• hace 3 meses
Canales en Telegram
El Diestro https://t.me/ElDiestro
El Diestro TV https://t.me/eldiestrotv
Lo que no te cuentan las televisiones https://t.me/LoQueNoTeCuentanLasTelevisiones

Category

🗞
Noticias
Transcripción
00:00I'm Bobby Lee and this is the Bobby Lee Show.
00:03Today we have with us Eustace Mullins, a lecturer, an author.
00:07Author of many books, a scholar, Washington and Lee University.
00:11And today we're going to be talking about several different subjects.
00:15But this particular subject is the most important for today's political venue.
00:22And Eustace has written a book called The World Order.
00:25Mr. Mullins has been working for the last 50 years to research important questions
00:33that need to be answered in relationship of middle America to the political evolution.
00:40Eustace, tell us a little bit, if you would, how you got started in being an author.
00:45Well, I had always intended to be an author, but I intended to write novels, perhaps some poems.
00:52And I had absolutely no interest in any research or any non-fiction work.
00:58I didn't consider that as creative writing.
01:01So I met a poet, a very bohemian person named Ezra Pound,
01:06who was then incarcerated without trial on a more or less lifetime basis.
01:11And he asked me to look into the banking interest, the Federal Reserve System,
01:18at the Library of Congress there in Washington, D.C.
01:21And I did this, and I found it to be quite an interesting story,
01:25which launched me on research which continues to the present day.
01:30Now, this book, The New World Order,
01:33how does The New World Order deal with the banking interest in America and across the world?
01:38Well, you see, in studying the banking system in the United States,
01:43I found it was part of an international system of banking called Central Banks in Europe,
01:49and that the Federal Reserve System which we had here
01:51was simply an American version of the Central Banks they had in Europe.
01:55And I also found that these banks did not exist as some entity in some world of their own.
02:01They were an integral part of what I came to call the World Order.
02:05Now, Eustace, this New World Order and this banking system,
02:09I was under the impression that the banks themselves were American banks
02:14and it was the federal government that owned the banks.
02:16Are you telling me that our government itself doesn't own these banks?
02:20Well, our government doesn't own anything.
02:22We really don't have a government. We're just a colony of England.
02:26How can you say that? A colony of England?
02:28Well, I know that they have the Republican Party and the Democrat Parties,
02:31and I go down to the local bank and I can cash a dollar bill, can't I?
02:36Oh, well, you can go into any colony of Great Britain and cash a check.
02:40That doesn't mean you're in an independent nation.
02:43Would you trace for me the colony of Great Britain to the United States and the banks?
02:47If I put a Federal Reserve note in the bank today,
02:50how can I say that that's part of a colony of Great Britain?
02:55Well, you see, we started out as a colony of Great Britain
02:58and then presumably we won political independence in the American Revolution.
03:06But, you see, the American Revolution was not against the bank.
03:09The American Revolution was against King George III.
03:13So we won against King George III,
03:16but we didn't win against the Bank of England,
03:19of which King George III was a major stockholder.
03:22So King George lost this wonderful colony over here,
03:26but he retained the banking control
03:29and continued to get his interest and his profits from his American colony, just as before.
03:36Ok, let's go from King George to the Federal Reserve.
03:39What happened in between, because there was some time in there
03:42and some people say that Andrew Jackson was one of the best presidents this country ever had.
03:46Could you tell us about him and what did he do in regard to banking?
03:50Well, you see, immediately after the Revolution,
03:52when we had our wonderful independence
03:54and we could have the Fourth of July and shoot off firecrackers
03:57and still pay interest to the Bank of England,
04:00which no one seemed to mind because they didn't know about it,
04:03and so Andrew Hamilton re-established the Bank of England presence
04:09in the United States of America immediately after the Revolution,
04:13called the First Bank of the United States,
04:15which Jefferson strongly opposed.
04:18And when Jefferson became president,
04:20he refused to renew the charter of this foreign central bank,
04:23the First Bank of the United States,
04:25so it went out of existence.
04:27And in revenge for that, England declared war on us.
04:30We had the War of 1812, which was simply a banking war.
04:34Of course, you won't read that in any history book in England or in the United States.
04:39They tell you that American seamen were being impressed by the British Navy.
04:44They would stop American ships and impress American seamen.
04:47And this was the occasion of the war.
04:49Well, it had nothing to do with it.
04:51It was simply the Bank of England said,
04:53we're going to punish the United States for refusing to renew
04:56the charter of the First Bank of the United States.
