30.12.08
G.P.M.: Stalin’s…Brutal Wisdom!
One day in 1935 Josef Vissarionovitch Djugashvili [a Jew] known as Josef Stalin (Man of Steel) (who in his early life studied to be a priest and robbed banks for entertainment), lined up his senior KGB and General Staff officers on the parade ground. There was no junior officers or enlisted men in the vicinity.
The senior officers were intrigued to notice Stalin had a live chicken under his left arm. As he dictated, his policies of cutting the peoples food rations, and ordering another 2,000,000, Kulaks (middle class) to be entrained for the Siberian Gulags, he slowly but methodically with his right hand plucked the live chicken.
He just pulled out a hand full of feathers and let them fall near his feet; he ignored the chicken completely. It squawked and fluttered a lot, but Josef did not desist from his tirade on his generals and his task of plucking the live chicken. When Stalin had finished, dressing down the senior officers for not being severe enough on the Russian people, when the chicken was completely bald, without moving or taking his fixed gaze off the eyes of the Generals he just dropped the chicken. Immediately he reached into his large Greatcoat pocket and pulled out some seed, he let some of it filter through his fingers on to the parade ground. The bald, plucked chicken immediately ran back to his feet and next to the pile of its own feathers began pecking contentedly, eating the seeds as he dropped them.
Joseph Stalin bellowed at his officers. "This is a lesson, I learned many years ago when I grew up in Georgia, on the farm, with my mother's people, who are peasants on the land, the same sort of people you are dealing with. People are the same as Chickens, treat them nice and they will be revolting at every opportunity, give them an inch and they will want a mile. Treat them tough, real tough. Pull all their feathers out, take everything off them, leave them naked in the snow, and like this grazing chicken, they will love you, love you forever, they will never forsake you. Just feed them a little, every now and then, with the words. It is a necessity for sacrifices to day for the sake of a better tomorrow, that's enough!"
Who does Simitis, Mitsotakis, BravoGiorgo Mineyko, Alavanos, Tsipras, Papariga and Karamanlis jr. take their lessons from?
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου