
Originally Posted by
YLC
I have not spoke enough it seems, but in anyway, allow me to clear somethings up.
If we are dealing with Russians of a less favorable sort, we must also remember that Russia is not all communist - some are Bolshevik, Red, some are Menshevik, White. I must also state that the Stranger's kill was obviously not performed with ill intent, as can be seen if one reads it properly, and I thought we established that the kill was done by a single person, not a family or group? There is also the reference to French, and a mosin-nagant, indications of Imperial Russia, which are more White, or pro-monarchist and pro-provisional supporters.
Please, take more thought into consideration.
More information to hgelp those of the committee.
"During World War I, some anti-war mensheviks had formed a group called Menshevik-internationalists (меньшевики-интернационалисты). They opposed war and 'social chauvinism', were active around the newspaper Novaya Zhizn and took part in the Mezhraiontsy formation. After July 1917 events in Russia, they broke with Menshevik majority that supported war. The mensheviks-internationalists became the hub of the Russian Social Democratic Workers' Party (of internationalists) (РСДРП (интернационалистов)). In 1920, right-wing mensheviks-internationalists emigrated, some of them pursued anti-bolshevik activities.[1]
The Democratic Republic of Georgia was a stronghold of the Mensheviks. In parliamentary elections held on February 14, 1919 they won 81.5 percent of the votes, and the Menshevik leader Noe Zhordania became Prime minister."