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Useless Dissident
Useless Dissident
Useless Dissident
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Useless Dissident

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Prologue

What some political analysts would refer to as an epoch-defining interview, would later be ignored by the world. If ever there had been an event where someone had shone a light on the happenings over the past decades, it would be the televised interview with Yuri Bezmenov. In 1984, he gave an interview to G. Edward Griffin, who at that time was a member of the John Birch Society, an anti-communist group. In the interview, Bezmenov explained the methods used by the KGB for the gradual subversion of the political system of the United States. Yuri Bezmenov, a disillusioned Soviet KGB agent, defected to North America while stationed in India. His goal was to save the West from Soviet subversion by publicising KGB tactics and goals. While he received some attention in the Western press, his warnings have mostly gone unheeded while much of what he predicted has come true.

Yuri Alexandrovich Bezmenov (Russian: Ю́рий Алекса́ндрович Безме́нов; 1939 – 1993), known by the alias Tomas David Schuman, was a Soviet journalist for RIA Novosti and a former PGU KGB informant who defected to Canada.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherWolf Sherman
Release dateAug 12, 2018
ISBN9780463667873
Useless Dissident
Author

Wolf Sherman

Biography - Wolf ShermanWolf was born in 1970, grew up in Pretoria and after school joined the South African Police in 1988. During 1993 he was transferred to Johannesburg. During his colourfully interesting police career he was attached to several specialist divisions that include the anti-vehicle theft unit, organised-crime-and-political-investigations unit, and the East-Rand Murder & Robbery unit. After his police career he successfully applied his experience in the corporate financial world as insurance investigator and financial planner.Wolf is 48-years of age, have been blessed with three daughters, and is an avid blood and blood platelet donor. He fills his time by weaving his unusual life experience and keen interest in religion, metaphysics, war and political research and that of his love for food and classical music - into his poetry, fictional short stories, and novels.“A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies, said Jojen. The man who never reads lives only one.” - George R.R. Martin, A Dance with Dragons.I'm always curious to listen when people talk about which book - ever - they'd first read. For me it was “The Man Called Noon” that was published in 1970. I suppose that it goes without saying the 1973 film directed by Peter Collinson - of the same name - as the 1970 Louis L'Amour novel, was quite a hit in the day.I was always in love with the books in which storytellers extended an invitation right from the word go, and pulled me in into a different world. The next early love for me growing up were bookshops and libraries. But I'd consider libraries had the first place. My love for both novels and short stories grew over the years, but somehow short stories found me more often. In part, I think because one can sponge it up in a single sitting, and move on to the next world, so to speak.On the topic of short stories, the storytellers in this instance tell how they see it - but being forced far quicker to relay that. I have no doubt that any short story can be stretched out and pinned down to become a novel - if one wanted to. Obviously there is no set length that a short story has to subscribe to, but I'd imagine anything from five-thousand to twenty-five-or-so-thousand words is adequate to save someone, murder a few people, get some revenge, use most of the rope in your boot, discard the spade when you're done, and go in hiding till the whole thing blows over. Of course, if there's a body to begin with... Which really stems from poor planning - I have always thought - in a story. Naturally. Of course, we also need to fall in love at some point and give our whole heart to someone special. It makes for a more balanced killer. In a story. Naturally.Look me up on:Pinterest @ Wolf Sherman BooksInstagram: @Wolf_ShermanTwitter: @WolfSherman2

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    Useless Dissident - Wolf Sherman

    Useless Dissident

    Copyright © Wolf Sherman. All Rights Reserved. However this is in a way a tribute to Yuri Bezmenov, it is also a work of research to which relevant information will be added on an ongoing basis. Should you have purchased a copy of this manuscript in print, or have downloaded it, feel free to contact the author to find out whether it has been updated. It needs to be said at the outset, that some sources are quoted verbatim to ensure accuracy, it would therefore be wise to include; when reproducing this ongoing work of research, the sources which are named and credited for the work they have put into it. This work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means electronically, electrostatic magnetic tape or mechanically; including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the author. Wolf Sherman Books does not claim to hold any particular political, or commercial, or religious opinion whatsoever over the contents of the information, nor does the author claim any credit for sections supplied by colleagues and contacts in South Africa, Russia, the United Kingdom, Israel or elsewhere, for past or present sources of information, of which their assistance made it possible to compile this work. This work is set up at the discretion of the author and in a particular order, for the benefit of intelligence and political researchers. This work is being made available as a historical account and includes to an extent - the names of commercial entities (banking, finance, insurance, etc.), political parties, and religious groups. Great care was taken not to implicate any party where the information had not already been introduced to the public domain. Certain operational events that span over several countries over a number of political eras are discussed in deeper detail than others, and again, are done so for the sole purpose of research.

    Foreword

    A tribute to Yuri Alexandrovich Bezmenov. The Interview That Will Haunt The Future. By Wolf Sherman.

    Russians - it's no secret - are masters of deception, mind control, and subversion. If you study their more modern methods, such as reflective control (the means of conveying to a partner or an opponent specially prepared information to incline him to voluntarily make the predetermined decision desired by the initiator of the action), which is certainly used by Putin in his foreign policy, you’ll know that Russians have put in their dues when it comes to developing tactics to control others on a mass scale. These strategies of control were used for an extended period against America to make its citizens believe in a collectivist ideology that would lead to the destruction of traditional American values. The question is asked, not only as we have seen in America and South Africa, but all over the world, why do so many people decide to sell out their own country? There are many different answers to this but it all comes down to creature comforts, money, awards, honours, and other benefits. After the want for money to pay for their food, rent, and material items - it's only a couple steps from there to actively sell out your country for even greater personal rewards. Of course, if one studies the darker parts of politics, it becomes evident that some don't have a choice, and their sexual weaknesses, and perverse sexual desires are exploited. Ranging from drug addiction to sex slaves and paedophilia, this unnatural range of allegations are constantly covered up and the information sealed, to keep these people in power, and it's impossible for the average voter to imagine that there are entities behind the leaders who force them to implement certain policies when it becomes time. There is likely not a single country that - therefore - can boast that they are truly sovereign. The leaders had become salespeople who find themselves wedged in between the worlds of banking and the persistent push for globalisation, and the world that the

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