Author Topic: Boroda...Operation Vittles  (Read 896 times)

Offline Dowding (Work)

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #30 on: April 26, 2002, 01:56:20 AM »
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i dunno.. chit, i know it's all in the nuances, but it just don't seem to roll off the tounge right; yah know?


No one ever said the path to communistic enlightenment was easy.

Anyway, enough of this bourgeois silliness. I'm off to read some more Marx and find out the right way to spell 'bourgeois'.

I'm not really a communist. I just like the blue overalls and worker's cap we get. Drives girls...err... away, actually. Hmmmm... maybe I should change my position.

Offline Boroda

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #31 on: April 26, 2002, 05:12:26 AM »
Deja, first: a few years ago German magazine Spiegel published a story releaving a terrific truth about evil Soviet regime. USSR had nukes in East Germany!!! Frankly speaking - I almost laughed my bellybutton off.

Second: "allies" knew what they were doing, leaving West Berlin in the middle of Soviet occupation zone.

Damn, forgot to press "submit" yesterday. Was too busy watching the flame on our board... Let me see what people answered on me drunken angry posts...

Offline Vulcan

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #32 on: April 26, 2002, 05:48:36 AM »
is that a hook hanging outta boroda's mouth?

Offline Boroda

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #33 on: April 26, 2002, 05:52:07 AM »
Hehe.

Hangtime, you know, you are always welcome into any neo-commie leaflet, right into the "face the enemy" section ;)

Miko, even such an educated person as TahGut doesn't know anything about the US intervention into Russia in 1918-22. Just think about "whatever they capture is theirs".

Miko, here is a link to a song for you. 3.09Mb.

http://www.zvuki.ru/T/P/357/mp3/14

Offline Udie

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #34 on: April 26, 2002, 09:16:06 AM »
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Originally posted by Boroda


Miko, even such an educated person as TahGut doesn't know anything about the US intervention into Russia in 1918-22. Just think about "whatever they capture is theirs".




 But it couldn't possible be because it's all soviet propaganda roadkill? hmmm?  


 this is a classic Boroda thread, thanks for starting it Tahgut!  History teachers should use this thread to teach their kids!!

Offline midnight Target

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #35 on: April 26, 2002, 09:25:56 AM »
How flattering.......I'm edumacated!


I found this.........seems kinda benign compared to the forgein incursion and takeover Boroda is talking about.

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The next serious threat was in the Autumn of 1919. This was the period of foreign intervention of the civil war. The allies, primarily France and England, but also the US, sent troops and materials to support the Whites. The troops only stayed until 1919, and the war materials may have helped the Whites more than the troops. The allies supported the Whites partly because they wanted a Russian government that would continue to fight the Germans, but also because they feared the spread of Socialism. Bolshevik Cossacks had taken most of the South and Ukraine, and had come within 200 miles from Moscow. General Yudenich advanced on the capital (Petrograd) and managed to get as far as the city's suburbs before being forced back. This was the last major threat to the Reds from the Whites; thought the fighting would continue on for more than another year.


Did we keep something? I'm pretty sure we paid for Alaska!

Offline Boroda

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #36 on: April 26, 2002, 09:40:38 AM »
Bolshevik Cossacks

Nothing more to say. Are all your sources like that?

JFYI: US sent troops to Archangelsk to seize the weapon stocks that were delivered there from the Allies, and were paid for in gold. That US troops were even trained to use Russian three-line rifles.

US have stolen the gold stock of the Russian Empire, and didn't deliver the weapons paid by admiral Kolchak.

As for Alaska - you had to give it back in 1967. :p

Offline midnight Target

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #37 on: April 26, 2002, 09:56:32 AM »
Not all of them.....

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At the beginning of 1919 the French and Italian governments favoured strong support (in the form of munitions and supplies rather than in men) to the Whites (as the anti-Communist forces now came to be called), while the British and U.S. governments were more cautious and even hoped to reconcile the warring Russian parties. In January the Allies, on U.S. initiative, proposed to all Russian belligerents to hold armistice talks on the island of Prinkipo in the Sea of Marmara.The Communists accepted, but the Whites refused. In March the U.S. diplomat William C. Bullitt went to Moscow and returned with peace proposals from the Communists, which were not accepted by the Allies. After this the Allies ceased trying to come to terms with the Communists and gave increased assistance to Kolchak and Denikin.


Here is thelink

Offline midnight Target

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Boroda...Operation Vittles
« Reply #38 on: April 26, 2002, 10:16:47 AM »
The Alaska thing is a hoot! I actually found an American web site stating that we should have given it back also.....the same site also claims to have gotten this info from one of the surviving Romanov children.:D  And, that the Tsar and his family were never killed and that the Rockefellers smuggled them out of the country and that the Titanic was sabotaged.......lol.

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He gave us many specific, verifiable details how the Russians to keep mum about the survival of the Czar, have been blackmailing large sums out of the Rockefellers and their banks. Also, Russia claims ownership of Alaska. In 1967, "Seward's folly", the U.S. obtained Alaska from Russia BY A 99 YEAR LEASE, NOT AS HISTORY PROCLAIMS, an outright purchase. The lease was arranged by a secret, midnight deal following the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln who obtained aid during the American Civil War from the then-Czar of Russia. Forcing the Rockefellers to disgorge the long-secret Romanov family deposits would severely wreck the Rockefeller banks. Note: Rockefellers' Chase Bank is the advertiser on major TV Network talk shows.


Go here for a good laugh.