by Kev Moore
Which part of the Communist Manifesto does Australia not follow?
10 Communist Manifesto Planks of the US Government
February 21, 2015—167 years ago today, Karl Marx published The Communist Manifesto. In it, Marx outlined 10 Planks, or policies, for overturning capitalist economies. How many of Marx’s planks are already implemented in the U.S.? Let’s examine the planks to find out.

The 1st Plank: “Abolition of property in land and application of all rents of land to public purposes.”
The 14th Amendment in 1868 granted the US government eminent domain power to expropriate private property in the name of the “public good.” There’s also the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) which wields enormous zoning and regulatory power, as well as school and property taxes, and environmental considerations which take precedence over private property and individual rights. You don’t pay your property taxes? The government takes your house. So is it really your house to begin with?
Read on –
https://voicesofliberty.com/2015/02/22/10-communist-manifesto-planks-of-the-us-government/
“None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.” — Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
So, therefore the ‘West’ is communist and China and Russia are not or less so.
The “10 Planks” of the Communist Manifesto
Actually, the UN Charter and functions were written by Nelson Rockefeller between 1934 and 1938 and agreed upon by FDR and Churchill in 1944/45. Later, followed the CFR, NED, and TC. There is a private history on all of this since 1815, held by the Rothschilds and Rockefellers. I read most of it.
While we are on this subject, Alger Hiss – the undertaker of Central Europe at Yalta – was later the secretary general of the UN Conference on International Organisation 1945. He drafted the UN Charter and incorporated every plank of the Communist Manifesto.
Accused of spying for the Soviet Union, he could not be tried because the statute of limitations had expired. He was convicted of perjury 1950.
What could possibly go wrong?