A hundred years ago today, in the early hours of the
morning, the presence of the Habsburg Illuminati bloodline in Russia
came to an end. Nicholas Romanov, the former Tsar Nicholas II of Russia,
was executed along with his entire family. It was a grisly scene in the cellar
of Ipatiev House in Russia,
where the Church of the Blood in Yekaterinburg now stands. It is dedicated to
Nicholas and his family who are Russian Orthodox saints. Nicholas, his wife
Alexandra and their five children, Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia and Alexei;
also a handful of their private staff, were all shot and killed. The youngest
girl, Anastasia, survived the shooting because she had the Romanov family
jewels sewn into her clothing and this acted as body armour. So she was beaten
to death with a stick. The youngest victim, former Prince Alexei, was only
thirteen.
Tsar Nicholas II was the last emperor of the Romanov dynasty
which had ruled the Russian Empire for over three hundred years. He was forced
to abdicate in March 1917 following the Russian Revolution. At first he and his
family were kept under house arrest in one of their palaces which were, of
course, very comfortable. The "dual power" system at the time,
consisting of the union of the soviets and Alexander Kerensky's provisional
government, treated the royal prisoners very well; but after the Bolshevik
Revolution in October everything changed. The Russian Civil War broke out and
so the Tsar's family were moved several times to keep them out of enemy hands. Eventually
they were incarcerated in Ipatiev House which was known as "the place of
special purpose". In July 1918 the White Army was advancing on
Yekaterinburg and this could have resulted in the Romanovs being liberated,
which would have been a huge morale boost to the enemy; so Lenin ordered that
the Romanovs be executed. After the family were all dead they were taken out of
the city and an attempt was made to destroy their bodies; the Bolsheviks wanted
the Whites to find absolutely no trace at all of the royal prisoners. The
corpses were dismembered, soaked in acid and burned. The remains were then
thrown down a flooded mine shaft. The skeletons of the couple and their three
oldest children were found in 1979 and they were eventually buried in 1998. The
remains of Anastasia and Alexei were found in 2007. The whole family now lies in
a crypt at the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St Petersburg.
To certify the identification of Alexei it was necessary to compare his DNA to
that of his closest living relative, Prince Philip.
The cold-blooded and pragmatic disposal of the Romanov
family still haunts the Russian people today a century after it was done; in
fact the full exhumation of the bodies was only politically correct after Mikhail
Gorbachev took over as Soviet leader and initiated his
Glasnost and
Perestroika
reforms. Before that the authorities, after the first discovery in 1979, had
ordered the evidence thrown back into the mine shaft where they'd been recovered.
The full story is told best by Frankin Schaffner's film
Nicholas and Alexandra, which includes a brilliant performance by
the
Doctor Who actor Tom Baker as Rasputin.
see:
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067483/.
The answer you will give to the question of why the Romanovs were killed will
depend on your point of view. If you are a Marxist you will say that it was
necessary as a tactic in the war, and that the Romanovs were brutal tyrants and
so deserved it anyway. If you are an American right-winger you'll probably say
that it was an evil thing done by communists because communists are naturally
evil per se. What sense does it make to me, a conspiracy theorist? The Romanovs
were part of the Illuminati, in fact at the time they were one of the most
powerful families in the world, at least among those in the public arena. It
also is indisputable that the Russian Revolution was intended and in line with
those behind the New World Order; as has been discovered by people like Anthony
Sutton and G Edward Griffin, see the background links above and below. The
answer lies in the nature of the Illuminati itself. Despite the enormous
privilege of being a part of the elite global bloodlines in terms of material
wealth, status and political power, the benefits do not necessarily include
loyalty. If your own death is required for the wellbeing or advancement of the "Great
Work of Ages" then you will be discarded without a qualm. In his book
They Cast no Shadows Brian Desborough
describes a disturbing scene at a Satanic ritual in which a long term operative
within the Satanic network who had carried out numerous ceremonies for the
elite was himself seized, bound and placed on the altar by his fellow black
magicians. They then killed him with the same fervour that they did their usual
innocent victims, see:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/They-Cast-Shadows-revisionist-technologies/dp/0595219578.
Joining the Illuminati is something of a Faustian bargain. To adapt slightly a quote
from the Gospels: "You will gain the world but lose your soul". The
Illuminati will give you riches beyond your wildest dreams and everything that
goes with it. You will eat every day from golden plates and never again drive
anything cheaper than a Rolls Royce. However, in return...
you never say "no". Whatever order you are given by your
superior within the network, you will carry out immediately and to the letter;
regardless of what it is. Another good illustration of this dilemma is the film
The Brotherhood of the Bell, see:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIyndyIX5EQ.
As the example of the Romanovs has shown, if it is required of you, you will
give up your life. Tsar Nicholas II was a part of the global elite, but he and
his loved ones were thrown to the wolves without a moment of hesitation or
regret because the necessity of the cause required it. Those who are tempted by
a lust for money, success, status and power, and approach the Illuminati in the
hope that it will deliver it to them, should consider this carefully before
their initiation.