SUGAR KEYNES by Zygmund
Dobbs
Reprinted from The Review of the News,
John Maynard Keynes Lytton Strachey
[1883-1946] [1880-1932]

"By a continuous process of inflation, governments
can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their
citizens. By this method, they not only confiscate, but they confiscate
arbitrarily; and while the process impoverishes many, it actually enriches
some....The process engages all of the hidden forces of economic law on the
side of destruction, and does it in a manner that not one man in a million can
diagnose." - John Maynard
Keynes Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920
Singing
the Red Flag, the highborn sons of the British upper-class lay on the
carpeted floor spinning out socialist schemes in homosexual intermission.
Sometimes, one of the participants would shout out an obscenity - then, as if
on signal, the entire group would join in a frenzied babble of profanity. Here
and there individuals would smoke or chew hashish. Most had unkempt long hair,
and some sported beards.
The attitude in such
gatherings was anti-establishmentarian. To them the older generation was
horribly out of date; even superfluous. The capitalist system was declared
obsolete, and revolution was proclaimed as the only solution. Christianity was
pronounced an enemy force, and the worst sort of
depravities were eulogized as “that love which passes all Christian
understanding.”
The year was 1904, and the
participants were destined to become the intellectual and political leaders of
the British Empire.
Chief of this ring of
homosexual revolutionaries was John Maynard Keynes, who eventually became the
economic architect of English socialism and gravedigger for the British Empire.
The chief American Fabians, acting as carriers of the Keynesian sickness, were
Felix Frankfurter and Walter Lippmann. Covertly, they
mobilized their Leftist comrades to spread this pollution in America also. So
successful were they that on January 4, 1971, President Nixon announced: “I am
now a Keynesian in economics.” What does that mean?
Keynes was characterized by
his male sweetheart, Lytton Strachey,
as “A liberal and a sodomite, an atheist and a statistician.” His particular
depravity was the sexual abuse of little boys. In communications to his
homosexual friends, Keynes advised that they go to Tunis, “where bed and boy were also not expensive.” As a sodomistic
pedophiliac, he ranged throughout the Mediterranean area in search of boys for
himself and his fellow socialists. Taking full advantage of the bitter poverty
and abysmal ignorance in North Africa, the Middle East, and Italy, he purchased
the bodies of children prostituted for English shillings[See Lytton Strachey, A
Critical Biography, Michael Holyroyd, Holt,
Rinehart and Winston, two volumes].
Such Leftist hypocrites
then, as now, issued loud denunciations against poverty, imperialism, and
capitalist immorality. However, for their own degenerate purposes, they eagerly
sought out the worst pockets of destitution and backwardness to satisfy their perverted
purposes through sexual enslavement of youngsters. While traveling in France
and the United States they complained among themselves of the harassment by the
police of practicing homosexuals. In degenerate areas of the Mediterranean, on
the other hand, they found a pervert’s Utopia where the bodies of children
could be purchased as part of a cultured socialist’s holiday.
These Leftist degenerates
began to scheme over sixty years ago to secure public acceptance of their
depravity. Havelock Ellis, a founder of the Fabian Society, compiled a massive
erotic work entitled, Studies In The Psychology Of
Sex. Ellis was a sexual pervert and drug user. He and a group of fellow
Leftists even pioneered in the experimental use of hallucinogens in private
orgies. Ellis was definitely a pathological case. He drove his wife into
Lesbianism and drug addiction, securing additional erotic excitement by urging
her to recite her Lesbian experiences. Mrs. Ellis eventually went insane and
died in utmost misery after denouncing her husband as a sexual monster.
The Fabian socialists used
the writings of Ellis as a wedge for sex education in the schools. They started
in the colleges and gradually eased into the high school level. Ellis
complained to his fellow socialists fifty-five years ago that he found wider
acceptance for his books in the United States than he did in England. In fact,
he was arrested and tried for obscenity in England, whereas his books were sold
here without serious interference by the authorities. Today, his perversions
are standard reference material for the sex educators, and Havelock Ellis is
popularly called “the father of social psychology.”
Keynes and his cohorts
seized upon the works of Ellis as justification for their depravities. They
were also greatly bolstered in their campaign by the theories of an Austrian
Leftist named Sigmund Freud. Dr. Freud acknowledged in private correspondence
that he copied the thesis of sex as the central determinant in human action
from Havelock Ellis. Echoing Ellis, he laid down the premise that homosexuality
and carnal depravities are not a matter of abnormality, but merely a case of
personal preference. This, plus his declaration of atheism, overjoyed the
socialist Keynesian crowd. John Maynard Keynes audaciously proclaimed, “Sex
Questions are about to enter the political arena.” He inveighed against “the
treatment of sexual offense and abnormalities,” adding the charge that “the
existing state of the Law and of orthodoxy is still Mediaeval - altogether out
of touch with civilized opinion and civilized practice and with what
individuals, educated and uneducated alike, say to one another in private.”
