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Conspiracy Nation Vol. 12 Num. 21

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Published in 
Conspiracy Nation
 · 4 years ago

  


Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 12 Num. 21
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("Quid coniuratio est?")


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IN RUSSIA: BIG FUSS OVER "THE TSAR'S" BONES
===========================================

Associated Press (AP) reports (7/15/98) on current ceremonies in
Russia involving the formal burial of supposed remains of Tsar
Nicholas II and members of the Russian royal family. But several
hundred demonstrators in St. Petersburg marched in protest: "The
marchers don't believe the bones are those of the royal
family..." [1]

"The Russian Orthodox Church has refused to accept [DNA test
results which] scientists believe has conclusively proven the
authenticity of the remains." [2]

Some other experts are claiming that "the discovery of the
[supposedly royal] remains in 1991 was a KGB-inspired fraud." [3]

The controversy raging in Russia over whether or not the bones
are those of certain Romanovs, supposedly murdered by Bolsheviks
at Ekaterinburg in 1918, has caused Russian president Boris
Yeltsin to abruptly cancel his plans to attend the burial
ceremony.

Remains of two of the Romanov children, Alexei and Maria, have
never officially been found.

Yet strong evidence throughout the years consistently points to
at least two of the Romanov children, Alexei and Anastasia, as
having survived the supposed 1918 "mass execution" and having
lived for decades thereafter. (See, for example, the book "The
File on the Tsar" by Anthony Summers and Tom Mangold. ISBN:
0-06-012807-0.)

So why is this important? Because (1) there =is= such a thing as
"the truth," and (2) because the truth matters. We know that,
contrary to pronouncements by academic eggheads, that the truth
is not always "subjective." For example, 2 + 2 = 4; there's
nothing "subjective" about it. See also the little book,
"Meditations," by Rene Descartes to convince yourself that, yes,
there is such a thing as "the truth." As to whether or not the
truth matters, that is harder to prove. But consider that for
centuries the pursuit of truth has been regarded as =the= most
important occupation. "There is no religion higher than truth."
Or, as inscribed on the door of the Bishop Payne Library,
Virginia Theological Seminary:

Seek the truth
Come whence it may
Cost what it will.

So Conspiracy Nation (CN) keeps plugging away, offering
counterpoint to a universe of lies constantly propagated by
supposed "intellectuals." CN is just silly enough to believe
that the truth might actually matter. And the truth is that not
all of the Romanovs, and even none of the Romanovs, were murdered
in 1918 at Ekaterinburg.

The motive for this massive, ongoing cover-up of the actual fate
of the Romanovs seems to be based on greed. Tsar "Nicholas was
in theory the richest man in the world with eight magnificent
palaces, a staff of 15,000 and crown property estimated at
between eight and ten billion pounds." [4] Surviving Romanovs
would have laid claim to that property, much of it consisting of
billions of dollars worth of gold and precious gems. But if the
false claim that the Tsar and his family had all died at
Ekaterinburg came to be accepted, then "someone else" could claim
the vast treasure. Likely suspects for the "someone else" would
be the British royals, the German royals, and the Rockefellers.
Maybe they "divied up the loot" between themselves. We are
talking here about perhaps the greatest robbery ever to have
occurred in the history of the world.

See CN 4.26 for a reproduction of a United Press International
(UPI) story carried initially in -- then pulled from -- the
Chicago Tribune, 12/14/70: "U.S. Aided Rescue Of Czar Nicholas,
British Hint." It appears that a "Sir William Wiseman, a partner
in the New York banking house of Kuhn, Loeb & Co." received
$75,000 from the U.S. government as part of a "scheme" for a
secret mission to rescue the Tsar and his family. "There is also
mounting evidence that the unpublished complete text of the
treaty of Brest-Litovsk... contained a guarantee from the Lenin
government that no harm would come to the Romanovs..." [5]

Commander of "White Russian" forces, Prince Kuli-Mirza, believed
that the Romanovs survived Ekaterinburg, and showed Gleb Botkin,
son of the Tsar's doctor, several secret reports "according to
which the imperial family had first been taken to a monastery in
the province of Perm, and later sent to Denmark." [6]

According to the official story, 23 people were supposed to have
all crammed together into the cellar of the Ipatiev House at
Ekaterinburg for the "mass execution" -- 23 people -- shooters
and shot -- in a room measuring 17 feet by 14 feet. [7]

A Captain Malinovsky of the Officer's Commission, one of the
first investigators on the scene subsequent to the "mass
execution," wrote this, in an official dossier: "As a result of
my work on this case I became convinced that the imperial family
was =alive=. It appeared to me that the Bolsheviks had shot
someone in the room in order to =simulate= the murder of the
imperial family..." [8]

There's a lot more. These (above) have been just a few examples
of why so many do not believe supposed DNA evidence that the
remains of the Tsar and members of his family have truly been
found. "Science" is only as good as the scientist, and even
scientists can be hoodwinked -- for example, by faked data and
evidence.

---------------------------<< Notes >>---------------------------
[1] "Eighty years after death of Russia's last czar, burial."
AP, 7/15/98.
[2] Ibid.
[3] "Last Tsar's burial splits family, State and Church." London
Telegraph, Electronic Edition, 7/15/98.
[4] *The File on the Tsar* by Anthony Summers & Tom Mangold. New
York: Harper & Row, 1976. ISBN: 0-06-012807-0.
[5] "U.S. Aided Rescue Of Czar Nicholas, British Hint." UPI,
12/13/70.
[6] Summers & Mangold. op. cit.
[7] Summers & Mangold. op. cit.
[8] qtd. in Summers & Mangold. op. cit.

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +

For related stories, visit:
http://www.shout.net/~bigred/cn.html
http://www.netcom.com/~feustel

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Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
of Conspiracy Nation, nor of its Editor in Chief.
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9




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