04:58So anyway, the First Bank of the United States disappeared,
05:02and then Nicholas Biddle, an agent of James Rothschild of Paris,
05:07chartered the Second Bank of the United States.
05:11And it was doing quite well until Andrew Jackson came along
05:14and he said to the bankers,
05:16you are a nest of vipers, and by God, I will rout you out.
05:20And so he did.
05:21He removed all of the government deposits
05:24from the Second Bank of the United States in 1836,
05:28which caused it to collapse.
05:30And in revenge, the Bank of England suspended all American paper,
05:35which caused the first great depression in the United States,
05:38called the Panic of 1837.
05:41That was strictly a banker's panic.
05:43And of course, then the Rothschilds came in and bought up American securities
05:47at one cent on the dollar
05:49and established a great many of the great American fortunes,
05:52including J.P. Morgan.
05:54But Andrew Jackson himself,
05:56would you credit him with at least taking a stand
05:59against this banking monopoly that is destroying his America?
06:03Well, he was a general and a patriot and an American.
06:06And to him, the bankers were Satan incarnate.
06:10They were robbing and looting this country.
06:12They were oppressing the people.
06:14They were causing financial depression and widespread suffering.
06:17And he said, I'm going to go after them, and he did.
06:20Unfortunately, the history books do not tell you
06:22why he did anything that he did.
06:24So the American children go to school
06:26and they have no idea what all this was about.
06:28Neither do the college students.
06:30Neither do the graduate college students.
06:32You know, I saw a beautiful statue of Andrew Jackson
06:35not long ago up in Jacksonville, Florida.
06:37A lot of people don't realize that the state of Florida,
06:40the first governor was Andrew Jackson.
06:43Yes, that's right.
06:44And this city of Jacksonville was named after this wonderful patriot
06:48and hero of the American middle class.
06:52Now, let's go a little bit further.
06:54You mentioned the word Rothschilds.
06:56Where did that name come from, please?
06:59Well, there was a family of moneylenders in Frankfurt, Germany,
07:03named Bauer, which means peasant.
07:06And why these moneylenders were trying to call themselves peasants,
07:09I don't know, because none of them had ever been near a plow in their life.
07:12And so they were moneylenders.
07:15And they needed some way of advertising their business.
07:21And so the founder of this dynasty, the House of Rothschild,
07:25put up a red shield above his door
07:28so that people who came from various parts of Europe
07:30to change money with him could find it.
07:34And so after a few years, people didn't know who Bauer was,
07:41but they knew the Rothschild.
07:42The red shield was Rothschild.
07:44And so he simply began to call himself Rothschild.
07:48Okay. Now, he died eventually,
07:51but did he leave a dynasty of some sort?
07:53I mean, how did this happen?
07:55Well, he left five sons who were very well trained by this man
07:59who by that time had become the outstanding moneylender of Europe.
08:04Due to a very peculiar circumstance,
08:06King George III and the Bank of England wanted to punish
08:10the American colonists for being so obstructorious
08:13and for refusing to give all of their profits to the Bank of England
08:16from their income.
08:18And so when they rebelled,
08:22then the British army did not really want to fight their American cousins.
08:27So King George said,
08:28I've got to get somebody else to fight this war.
08:30I need some mercenaries, some hard soldiers.
08:33And over in Germany, the elector of Hesse, a German province,
08:36had a very well trained group of soldiers called the Hessians.
08:41And so he said, well, I'll rent these out to you, King George,
08:45who was a German himself, by the way, a Hanover.
08:48And he said, for $5 million, you can have this nice army.
08:53And so George said, all right.
08:55And then when the elector of Hesse got this $5 million,
08:59he said, what am I going to do with it?
09:01And they said, well, there's a very good investor
09:05and financial advisor named Meyer Amschel Rothschild and Frankfurt.
09:09So he let Meyer Amschel lend out this money,
09:13which was the biggest chunk of capital in Europe at that time, $5 million.
09:17And so Amschel spread it around,
09:19and pretty soon he brought back $20 million to the elector,
09:24who was very pleased, and kept $5 million for his efforts.
09:28So now he was a monetary power himself,
09:31and of course the elector of Hesse let it be known
09:34that if you had money to invest, put it in Meyer Amschel's hands.
09:37So when Meyer died, he had five sons,
09:40and so they dispersed themselves over the five capitals of Europe.
09:45Nathan went to London, James went to Paris, and so forth.
