bringing the attention and the confidence of the public to the side 
			of our government. Thanks to such methods we shall be in a position, 
			as from time to time may be required, to excite or to tranquillize 
			the public mind on political questions, to persuade or to confuse, 
			printing now truth, now lies, facts or their contradictions, 
			according as they may be well or ill received, always very 
			cautiously feeling our ground before stepping upon it....We shall 
			have a sure triumph over our opponents; since they will not have at 
			their disposition organs of the press in which they can give full 
			and final expression to their views; owing to the aforesaid methods 
			of dealing with the press. We shall not even need to refute them 
			except very superficially.
 16. Trial shots like these, fired by us in the third rank of our 
			press, in case of need, will be energetically refuted by us in our 
			semi-official organs.
 
 17. Even nowadays, already, to take only the French press, there are 
			forms which reveal masonic solidarity in acting on the watchword: 
			all organs of the press are bound together by professional secrecy; 
			like the augurs of old, not one of their numbers will give away the 
			secret of his sources of information, unless it be resolved to make 
			announcement of them. Not one journalist will venture to betray this 
			secret, for not one of them is ever admitted to practice literature 
			unless his whole past has some disgraceful sore or other....These 
			sores would be immediately revealed. So long as they remain the 
			secret of a few, the prestige of the journalist attacks the majority 
			of the country – the mob follow after him with enthusiasm.
 
 18. Our calculations are especially extended to the provinces. It is 
			indispensable for us to inflame there those hopes and impulses with 
			which we could at any moment fall upon the capital, and we shall 
			represent to the capitals that these expressions are the independent 
			hopes and impulses of the provinces. Naturally, the source of them 
			will be always one and the same – ours. We require that, until such 
			a time as we are in the plenitude of power, the capitals should find 
			themselves stifled by the provincial opinion of the nations, i.e., 
			of a majority arranged by our agentur. What we need is that; at the 
			psychological moment; the capitals should not be in a position to 
			discuss an accomplished fact for the simple reason, if for no other, 
			that it has been accepted by the public opinion of a majority in the 
			provinces.
 
 19. When we are in the period of the new regime; prior to the 
			transition to that of the assumption of our full sovereignty; we 
			must not admit any revelations by the press of any form of public 
			dishonesty; it is necessary that the new regime should be thought to 
			have so perfectly contented everybody that even criminality has 
			disappeared...Cases of the manifestation of criminality should 
			remain known only to their victims and to chance witnesses – no 
			more.
 
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			PROTOCOL 13  
			 DISTRACTIONS
 
			Daily bread – Recreation centers – The unsuspected plan
			 
				
				1. The need for daily bread forces 
				the goyim to keep silence and be 
			our humble servants. Agents taken on to our press from among the 
			goyim will, at our orders, discuss anything which it is inconvenient 
			for us to issue directly in official documents, and we meanwhile, 
			quietly amid the din of the discussion so raised, shall simply take 
			and carry through such measures as we wish and then offer them to 
			the public as an accomplished fact. No one will dare to demand the 
			abrogation of a matter once settled, all the more so as it will be 
			represented as an improvement ... And immediately the press will 
			distract the current of thought towards, new questions, (have we not 
			trained people always to be seeking something new?). Into the 
			discussions of these new questions will throw themselves those of 
			the brainless dispensers of fortunes who are not able even now to 
			understand that they have not the remotest conception about the 
			matters which they undertake to discuss. Questions of the political 
			are unattainable for any save those who have guided it already for 
			many ages, the creators.
 2. From all this you will see that, in seeming the opinion of the 
			mob, we are only facilitating the working of our machinery, and you 
			may remark that it is not for actions, but for words issued by us on 
			this or that question, that we seem to seek approval. We are 
			constantly making public declaration, that we are guided in all our 
			undertakings by the hope, joined to the conviction, that we are 
			serving the common weal.
 
 
				WE DECEIVE WORKERS 
				3. In order to distract people who may be too troublesome, from 
			discussions of questions of the political, we are now putting 
			forward what we allege to be new questions of the political, namely, 
			questions of industry. In this sphere let them discuss themselves 
			silly! The masses are agreed to remain inactive, to take a rest from 
			what they suppose to be political (which we trained them to, in 
			order to use them as a means of combating the goy governments) only 
			on condition of being found new employments, in which we are 
			prescribing them something that looks like the same political 
			object. In order that the masses themselves may not guess what they 
			are about, we further distract them with amusements; games; 
			pastimes; passions; people’s palaces….Soon we shall begin through 
			the press to propose competitions in art; in sport of all kinds: 
			these interests will finally distract their minds from questions in 
			which we should find ourselves compelled to oppose them. Growing 
			more and more dis-accustomed to reflect and form any opinions of 
			their own, people will begin to talk in the same tone as we, because 
			we alone shall be offering them new directions for thought...of 
			course through such persons as will not be suspected of solidarity 
			with us.
 4. The part played by the liberals, utopian dreamers, will be 
			finally played out when our government is acknowledged. Till such 
			time they will continue to do us good service. Therefore we shall 
			continue to direct their minds to all sorts of vain conceptions of 
			fantastic theories, new and apparently progressive: for have we not 
			with complete success turned the brainless heads of the goyim with 
			progress, till there is not among the goyim one mind able to 
			perceive that under this word (progress) lies a departure from 
			truth; in all cases where it is not a question of material 
			inventions; like a fallacious idea, serves to obscure truth; so that 
			none may know it except us, the Chosen of God, its guardians.
 
 5. When we come into our kingdom, our orators will expound great 
			problems which have turned humanity upside down, in order to bring 
			it at the end under our beneficent rule.
 
 6. Who will ever suspect then that all these peoples were 
			stage-managed by us according to a political plan which no one has 
			so much as guessed at in the course of many centuries?….
 
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			PROTOCOL 14  
			 ASSAULT ON RELIGION
 
			Destruction of existing religions and substitution of the religion 
			of Moses – A new era of slavery  
			– Pornography encouraged in 
			progressive countries  
				
				1. When we come into our kingdom it will be undesirable for us that 
			there should exist any other religion than ours of the One God with 
			Whom our destiny is bound up by our position as the Chosen People 
			and through Whom our same destiny is united with the destinies of 
			the world. We must therefore sweep away all other forms of belief. 
			If this gives birth to the atheists whom we see to-day, it will not, 
			being only a transitional stage, interfere with our views, but will 
			serve as a warning for those generations which will hearken to our 
			preaching of the religion of Moses, that, by its stable and 
			thoroughly elaborated system has brought all the peoples of the 
			world into subjection to us. Therein we shall emphasize its mystical 
			right, on which, as we shall say, all its educative power is 
			based....Then at every possible opportunity we shall publish 
			articles in which we shall make comparisons between our beneficent 
			rule and those of past ages. The blessing of tranquility, though it 
			be a tranquility forcibly brought about by centuries of agitation, 
			will throw into higher relief the benefits to which we shall point. 
			The errors of the goyim governments will be depicted by us in the 
			most vivid hues. We shall implant such an abhorrence of them that 
			the peoples will prefer tranquility, in a state of serfdom, to 
			those rights of vaunted freedom which have tortured humanity and 
			exhausted the very sources of human existence, sources which have 
			been exploited by a mob of rascally adventurers who know not what 
			they do....Useless changes of forms of government, to which we 
			instigated the goyim when we were undermining their state 
			structures, will have so wearied the peoples by that time that they 
			will prefer to suffer anything, under us, rather than run the risk 
			of enduring again all the same agitations and miseries they have 
			gone through.
 
				WE SHALL FORBID CHRIST 
				2. At the same time we shall not omit to 
				emphasize the historical 
			mistakes of the goy governments, which have tormented humanity for 
			so many centuries by their lack of understanding of everything that 
			constitutes the true good of humanity, in their chase after 
			fantastic schemes of social blessings, and have never noticed that 
			these schemes kept on producing a worse and never a better state of 
			the universal relations which are the basis of human life....
 3. The whole force of our principles and methods will lie in the 
			fact that we shall present them and expound them as a splendid 
			contrast to the dead and decomposed old order of things in social 
			life.
 
 4. Our philosophers will discuss all the shortcomings of the various 
			beliefs of the goyim. But no one will ever bring under discussion 
			our faith from its true point of view since this will be fully 
			learned by none save ours, who will never dare to betray its 
			secrets.
 
 5. In countries known as progressive and enlightened we have created 
			a senseless, filthy, abominable literature. For some time, after our 
			entrance to power, we shall continue to encourage its existence, in 
			order to provide a telling relief; by contrast; to the speeches, 
			party program, which will be distributed from exalted quarters of 
			ours....Our wise men, trained to become leaders of the goyim, will 
			compose speeches; projects; memoirs; articles; which will be used by 
			us to influence the minds of the goyim; directing them towards such 
			understanding and forms of knowledge as have been determined by us.
 
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