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Excerpt from the 'Protocols of the Elders of Zion' All people are chained down to heavily toil by poverty more firmly than ever they were chained by slavery and serfdom; from these, one way and another, they might free themselves, these could be settled with, but from want they will never get away. We have included in the constitution such rights as to the masses appear fictitious and not actual rights. All these so-called "People's Rights" can exist only in idea, an idea which can never be realized in practical life. What is it to the proletariat labourer, bowed double over his heavy toll,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Excerpt from the 'Protocols of the Elders of Zion' All people are chained down to heavily toil by poverty more firmly than ever they were chained by slavery and serfdom; from these, one way and another, they might free themselves, these could be settled with, but from want they will never get away. We have included in the constitution such rights as to the masses appear fictitious and not actual rights. All these so-called "People's Rights" can exist only in idea, an idea which can never be realized in practical life. What is it to the proletariat labourer, bowed double over his heavy toll, crushed by his lot in life, if talkers get the right to bable, if journalists get the right to scribble any nonsense side by side with good stuff, once the proletariat has no other profit out of the constitution save only those pitiful crumbs which we fling them from our table in return for their voting in favour of what we dictate, in favour of the men we place in power, the servants of our agentur.(agenda). We appear on the scene as alleged saviours of the worker from this oppression when we propose to him to enter the ranks of our fighting forces - Socialists, Anarchists, Communists - to whom we always give support in accordance with an alleged brotherly rule (of the solidarity of all humanity) of our social masonry. The aristocracy, which enjoyed by the law the labour of the workers, was interested in seeing that the workers were well fed, healthy and strong. We are interested in just the opposite - in the diminution, the killing out of the GOYIM (Christian). Our power is in the chronic shortness of food and physical weakness of the worker because by all that this implies he is made the slave of our will, and he will not find in his own authorities either strength or energy to set against our will.
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Autorenporträt
The son of a London music engraver, and by poor sight debarred from treading his father's vocation, James Caulfield (1764 - 1826) set up as a printseller, vending engravings, adorning books, and fashioning catalogues. In the meantime he fathered seven children, out of which four survived. Samuel Johnson and Richard Cosway were among his visitors, and illustrious collectors numbered among his patrons, including Earl Spencer, Charles Towneley, James Bindley, and Clayton Mordaunt Cracherode. Beyond trade, he ventured into the world of letters and, penning diverse books while also serving as editor and publisher, left his imprint in the realm of antiquarian scholarship and curiosity. In his final years he took to drink, and died in St Bartholomew's Hospital following complications from a kneecap fracture.