09:50So they now had total control of the monetary resources
09:55of Western civilization, the entire continent of Europe.
09:58Tell us about the Rothschilds now,
10:00how they enter into the picture as far as,
10:03shall we say, the Federal Reserve is concerned.
10:06Well, the Rothschilds realized early on,
10:08you don't make any money by lending somebody $200 to buy a used car.
10:12They only dealt with governments and with the kings of Europe,
10:16and they only handled government loans,
10:19because that's where the big money was.
10:21And you see, they realized it was a sure thing,
10:24because if you lent money to a government and they didn't repay you,
10:29then they would never get any more money.
10:32They always needed money for wars and to build Versailles and so forth.
10:38To be a king means you spend a lot of money, you're a big spender.
10:42And they could always tax their people enough to repay the Rothschilds their money,
10:47so they had nothing to worry about.
10:50And so, by 1880, the Rothschilds really owned all of Europe,
10:55and they owned a large part of the United States, secretly,
10:58because they always advertised and promoted the idea
11:02that the Rothschilds had no activities in the United States.
11:05And they did not, because they worked through August Belmont,
11:09who was their named representative,
11:12and they also worked through J.P. Morgan and Kuhn Loeb Company,
11:15which were their secret representatives.
11:18And by 1896, these two Rothschild firms, J.P. Morgan and Kuhn Loeb,
11:24owned 96% of all the railroad mileage in the United States.
11:29Wow! Talk about a monopoly there.
11:31And that's in congressional reports.
11:33I got that right out of... most of my work, by the way, comes from congressional reports.
11:37How did Soviet Russia come into this New World Order situation, Mr. Mullins?
11:42Well, Soviet Russia was always part of the World Order.
11:45Soviet Empire came about because of greed and envy.
11:50Now, communism, of course, is based on hatred, greed, and envy.
11:53But what people don't realize is that the Russian Revolution came about
11:58because of the greed and envy of King George V of England
12:05for his cousin, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia,
12:10who happened to be the richest man in the world.
12:13And when you're the richest man in the world,
12:15the consequence is all the people who are not quite as rich hate you
12:19and wish they could get their hands on your money.
12:21So the Rothschilds told King George V,
12:24they were all around him as his advisors in London,
12:27they said, look, let's go after Nick and get his dough.
12:32And George said, well, off game.
12:34And so the Rothschilds started the communist movement in Russia.
12:38And so they murdered the Tsar and his family
12:42and took his gold, which was sent to Paris and to Kuhn Loeb Company in New York
12:47and the other Rothschild offices, London and so forth.
12:50And some of this money, by the way,
12:53these Rothschild banks used to buy the original stock of the Federal Reserve System in 1914.
13:00That was all bought with the Tsar's money.
13:02And so the Romanov heirs, such as are still alive,
13:06are the real owners of our Federal Reserve System.
13:09And so, as I say, they murdered the richest man in the world, took all of his money.
13:14What year was that, by the way?
13:17What year was that when they murdered the Tsar?
13:19Well, that was 1918.
13:20They had the communist revolution in 1917.
13:24And the first thing they did was go in and loot the whole country.
13:28They took all the money.
13:30And so the result was the new Soviet empire had no operating capital
13:38and they couldn't tax anybody because they had murdered all the people who owned anything.
13:44So you couldn't go out and tax the peasants to keep the country running.
13:48So they sent out cries of anguish and people all over the world responded.
13:53Woodrow Wilson, our president, he made a speech to Congress in which he said,
13:59it is our duty to help these noble murderers in Moscow, in so many words.
14:04And so he first sent them $25 million of his personal war fund,
14:09voted to him by Congress to prosecute World War I.
14:12Hay mucha gente que ha dicho que el financiamiento en sí mismo,
14:16que la revolución comunista comenzó en Wall Street.
14:19¿Eso es un verdadero hecho o no, Justus Mullins?
14:22Es absolutamente verdadero.
14:24Todo el dinero para Wall Street, para la revolución bolshevista,
14:28vino de Wall Street, realmente de las firmas Rothschild,
14:33pero sería demasiado obvio si las Rothschilds de Londres
14:37enviaban todo su dinero a Rusia para ayudar a los comunistas.
14:39Así que lo hicieron a través de su favorito Patsy,
14:42que es el gobierno americano.
14:45Incluso formaron una firma especial en Wall Street en 1916
14:52para financiar la revolución comunista en Rusia,
14:55que se llamaba American International Corporation.
