>The Palace of the Soviets (Russian: Двopeц Coвeтoв, Dvorets Sovetov) was a project to construct a political convention center in Moscow on the site of the demolished Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. The main function of the palace was to house sessions of the Supreme Soviet in its 130-metre (430 ft) wide and 100-metre (330 ft) tall grand hall seating over 20,000 people. If built, the 416-metre (1,365 ft) tall palace would have become the world's tallest structure, with an internal volume surpassing the combined volumes of the six tallest American skyscrapers.[10]
>The current church is the second to stand on this site. The original church, built during the 19th century, took more than 40 years to build, and was the scene of the 1882 world premiere of the 1812 Overture composed by Tchaikovsky. It was destroyed in 1931 on the order of Lazar Kaganovich. The demolition was supposed to make way for a colossal Palace of the Soviets to house the country's legislature, the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. Construction started in 1937 but was halted in 1941 when Germany invaded the Soviet Union during World War II. Its steel frame was disassembled the following year, and the Palace was never built.
Jew. Used and disposed of by Stalin who wuz a gud boi dindu nuffin.
Logan Harris
pure fantasy, that structure
the dome the whole fucking monstrosity sits on is structurally impossible
Thomas Carter
based if true.
Grayson Parker
>Used and disposed of by Stalin who wuz a gud boi dindu nuffin. I think you're confusing him with someone else
>During the Second World War, Kaganovich was commissar of the North Caucasian and Transcaucasian Fronts. After the war, apart from serving in various industrial posts, Kaganovich was also made deputy head of the Soviet government. After Stalin's death in 1953 he quickly lost influence. Following an unsuccessful coup attempt against Nikita Khrushchev in 1957, Kaganovich was forced to retire from the Presidium and the Central Committee. In 1961 he was expelled from the party, and lived out his life as a pensioner in Moscow. At his death in 1991, he was the last surviving Old Bolshevik.[1] The Soviet Union itself outlasted him by only five months, dissolving on 25 December 1991.
Cameron King
>t.Chabad
Zachary Gutierrez
You'll never be white, Rajeesh.
Mason Cruz
Reminder that Bolsheviks are literally subterranean rat people in disguise.
The Tower of Babel is the oldest allegorical symbol refering to the one world government concept and historically originating as a rebellious act against God that expresses humanity's overall bravado. Identically, and according to alternative accounts, the Palace of the Soviets was intended as the seat of the potential world communist state that was Lenin and Stalin's wet dream.
Carson Scott
Schwab has a Lenin bust on his shelf and RINOs like the Bushes and McCain are basically Neo-Trotskyites. Best guess is Rothkikes decided to use Stalin and the Cold War to A/B test globalism through military and through corpratism and fractional reserve banking. The latter model proved more effective.