Dugin was booted from nationalist org due to being "Jewish-Masonic agent": analyst Pribylovsky
Quote from Timothy Fitzpatrick on December 10, 2022, 19:54
By Vladimir PRIBYLOVSKY
Rebbe Shmulevich
... If you are interested in Avrom. In the year 87-88, Nikita-Avrom Shmulevich-Demin came to Moscow. Then someone introduced him behind my back as Nikita, so I remember him as Nikita, although, apparently, he himself introduced himself to me as Avrom. One of the goals of his visit was to get to know DimDimych Vasilyev's "Memory" first-hand and find out for certain whether they are anti-Semites or whether the Soviet government is slandering them. Someone gave him my phone, saying that I was a specialist in "Memory". Nikita-Avrom made an appointment to meet me at the synagogue (he probably thought I was also a Jew). I then the first (and I suppose that the last) time in my life visited the synagogue. We talked in some square or on the boulevard. It seems that in the square somewhere halfway between the synagogue and Inostranka. Nikita really wanted to find normal Russian right-wing nationalists who were not anti-Semites. He had special hopes for Vasiliev's"Because he was told that they only pretend to be nationalist communists a la "Our Contemporary", but in fact at heart monarchists. I confirmed to him that they are monarchists at heart, and “our contemporaries” are also Black Hundreds rather than commies at heart, but I could not reassure him that Vasilyev was slandered by the authorities as an anti-Semite. And he gave him how many manifestos of "Memory", and at the same time gave the phone numbers of DimDimych and the head of his security service, Alexander Barkashov. Nikita Toko glanced, and immediately turned sour - cool anti-Semitism was evident in the documents of "Memory"."Are there Russian nationalists in general - not anti-Semites"?" - he asked me with hope. I said that theoretically SHOULD BE, I'm looking for it myself - but I haven't found it yet (I didn't know Viktor Aksyuchits then , otherwise I would have made Nikita happy phone Aksyuchits). Semites, but in fact they are not at all like that (and a few months later DimDimych expelled Dugin and Dzhemal from "Memory" exactly as Jewish Masonic agents and Zionists) . or later ...
Source: http://anticompromat.panchul.com/shmulevich/memo_pr.html
By Vladimir PRIBYLOVSKY Rebbe Shmulevich... If you are interested in Avrom. In the year 87-88, Nikita-Avrom Shmulevich-Demin came to Moscow. Then someone introduced him behind my back as Nikita, so I remember him as Nikita, although, apparently, he himself introduced himself to me as Avrom. One of the goals of his visit was to get to know DimDimych Vasilyev's "Memory" first-hand and find out for certain whether they are anti-Semites or whether the Soviet government is slandering them. Someone gave him my phone, saying that I was a specialist in "Memory". Nikita-Avrom made an appointment to meet me at the synagogue (he probably thought I was also a Jew). I then the first (and I suppose that the last) time in my life visited the synagogue. We talked in some square or on the boulevard. It seems that in the square somewhere halfway between the synagogue and Inostranka. Nikita really wanted to find normal Russian right-wing nationalists who were not anti-Semites. He had special hopes for Vasiliev's"Because he was told that they only pretend to be nationalist communists a la "Our Contemporary", but in fact at heart monarchists. I confirmed to him that they are monarchists at heart, and “our contemporaries” are also Black Hundreds rather than commies at heart, but I could not reassure him that Vasilyev was slandered by the authorities as an anti-Semite. And he gave him how many manifestos of "Memory", and at the same time gave the phone numbers of DimDimych and the head of his security service, Alexander Barkashov. Nikita Toko glanced, and immediately turned sour - cool anti-Semitism was evident in the documents of "Memory"."Are there Russian nationalists in general - not anti-Semites"?" - he asked me with hope. I said that theoretically SHOULD BE, I'm looking for it myself - but I haven't found it yet (I didn't know Viktor Aksyuchits then , otherwise I would have made Nikita happy phone Aksyuchits). Semites, but in fact they are not at all like that (and a few months later DimDimych expelled Dugin and Dzhemal from "Memory" exactly as Jewish Masonic agents and Zionists) . or later ... Source: http://anticompromat.panchul.com/shmulevich/memo_pr.html |
Quote from Timothy Fitzpatrick on December 10, 2022, 20:11Who Killed Vladimir Pribylovsky? Author Who Criticized Russian President Putin Found Dead in Moscow
Vladimir Pribylovsky had co-written a number of books, none of them with titles that particularly flattered Russian President Vladimir Putin. "The Putin Corporation: The Story of Russia's Secret Takeover" was one. Another was "The Age of Assassins: The Rise and Rise of Vladimir Putin: How Scary Are Russia's New Rulers?" Now, Pribylovsky has been found dead in Moscow at the age of 59, and the cause of his death remains unclear.
