The Soviet Empire was established at four minutes past two o'clock on the
8th of November 1917 in the Russian capital, Petrograd. In astrological
terms, the sun was just then precisely at the centre of the sign of Scorpio.
Thus Scorpio can be regarded as the symbol and guardian of Soviet power.
The
planet Pluto in turn, affects those under the direct influence of Scorpio.
In the past, Mars was said to rule Scorpio but since Pluto's discovery in
1930 and its subsequent integration into the astrological system, it has
assumed its rightful place in the sign of Scorpio. The effects of Pluto,
even before its discovery, have always been the same, whether or not they
were attributed to another planet.
The fact that the Soviet empire was born under the "wrong" planet
demonstrates the inscrutable nature of Pluto, which does not show its true
face until the time is ripe to restructure power to its own advantage. It
has recently been revealed that the Bolsheviks were well versed in
astrology.
Scorpio's field of influence includes power and financial
developments at the expense of others. This is why the power-mongers of
Scorpio need to stick together - to establish a political Mafia, in other
words. Pluto in Scorpio also involves certain hidden circumstances, which
are revealed only with the passing of time.
The astrologer E. Troinsky
claimed as early as 1956 that the Soviet Empire would break up at the
beginning of the
1990s.
Due to their vindictiveness, cunning, brutality and art of dissembling, the
wards of Scorpio are characterized as extremely dangerous opponents. Those
under the power of Scorpio are deeply materialistic extremists who like to
exploit others and neither forgive nor forget. If their aims are crossed
they become possessed by fury. They stop at nothing to reach these aims.
Their true nature remains shrouded in mystery. Scorpio's color is red and
its symbols are the vulture, the snake and the lifeless desert.
In the animal kingdom, the scorpion is known as a poisonous creature that
prefers the cover of darkness. It has been known to sting others of its kind
if they get in its way.
The reader will see that this description suited the Soviet system, its
ideology and leaders. The brutality of Soviet power is well documented. Its
ideology bore a distinct likeness to the mirage of the desert, since neither
of the two have anything at all to do with reality.
Despite personal experience of Communism, the average subject of the Soviet
Empire knew nothing of the fundamentals or essential points of
Marxism-Leninism, or of its true origins and history. Everything of
importance or in the least bit compromising has been concealed in both
Western and Soviet history books.
The former president of the United States, Ronald Reagan, stated that
concealment was a kind of falsehood. Therefore, the author would like to
reveal a few facts, which corrupt historians usually pass over in silence.
This book deals with
Adam Weishaupt, who founded the
Illuminist-Socialist
movement in the Bavarian town of Ingolstadt on the first of May 1776, and
Moses Hess, Karl Marx's guide and teacher, two names, which are not
generally known to those who have passed through Marxist educational
institutions.
There is a saying: communism is the bloodiest, most difficult and the most
terrible way from capitalism to capitalism. The truth of this now appears to
be proved by reality.
The representatives of the criminal powers who halted Russia's development
and threw the country into chaos have now themselves admitted that life was
better in tsarist Russia than in the Soviet Union. As an example of this, a
Soviet Russian head clerk in 1968 lived at a standard, which was only 18 per
cent of that which a normal Russian clerk enjoyed in 1914. It has also been
calculated that a Russian labourer in 1968 lived at a standard, which was
only half of his counterpart's in 1914, even counting an inflation rate of
8 per cent per year.
Even so, life in Russia was not so hard in 1968 as in
1991, the last year of Soviet power. Workers during the tsarist regime
earned 30 roubles per month, teachers and doctors 200. A loaf of bread (410
g) cost 3 kopecks, 410 g of meat 15 kopecks, 410 g of butter 45 kopecks, 410
g of caviar 3 roubles and 45 kopecks. If we compare the conditions in the
USSR with those in the West, we find even sharper contrasts. In 1968, the
average standard of living in the United Kingdom was 4.6 times higher than
in the Soviet Union.
The figures are taken from Anatoli Fedoseyev's book
"About the New Russia" (London, 1980).
The last dictator of the Soviet Union,
Mikhail Gorbachev (a member of the
Trilateral Commission), sought only to mend the roof of his giant empire
when its socialist foundations were rotten to the core. In the West and even
in the East, the symptoms of the Socialist disease have been discussed but
not its ideological, political, or economic causes.
For this reason, I would
like to take this opportunity to inform the reader about the ideological
foundations of Soviet power and about the real reasons behind the decision
to spread Socialism-Communism throughout the world using cunning and
violence, a decision, which has resulted in the greatest spiritual, social
and ecological catastrophe in the history of mankind.
Important facts, hitherto unknown, about Soviet Communism, its crimes and
its criminals, are continually publicized in present-day Russia. Therefore,
intelligent Russians are aware of essentials that are very little known in
the West.
I have included many such new facts in this second edition of
"Under the Sign of the Scorpion", and can present an enlarged work to the
reader.
Juri Lina
Stockholm, January 2002.