View Full Version : Astana, Kazakhstan - A New Masonic Capital ... Must Watch
old steel
5th January 2017, 11:46 PM
Muslims and masons?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jv64nB40CKg
singular_me
6th January 2017, 03:21 AM
there are many names out there but they all subvert the same principles
hoarder
6th January 2017, 06:52 AM
The Khazars have a foothold on Kazakhistan?
Neuro
6th January 2017, 09:12 AM
Muslims and masons?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jv64nB40CKg
How quick do they think people read on average?
Santa
6th January 2017, 10:56 AM
Finally, it will be so much nicer to shop in Kazakhstan rather than boring old Paris or NYC.
We should all get together for a long weekend when it opens. It'll be fabulous. :rolleyes:
Neuro
6th January 2017, 11:03 AM
Finally, it will be so much nicer to shop in Kazakhstan rather than boring old Paris or NYC.
We should all get together for a long weekend when it opens. It'll be fabulous. :rolleyes:
The Prada shop in Astana Has EVERYTHING! And certified Putin-free/compensated Russian Caviar is an absolute bargain! It'll be FAB! Kisses!{@@,&)
crimethink
24th June 2017, 10:09 AM
Something is definitely up with this place...
Is a city you can't locate on a map about to become the world's hottest travel destination?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/asia/kazakhstan/articles/astana-newest-city-break-expo/
Five years ago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFxm3BYjqDw
http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/article/17826000/kazakhstan-thanks-borat-for-boosting-tourism
7th trump
24th June 2017, 10:39 AM
Something is definitely up with this place...
Is a city you can't locate on a map about to become the world's hottest travel destination?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/asia/kazakhstan/articles/astana-newest-city-break-expo/
Five years ago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFxm3BYjqDw
http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/article/17826000/kazakhstan-thanks-borat-for-boosting-tourism
Crimethink has packed his luggage and bought the plane tickets to go kike shopping.
Glass
24th June 2017, 11:04 AM
some military wanted to spend a lot of money in that area on bases. fairly hard bases as well. More your long term presence kind of thing but even then, up factored a couple times in hardness. Not your transitory supply line type of facility. Plans were well underway. Then suddenly there were some political instability in surrounding countries. It seems if someone doesn't agree with something or tries to enhance their families future through these kinds of "investments", ruling power can shift quickly and unexpectedly. It's a familiar pattern.
Stop Making Cents
24th June 2017, 07:10 PM
Intriguing place I've never heard much about. Surprised to see that 1% are ethnic German. Are these people German in name only aka mongrels with some german blood, or real Germans?
According to the 2009 census, the ethnic composition of Kazakhstan is approximately: 63.1% Kazakh, 23.7% Russian, 2.9% Uzbek, 2.1% Ukrainian, 1.4% Uyghur, 1.3% Tatar, 1.1% German, 1% Kyrgyz, and <1% Korean, Turkish, Azerbaijani, Belarusian, Dungan, Zaza, Tajik, Pole, Chechen.
Atocha
24th June 2017, 07:32 PM
How quick do they think people read on average?
I thought the same thing.
ShortJohnSilver
24th June 2017, 10:29 PM
Intriguing place I've never heard much about. Surprised to see that 1% are ethnic German. Are these people German in name only aka mongrels with some german blood, or real Germans?
According to the 2009 census, the ethnic composition of Kazakhstan is approximately: 63.1% Kazakh, 23.7% Russian, 2.9% Uzbek, 2.1% Ukrainian, 1.4% Uyghur, 1.3% Tatar, 1.1% German, 1% Kyrgyz, and <1% Korean, Turkish, Azerbaijani, Belarusian, Dungan, Zaza, Tajik, Pole, Chechen.
There were a lot more in the past. Stalin didn't trust the Volga Germans that lived in USSR but near the German areas, he thought that in time of war they would not be loyal troops.
So (because he had dictator powers) he packed them up and shipped them far away from the front lines.
If Kazakhstan was attacked, he could still trust the Germans to fight the Tajiks etc. as they would have no ethnic sympathy and nothing in common with them.
When East and West Germany reunited, and then the USSR fell apart, the Germans allowed just about anyone (the joke was, if you owned a German shepherd that was enough) to repatriate to Germany.