During the same period
(1925) Keynes struck out against drug control. He laid down the line which has
been pursued by Leftists to the present day in demanding that distribution of
narcotics be unrestricted. Homosexuals find drugs a useful adjunct in loosening
moral inhibitions to perversion. And this ravisher of little boys feigned
sympathy for the masses by urging universal rights for users of narcotics. He
declared: “how far is bored and suffering humanity to be allowed, from time to
time, an escape, an excitement, a stimulus, a
possibility of change?”
Keynes and his conspirators
projected homosexuality and drug addiction as an intrinsic part of their
collectivist society of the future. His male sweetheart, Lytton
Strachey, wrote privately that they would corrupt the
whole population, “subtly, through literature, into the bloodstream of the
people, and in such a way that they accepted it all naturally, if need be
without at first realizing what it was to which they were agreeing.” He boasted
that he intended “to seduce his readers to tolerance through laughter and sheer
entertainment.” He pointed out that the object was “to write in a way that
would contribute to an eventual change in our ethical and sexual mores - a
change that couldn’t be done in a minute, but would unobtrusively permeate the
more flexible minds of young people.” J. M. Keynes put it in the terms of
Marxist economics:
“When the accumulation of wealth is no longer of high social importance, there will be great changes in the code of morals. We shall be able to rid ourselves of many pseudo-moral principles which have hagridden us for two hundred years....”
Keynes and Strachey used their malignant writings to help contaminate
the entire English-speaking world. In the United States they both found
expression in the New Republic, the New York Times, and the Saturday
Review Of Literature.
In
The works of Keynes, Lytton Strachey, and Bertrand
Russell have been, and are today, required reading in almost every college and
university in the United States and Canada.
In the spring of 1905
Keynes and his lavender cohorts had been thrilled by a conference of Russian
revolutionaries in London. British Fabians and Joseph Fels,
an American soap manufacturer who was also a Fabian, had financed the Russian
gathering and furnished them a hall in a Christian church. Key
revolutionaries at this London conference included Nikolai Lenin, Leon Trotsky,
and Joseph Stalin. The future slaughter of fifty million
civilians, and the conquest of one-third of the earth’s surface. rested within the shelter of this gathering. Shivers of
excitement rippled down the spines of the socialist homosexuals when they heard
that Lenin had openly defended the slaughter of bank guards and stealing of
bank funds for the bolshevik coffers. During this
time Strachey wrote to one of his intimates: “At this
moment Keynes is lying on a rug beside me.”
Keynes and his fellow
debauchees became active pacifists and conscientious objectors during World War
I. The socialist position against military service dovetailed perfectly with
the homosexual aversion to any kind of physical danger and the manly
requirements of military training. Yet, in spite of Keynes’ sheltering of
“queer conchies,” and his own refusal to serve his country, he was made the
head of an important division of the British Treasury. During March of 1917 he
confided privately that he supported the bolshevik
group among the Russian socialists after the overthrow of Czar Nicholas.
The seizure of power by the
bolsheviks in November of
1917 elated Keynes and the rest of the Fabian coterie. At Leftist parties in
London, Keynes and his fellow perverts celebrated by dressing in women’s
clothes and performing lewd dances. He had as his consort an
eighteen-year-old-boy who was ensconced as his assistant in the Treasury
Department.
Just before the Bolshevik
Revolution, Keynes had made a hurried trip to the United States for the British
Government. Here he had a chance to make contact with the American Fabians who
were similarly entrenched, via the Frankfurter-Lippmann
group, in key positions of the Wilson Administration.
Even the House of Morgan in
New York City’s financial district trotted out its sissies to welcome Keynes to
this country, and gave him an office just for himself. The international
grapevine had established the nature of his proclivities. The urbane air of
Keynes sent thrills of excitement through the ranks of the financial “giggle
gang.”
Keynes’ deviate socialist
circle was almost completely pro-bolshevik. One month
after the Revolution, J.M. Keynes wrote his mother”
“Well, the only course open to me is to be buoyantly bolshevik; and as I lie in bed in the morning I reflect with a good deal of satisfaction that, because our rulers are as incompetent as they are mad and wicked, one particular era of a particular kind of civilization is very nearly over.”
On February 22, 1918,
Keynes proudly boasted of “being a bolshevik.” Yet
the British Government blindly sent Keynes to the Versailles peace talks. There
he joined forces with his Fabian American comrade, Walter Lippmann,
who was among those representing the equally blind U.S. Government. The ensuing
pro-bolshevik and anti-American machinations were
largely responsible not only for laying the basis for continuing Red victories,
but also for setting off the chain of events that eventually brought Hitler to
power.
In 1919 Keynes authored The
Economic Consequences Of The Peace, which was
promptly acclaimed from Moscow by Nikolai Lenin, himself. The Red dictator
declared: “Nowhere has the Versailles treaty been described so well as in the
book by Keynes.” A special edition of The Economic Consequences was
printed under the label of the Fabian Society; and, Frankfurter and Lippmann brought the manuscript to the United States and
arranged with Harcourt and Brace to publish it here. The volume became required
reading among American socialists and Communists.