14:59Y sus directores eran Percy Rockefeller,
15:02los más ricos de los Estados Unidos,
15:04incluyendo un financiero llamado George Herbert Walker,
15:08que acaba de ser el abuelo de George Bush, nuestro presidente.
15:13Bueno, el Nuevo Mundo es un grupo de insíderes,
15:15es una especie de mafia internacional,
15:17y o trabajan juntos, o se eliminan.
15:20Es decir, estas personas tienen que cooperar
15:22porque la sentencia de muerte es inadecuada si no la haces.
15:25Y no dices que te voy a la mierda,
15:28porque si vas a tu camino, tu camino es directamente hacia abajo.
15:31Una de las cosas que fue tan triste para mí leer sobre esto,
15:34por supuesto, fue cuando los bolcheviques se fueron a la Ucrania
15:39y mataron a tantas personas.
15:42Empezaron con 6 o 8 millones de ucranianos.
15:46Y este es el resultado final de lo que América ha hecho,
15:49porque América misma, este gobierno,
15:51no el país, no creo que el país haya usado esto,
15:53no creo que los patriotas en el país,
15:55pero este gobierno fue responsable
15:57de financiar situaciones como esta, ¿verdad?
16:00Muy bien.
16:01De hecho, este gran masacro
16:03de los bolcheviques rusos en los inicios de los años 1930
16:07fue deliberadamente supresionado por Walter Duranty,
16:11el correspondente general en Rusia de The New York Times,
16:14y él dictó lo que podía ser enviado de vuelta a este país.
16:19Totalmente lo supresionaron,
16:20de modo que Franklin Roosevelt,
16:22como placa principal de su plataforma en 1933,
16:26le pidió una reconocimiento diplomática oficial a Rusia Soviética
16:32para que le pudiéramos enviar más dinero,
16:34dinero de los impuestos,
16:35que lo habían hecho antes.
16:37Pero no podían hacer esto
16:39si la prensa iba a escribir una historia
16:41de que 10 o 12 millones de rusos
16:43habían sido asesinados por Stalin.
16:45Así que la historia fue completamente supresionada.
16:47Tuvimos la Segunda Guerra Mundial,
16:49la Segunda Guerra Mundial,
16:50la Guerra de Corea del Sur,
16:51y luego tuvimos Vietnam.
16:53¿Deberíamos haber luchado en alguna de esas guerras, Justus Mullins?
16:56¿Había una razón real?
16:58¿Y cuál fue el resultado final
16:59de que nos involucramos en, digamos,
17:01la Segunda Guerra Mundial y la Segunda Guerra Mundial?
17:03Bueno, John,
17:04tienes que entender qué son las guerras.
17:07Las guerras son producciones que se realizan con mucho cuidado.
17:09Ahora, estas son producciones que se realizan con mucho cuidado,
17:11y ellos hicieron lo que se suponía que debían hacer,
17:13y tenían un buen público,
17:15así que creo que fueron éxitos.
17:17Pero decir que estas guerras
17:19eran sobre cualquier cosa,
17:20que tenían alguna filosofía en particular
17:22en contra del gobierno,
17:23en contra de otra filosofía en contra del gobierno,
17:25es una locura.
17:27Estas fueron producciones de orden mundial,
17:29y, como dije,
17:31se realizaron con mucho cuidado.
17:32Ambos lados se instalaron
17:33para que se realizara de una manera determinada,
17:35y el resultado
17:37siempre estaba predeterminado.
17:39En otras palabras,
17:40estabas mirando una producción de escena,
17:42que ya habías visto muchas veces,
17:44como una especie de ópera de sopa,
17:46y sabías cómo iba a salir
17:48antes de que incluso empezara.
17:49Cuéntanos un poco más
17:50sobre Winston Churchill.
17:51¿Lo había comprado y pagado?
17:54Sí.
17:55Winston Churchill, a veces,
17:57hablaba contra el comunismo,
17:59y realmente era un tonto.
18:01Si no tenía dos cuartos de whisky al día,
18:03realmente no sabía dónde estaba.
18:05Y durante la gran explosión de Londres,
18:09la mayoría de la gente pensó
18:11que estaba siendo muy valiente,
18:13viviendo en Londres,
18:14durante la explosión de Krieg.
18:16Eso es donde estaban sus dos cuartos de whisky.
18:18Bueno, él estaba
18:19ocho estrellas abajo.
