Just some of the results of Jewish
Bolshevism in Russia in it's first three
years in power:
Child vagrancy in Moscow increased from
2% to well over 30%
Child prostitution increased by 10,000%
British espionagist Sir
Paul Dukes, who'd worked undercover
for several years in Bolshevik Russia,
and
even infiltrated the Cheka, wrote an
article which appeared in The
New York Times on July
17, 1921:
"Beginning with the year 1918 (says the
report [produced at the end of 1920] of
the League for the Protection of
Children), juvenile destitution began to
assume catastrophic proportions. The
percentage of uncared-for children in
Moscow, which in 1917 amounted to more
than 1 or 2 per cent., in the Summer of
1920 reached 25 to 30 per cent. In
reality, however, the number of
uncared-for children is much higher even
than this, for the Soviet departments
dealing with children's welfare possess
no adequate apparatus for registration."
A special conference on children held in
1920 revealed the fact that juvenile
prostitution has increased tenfold of
1,000 per cent. since 1917. The
interpelation of 5,300 girls of or about
15 years of age showed that no fewer
than 4,100 that is 88 per cent., indulge
in prostitution. Sailors, Red soldiers,
and the vast class of profiteering
speculators to which the Communist
regime has given birth provide custom
for these girls' earnings. The
Bolshevist Commissariat of Public Health
admits that while in 1917 in hospitals
for social diseases there were 12 per
cent of children to 88 per cent. adults,
there are now 60 per cent. children to
40 per cent. adults.
Sovietism's Effect on Russia's Young -
New York Times - July 17, 1920
Elena Varneck an American translator and
historian specialising in Russian
history, wrote an article which appeared
in the Review of Reviews in
September 1926, in which she
concentrated on vagrant children in
Bolshevik Russia:
—But No Funds for Homeless Children
Now, of all the misery in Russia that
might be misreported, excused, or
explained away, there remains that
worst, that torturing fact which defies
all manipulation: the existence of
hordes of homeless children of all ages
and both sexes who come and go
incessantly across the whole
country—famine and civil war, orphans,
fugitives, and abandoned waifs most of
whom know nothing of their parents'
whereabouts. Most girls from the age of
ten are prostitutes. Nearly all the
girls and boys are thieves; a goodly
percentage are drug addicts and have
venereal diseases. They are clothed in
rags, and lodge in boilers, sewers,
asphalt kettles, etc. ...
Three Hundred Thousand Child Vagrants
Nor is this growing evil a recent one.
It began after the famine of 1920, ...
Varneck, Elna. Soviet Extravagance and
Poverty. The American Review of Reviews:
An International
Magazine (New York). September, 1926.
Vol. LXXIV. No.3. Volume 74. 1927.
p.279.
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