Over 1 million Germans, the descendants of those original Volga Germans, then left for Germany.
woodman
25th June 2017, 05:00 AM
So (because he had dictator powers) he packed them up and shipped them far away from the front lines.
Stalin and his precursors had amazing latitude to cleanse entire populations. No outcry from the Jewish press who were too busy making headlines about their Kabbalic 'six million Jews' who were constantly in threat of immolation over the years. Look what they did in Ukraine. How about Kalmykia?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalmyk_Autonomous_Soviet_Socialist_Republic
crimethink
25th June 2017, 09:41 AM
Intriguing place I've never heard much about. Surprised to see that 1% are ethnic German. Are these people German in name only aka mongrels with some german blood, or real Germans?
Now, you're not likely to find any real Germans.
My Dad's family is 100% pure Volksdeutsche from the Volga German territories of South Russia. When Tsarina Catherine II (the Great) invited the German farmers from the Reich to Russia, it came with a variety of promises "in perpetuity." Among them, no military service. Nicholas II rescinded this promise, and many decided to leave Russia rather than fight for an empire that really didn't give a shit about them (my family was Lutheran; other Volga Germans were pacifist Mennonites, and refused on that ground). Two of my great-grandparents left, with my granddad, when he was a baby (born in 1907), and settled in Nebraska, as the Volga Germans were experts at making previously "unfertile soil" grow anything (in particular, sugar beets), with little natural irrigation. My other great-grandparents had already left, and settled in southern Colorado, to do the same thing (Arkansas River plain, near Pueblo).
When World War II arrived, it was naturally assumed by Stalin and his Judeo-Bolsheviks that the Volga Germans would support the Reich, and deported the remaining Volga Germans from their centuries-old new homes to the Kazakh SSR or Russian Siberia. Those who survived the war generally assimilated, and the tiny few real Germans who survived into the '80s and '90s emigrated to the occupied Reich under the "law of return" (I was eligible up until 1992, but I had no interest in swearing allegiance to a fake "government").
Some of the "Germans" - in reality, German-language-speaking - types in Kazakhstan and similar are Jews. The rest are cross-breeds and/or spiritually-worthless types that "went with the flow," and are "German" in name only now.
On a side note, the Volga Germans settled in territories that were once the eastern parts of the Khazar Empire. My Dad joked about some of the "North Dakota 'Germans'" he met not looking like Germans. One guy I knew who was an "Ethnic German from Russia" looked like that caricature of a Jew we see here at the forum a lot, LOL. My DNA test assures me I have no such ties to the Khazar Empire.
crimethink
25th June 2017, 09:54 AM
No outcry from the Jewish press who were too busy making headlines about their Kabbalic 'six million Jews' who were constantly in threat of immolation over the years.
Not only that, the Jew York Times is still infamous for deliberately undermining the truth of the mass slaughters in Ukraine and Russia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denial_of_the_Holodomor#Walter_Duranty
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Duranty#Reporting_the_1932.E2.80.931933_fam ine
"[A]ny report of a famine in Russia is today an exaggeration or malignant propaganda....there is no actual starvation or deaths from starvation."
-- Walter Duranty, (((Pulitzer Prize))) winner, writing for the Jew York Times at the height of the Ukrainian Famine, August 23, 1933
That report is credited in supporting Franklin Rosenfeld's recognition of Bolshevik Russia as a legitimate government.
hoarder
25th June 2017, 12:30 PM
There were a lot more in the past. Stalin didn't trust the Volga Germans that lived in USSR but near the German areas, he thought that in time of war they would not be loyal troops.
So (because he had dictator powers) he packed them up and shipped them far away from the front lines.
When World War II arrived, it was naturally assumed by Stalin and his Judeo-Bolsheviks that the Volga Germans would support the Reich, and deported the remaining Volga Germans from their centuries-old new homes to the Kazakh SSR or Russian Siberia. Those who survived.....Stalin's objective was to exterminate as many Germanic people as possible, regardless of where they were or whose war they were fighting, so I think there was another motive for sending them to Siberia or other low-survival destinations where none would have any Germanic offspring. Perhaps he didn't want any witnesses or perhaps he understood that non-White troops would be more eager to exterminate Whites in Eastern Europe if they weren't fighting alongside Whites.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.0 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.