18:20Le construyeron un alojamiento especial,
18:22ocho estrellas abajo en el suelo,
18:24una habitación muy cómoda,
18:26y él estaba libremente suministrado con whisky.
18:29Y, de hecho,
18:30les mostraban esta habitación
18:33a los turistas después de la guerra,
18:35pero un historiador llamado David Irving
18:37hizo una nueva biografía
18:39de Winston Churchill,
18:41y él era un historiador de establecimiento.
18:43Fue publicado por Macmillan,
18:45que es propiedad de los Rothschilds,
18:47así que envió esta nueva biografía de Churchill
18:50a las oficinas de Macmillan,
18:53y cuando entró en algún encuentro
18:55sobre cómo este viejo drogado
18:58dormía durante la guerra
19:00en esta habitación especial
19:02debajo de Londres,
19:04ellos le dijeron,
19:05oh, no, no puedes imprimir eso.
19:06Y él dijo, bueno,
19:07esa es la clave de mi biografía.
19:09Y entonces ellos le dijeron,
19:11bueno, adiós,
19:12y refusaron imprimir el libro.
19:14Y finalmente lo sacaron a su propio lugar
19:16y comenzaron a tourar y lectorar
19:18sobre algunas de sus descubrimientos,
19:20con el resultado de que Canadá
19:22oficialmente lo prohibió
19:24de ingresar a Canadá.
19:26Es una persona muy peligrosa,
19:28porque él estaba contando la verdad
19:30sobre Winston Churchill,
19:32y tienen rostros cuando habla,
19:34y todo es muy emocionante.
19:36Los Rothschilds y las familias
19:38domésticas de orden mundial
19:40ganan por la sufrimiento y la desesperación
19:42de otras personas.
19:44Ellos ganan cuando hay una revolución comunista
19:46que asesina a 10 millones de pasajeros.
19:48Ellos ganan cuando hay una guerra mundial
19:50que devasta a Europa.
19:52Y así es exactamente
19:54lo que sucede.
19:56El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
19:58fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:00allí.
20:02Él dijo, ¿no te preocupas
20:04de todas tus casas
20:06y tus grandes estados y tal,
20:08con la revolución que está pasando?
20:10Él dijo, definitivamente no.
20:12El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
20:14fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:16allí.
20:18Él dijo, definitivamente no.
20:20El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
20:22fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:24allí.
20:26Él dijo, definitivamente no.
20:28El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
20:30fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:32allí.
20:34Él dijo, definitivamente no.
20:36El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
20:38fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:40allí.
20:42Él dijo, definitivamente no.
20:44El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
20:46fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:48allí.
20:50Él dijo, definitivamente no.
20:52El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
20:54fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
20:56allí.
20:58Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:00El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:02fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:04allí.
21:06Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:08El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:10fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:12allí.
21:14Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:16El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:18fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:20allí.
21:22Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:24El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:26fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:28allí.
21:30Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:32El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:34fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:36allí.
21:38Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:40El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:42fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:44allí.
21:46Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:48El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:50fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
21:52allí.
21:54Él dijo, definitivamente no.
21:56El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
21:58fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:00allí.
22:02Él dijo, definitivamente no.
22:04El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:06fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:08allí.
22:10El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:12fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:14allí.
22:16El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:18fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:20allí.
22:22El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:24fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:26allí.
22:28El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:30fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:32allí.
22:34El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:36fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:38allí.
22:40El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:42fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:44allí.
22:46El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:48fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:50allí.
22:52El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
22:54fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
22:56allí.
22:58El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:00fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:02allí.
23:04El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:06fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:08allí.
23:10El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:12fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:14allí.
23:16El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:18fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:20allí.
23:22El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:24fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:26allí.
23:28El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:30fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:32allí.
23:34El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:36fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:38allí.
23:40El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:42fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:44allí.
23:46El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:48fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:50allí.
23:52El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
23:54fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
23:56allí.
23:58El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:00fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:02allí.
24:04El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:06fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:08allí.
24:10El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:12fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:14allí.
24:16El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:18fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:20allí.
24:22El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:24fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:26allí.
24:28El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:30fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:32allí.
24:34El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:36fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:38allí.
24:40El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:42fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:44allí.
24:46El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:48fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:50allí.
24:52El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
24:54fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
24:56allí.
24:58El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
25:00fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
25:02allí.
25:04El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
25:06fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
25:08allí.
25:10El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
25:12fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
25:14allí.
25:16El alcalde Alphonse de Rothschild
25:18fue preguntado en la revolución comunista
25:20allí.

Recomendada