I have (Paul Ross) personally spent decades researching this subject and have written much about it. In my book, I make it irrefutably clear these killings had their roots in an ideological, savage, barbarous and inhumane philosophy; a philosophy responsible for the brutal murder of over 150 million people. It was the atheistic age of Godlessness, a rule of law devoted to the clinical extraction of religious belief in people by beating them to death and smashing their skulls against concrete walls. In fact, it was their attempt at killing God one person at a time. Jesus promised that where two or three are gathered in His name, he would be there in the midst of them. For Pol Pot, however, if three Christians gathered and prayed, they could be accused of being enemies of the regime and could be arrested or executed. Such is the joyous liberation that secular—atheistic—enlightenment brings.
Karl Marx was a visionary, and he deemed it absolutely necessary to destroy religion because, in his judgment, faith in God was an opiate; a drug substitute that prevents man from becoming aware of his dignity. It was Karl Marx who helped Kim, Mao, Stalin, Lenin, Enver Hoxha, Nicolae Ceauşescu and Pol Pot realize that God was the opiate of the masses. For Marx, the solution was simple: religion had to be eradicated so that the creation of the new man—and the new utopia—freed from the shackles of God and religion, could shine forth into an enlightened age of reason. So what kind of dignity did Marx’s atheistic ideological vision give to humanity? The answer is simple: blood, pain, torture, oppression, terror and fear. The terrible cruelties that were justified in the name of atheist Karl Marx should not surprise us when Marx’s closest collaborator in the foundation of modern Communism, Friedrich Engels, wrote in Anti-Dühring: “Universal love for men is an absurdity; we need hate rather than love—at least for now.”
Marx was anti-religious because, in his opinion, religion obstructs the fulfilment of the communist ideal, which he considered the only answer to the world’s problems. Marx wanted a world without God, and millions would pay with their lives to build this utopian world of atheistic paradise. Bukharin, one of Marx’s associates in the First International, was an anarchist and hater of God, and I suspect that atheist Marx would have been inspired by Bukharin’s quote: “Satan is the first free-thinker and saviour of the world. He frees Adam and impresses the seal of humanity and liberty on his forehead, by making him disobedient.”
Vladimir Lenin added his voice to this madness when he wrote, “Every religious idea, every idea of God, every flirtation with the idea of God is unutterable vileness, vileness of the most dangerous kind, ‘contagion’ of the most abominable kind. Millions of sins, filthy deeds, acts of violence and physical contagions are far less dangerous than the subtle, spiritual idea of a God.” Lenin went on to add, “Our program necessarily includes the propaganda of atheism.” ...CUT SHORT DUE TO WORD LIMITATION ON YOUTUBE.
—by Paul Ross
0 Comments