Page 116 - The Disasters Darwinism Brought To Humanity
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116 T T H E D I S A S T E R S D A R W I N I S M B R O U G H T T O H U M A N I T Y Y
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on, encouraged in this way all the ideologies which spilt blood and coun-
th
ted human life as valueless in the 20 century. That is why the last century
was full of ceaseless wars, massacres, rebellions, acts of violence, fighting,
and enmity.
The Oppression and Violence Inflicted On
the World by Darwinist Communists
Anarchy and terror are two of Marxism and Communism's indispen-
sable tools. Marxism's tendency towards terrorism and violence appeared
in the experiment of the Paris Commune while Marx was still alive. In
particular, terrorism became an indispensable part of Communist ide-
ology with Lenin, while he was making Marx's theory a practicality. Com-
munists spilt the blood of millions of people in every part of the world,
and made people undergo pain, fear, and violence by establishing terro-
rist organisations. As will be seen in the pages that follow, today all the
Communist leaders are remembered for the oppression and killings they
carried out. Yet despite this some circles still cover their walls with pictu-
res of these pitiless, bloody-handed assassins, and still accept these sadis-
tic people as their teachers.
No matter how much some Communists claim that violence and ter-
rorism are not Communist practices and that they only took place in some
individuals' applications of Communism, and no matter how much they
try to whitewash Communism, there is an undeniable truth: The foun-
ders of Communism personally defended violence and terrorism and
saw them as essential to their ideology. The American political scientist
Samuel Francis has this to say on the subject:
Marx and Engels were generally specific in insisting that revolution will al-
ways be violent and that revolutionaries must use violence against the ru-
lers, and in some instances they did express support of terrorism. 100
Karl Marx said "insurrection is an art quite as much as war" and took
these words of Danton, one of the foremost names in "revolutionary poli-
tics" as a principle, "de l'audace, de l'audace, encore de l'audace" (Attack, at-
tack, and attack again!) 101 There are clear statements by Lenin regarding the