Bohus Benes Bitterly Lectures Democracies -Aug 3, 1950
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Bohus Benes bitterly disparages democracy as "lazy, egotistical, smug and sure of itself" he praised the comniform and Bolsheviks for their loyalty and demanded "a United States of Europe... or a union of Atlantic Pact nations"
Bohus Benes was Zbigniew
Brzezinski's father in law and nephew of world stage agitators and
Stalin appeasing socialists Edward Benes and Vojta Benes. His father
was Marxist and political agitator Václav Bene\u0161 ( 26 September 1865- 27
April 1919) who was the elder brother of Edward and Vojta. Vaclav and his brothers founded the Czech mafia that plotted the overthrow of their government and agitated for WW1--Vojta in the United States and Edward in France and Switzerland, and Vaclav in the Austro Hungarian Reichstag (Imperial Council) where he was elected in 1911 as a Social Democrat with his fellow Marxist comrade, Bohumir Smeral, who was the founder of the Communist party in Czechoslovakia . While serving in the Reischstag Vaclav & Bohumir Smeral orchestrated & performed violent Marxist agitation.
The Korean war and the cold war are \u201cnothing less than the
final struggle for survival between bolshevism and democracy." This blunt
warning was given in Salem Wednesday night by Dr. Bohus Benes, nephew of
Czechoslovakia.
Dr. Benes, visiting professor at Willamette university, gave
the democracies 10 years in which to destroy "the most important
strongholds of bolshevism." If the democracies don't succeed, the
communist leaders will increase their power "even more" and
"will succeed in the final attempt for destruction of democracy." To Benes,
who was exiled from his home country by the Bolsheviks who took over in 1948,
the Korean war may be our last chance" to turn the tide of increasing
Bolshevik power. He said he would call the democracies lucky if Soviet leaders
do not follow the temptation to strike now while the democracies "at this
very moment" are "practically disarmed."
"In other words, to my mind the danger of communist
disaster to this world Is much nearer than many of us can Imagine." This
gravest of talks that Dr, Benes has given in Salem in his many appearances last
summer and this summer was heard by 200 persons in Waller hall on the
university campus. His appearance last night was sponsored by the Salem
chapter of Atlantic Union.
In this "greatest crisis that the democracies have ever
faced," Benes saw hope in these possibilities: , That the Western allies
would band together now in some kind of a union such as offered by the
movement for a United States of Europe or a union of Atlantic pact nations.
That democracy would cease being static and become dynamic
and offer the masses hope.
As Benes sees it, there is no top leadership in the United
States that has grasped the concept of world domination as envisioned by Soviet
Russia and that has the courage to offer the arms and determination not only to
stop that imperialism but to push it back. (Concluded on Pag 5. Column I)
In the opinion of Benes, the crisis cannot be settled by
armament alone. "It is an inner conflict of our civilization, and as such
it takes the form of the struggle between b
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