Pribylovsky was found dead in his apartment, his colleague and sometimes co-author Yury Felshtinsky wrote on Facebook, Radio Free Europe reported Wednesday. Russian officials had not commented on the reported death, and Felshtinsky said he had "no further information at this point."
Pribylovsky was also the president of the Panorama Information and Research Center, a think tank in Moscow, and he had written articles for the Moscow Times and the website Open Democracy. According to his biography on the Panorama Center's website, he also translated George Orwell's "Animal Farm" into Russian.
In December 2014, in an article for Open Democracy titled "Power struggles inside the Kremlin," Pribylovsky wrote that compared to the stint of his predecessor Boris Yeltsin, "the number of freedoms and their quality has decreased" under Putin. "Power has passed to a comparatively large number of ruling clans, predominantly from the Petersburg security services and Moscow financial circles," he wrote. He also questioned whether Putin had considered the economic consequences for Russia of annexing Crimea in March 2014, as well as the impact of sanctions imposed by Western countries for Russia's involvement in conflict in Ukraine.
Putin said in an interview Monday with Bild, the German daily, that the sanctions were "severely harming Russia," even as he added that Russia was "gradually stabilizing" its economy. The numbers, however, suggest a different picture. Dropping oil prices have taken their toll on the economy, which is dependent on exporting oil, natural gas and other commodities, and the value of the ruble dropped sharply Monday to more than 76 to the U.S. dollar from 74.75. Russia's GDP is expected to fall 3.8 percent in 2015.
Long before Russia's economy was hit by tumbling oil prices, Pribylovsky was questioning Putin. "Still, as yet, the aggrieved will not dare blame Putin for their problems, at least not openly," he wrote in the December 2014 Open Democracy article. "But somewhere, sitting inside the Kremlin, biding his time, sits his successor," he added.
In February 2015, Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov, who had been an outspoken critic of Putin, was assassinated, and the question of who killed him sparked numerous theories but no answers.
Pribylovsky was born in 1956 in Moscow, according to the Panorama Center biography. He earned a degree in Byzantine studies from Moscow State University and had worked jobs ranging from a museum guide to night watchman.
Who Killed Vladimir Pribylovsky? Author Who Criticized Russian President Putin Found Dead in Moscow
Vladimir Pribylovsky had co-written a number of books, none of them with titles that particularly flattered Russian President Vladimir Putin. "The Putin Corporation: The Story of Russia's Secret Takeover" was one. Another was "The Age of Assassins: The Rise and Rise of Vladimir Putin: How Scary Are Russia's New Rulers?" Now, Pribylovsky has been found dead in Moscow at the age of 59, and the cause of his death remains unclear.
Pribylovsky was found dead in his apartment, his colleague and sometimes co-author Yury Felshtinsky wrote on Facebook, Radio Free Europe reported Wednesday. Russian officials had not commented on the reported death, and Felshtinsky said he had "no further information at this point."
Pribylovsky was also the president of the Panorama Information and Research Center, a think tank in Moscow, and he had written articles for the Moscow Times and the website Open Democracy. According to his biography on the Panorama Center's website, he also translated George Orwell's "Animal Farm" into Russian.
In December 2014, in an article for Open Democracy titled "Power struggles inside the Kremlin," Pribylovsky wrote that compared to the stint of his predecessor Boris Yeltsin, "the number of freedoms and their quality has decreased" under Putin. "Power has passed to a comparatively large number of ruling clans, predominantly from the Petersburg security services and Moscow financial circles," he wrote. He also questioned whether Putin had considered the economic consequences for Russia of annexing Crimea in March 2014, as well as the impact of sanctions imposed by Western countries for Russia's involvement in conflict in Ukraine.
Putin said in an interview Monday with Bild, the German daily, that the sanctions were "severely harming Russia," even as he added that Russia was "gradually stabilizing" its economy. The numbers, however, suggest a different picture. Dropping oil prices have taken their toll on the economy, which is dependent on exporting oil, natural gas and other commodities, and the value of the ruble dropped sharply Monday to more than 76 to the U.S. dollar from 74.75. Russia's GDP is expected to fall 3.8 percent in 2015.
Long before Russia's economy was hit by tumbling oil prices, Pribylovsky was questioning Putin. "Still, as yet, the aggrieved will not dare blame Putin for their problems, at least not openly," he wrote in the December 2014 Open Democracy article. "But somewhere, sitting inside the Kremlin, biding his time, sits his successor," he added.
In February 2015, Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov, who had been an outspoken critic of Putin, was assassinated, and the question of who killed him sparked numerous theories but no answers.
Pribylovsky was born in 1956 in Moscow, according to the Panorama Center biography. He earned a degree in Byzantine studies from Moscow State University and had worked jobs ranging from a museum guide to night watchman.