However, Keynes’ value as a
hidden Red was in danger. The Fabians had developed the posture of
“respectability” to a fine art and the value of Keynes’ book as an “impartial
work” was in jeopardy. With Keynes’ future usefulness in upper-class circles at
stake, Lenin had personally come to the rescue. He pulled the classic Leftist double-twist,
praising Keynes’ book as a model for Communist revolutionaries and at the same
time covering for Keynes by labeling him as “anti-bolshevik.”
Nikolai Lenin rose before the Second Congress of the Communist International
and declared:
“I will quote another economic source which assumes particularly great significance, the British diplomat Keynes, the author of The Economic Consequences Of The Peace, who on the instructions of his government, took part in the Versailles peace negotiations, watched them directly from the purely bourgeois point of view, studied the subject step by step, and took part in the conference as an economist. He arrived at conclusions which are stronger, more striking and more instructive than any a Communist revolutionary could advance, because they are conclusions drawn by an acknowledged bourgeois....”
Thus was launched the
career of Fabian leader Keynes as a “non-Leftist” and “non-Communist.”
In 1925, John Maynard
Keynes was married. It was a bizarre performance. His best “man” was Duncan
Grant, his male lover for many years, and initiates swear that Keynes held
Duncan’s hand as the marriage vows were spoken. But, the background of the
bride was equally odd. She was Lydia Lopokova, the
premiere ballerina of the Diaghilev Ballet. She was an
habitué of Leftist circles, and had at one time been engaged to Heywood Broun, the well known socialist and confidant of Leon
Trotsky, but had broken the engagement to marry a dwarf named Barocchi. In 1917 Lydia had disappeared in Paris with the
top Cossack general of the White Army, returning to the ballet when the general
returned to lead his troops against the bolsheviks.
The bolsheviki had by now,
however, acquired advance information and used it to defeat the Cossacks.
Following the wedding to
Comrade Lydia, Mr. and Mrs. Keynes were the special guests of the Soviet
Government. He and his Russian wife were allowed free access to the Soviet
hinterland, even to the extent of visiting her relatives. This was a privilege
unheard of at the time, since even members of the Communist International were
not then allowed such unlimited travel. It was a time of mass killing of
civilians, and ordinarily a Russian national traveling with an Englishman would
have been arrested and shot. But, Soviet officials were effusive in their
thanks to Keynes for designing the first Soviet currency for them while he was
still a member of the British Treasury.
The marriage was definitely
an “arrangement,” as Keynes continued to enjoy his amours with men. This was
often the case with upper-class homosexuals who needed a legal wife as a
facade. They both had separate living quarters, and did not interfere with the
personal lives of one another. Lydia was very useful as a go-between since
Keynes was in frequent contact with Soviet officials both in Britain and the
United States.
Meanwhile, the perversion
continued apace. It was quite a pace. As I have noted in the new edition of Keynes
At Harvard:
Keynes had relations with Strachey; Strachey had affairs with Duncan Grant; Keynes stole Grant from Strachey; Lytton’s brother James Strachey adored Rupert Brooks but so did Keynes; Strachey reports to G.E. Moore on seduction of new boys; Keynes steals Edgar Duckworth from Lytton; Keynes and Lytton agree that homosexuality is, “that love which passes all Christian understanding”; Strachey emulates Oscar Wilde with absinthe and drugs; He also declares that, “the whole truth is the Devil”; He predicts that in one hundred years, “everyone will be converted,” to homosexuality; Strachey and Keynes promote obscenitarian talk in colleges; Lytton lives with Dora Carrington, a Lesbian; Carrington solicits homosexual partners for Lytton; Keynes, Lytton and Carrington have orgies involving Lesbian and sodomistic interchanges; Keynes and Strachey dress in women’s clothes and dance; Keynes and Strachey give a sanctuary to homosexual objectors to military service thus frustrating the authorities; Keynes defends the use of drugs and Strachey smokes hashish; Carrington married several men so they could be Strachey’s boy-friends; Lytton stole Sebastian Sprott from Keynes (the tables were turned); Lytton excuses his drug taking as a liberation from, “this wrong world.” Finally, there are engrossments by Keynes and Strachey with sadistic beating of young boys, “compulsive pre-occupation with male reproductive and excretory organs” and voyages to the most depraved dens of perversion throughout Europe, North Africa and Asia.
The Fabian homosexual
circle was incredibly successful in gaining influence and control in a wide
area of activity. They staked out the entire British Empire and the United
States as well. Lytton Strachey
wrote to Keynes:
“Oh dear me!, when will my heaven be realized? - My Castle in Spain? Rooms, you know, for you, Duncan and Swithin, as fixtures - Woolf of course, too, if we can lure him from Ceylon; and several suites for guests. Can you conceive anything more supreme! I should write tragedies; you would revolutionize political economy, Swithin would compose French poetry, Duncan would paint our portraits in every conceivable combination and permutation, and Woolf would criticize us and our works without remorse.”
This projection was
incredibly prophetic. J. M. Keynes became the mastermind behind the economic
structure of British and American socialism. Strachey
was responsible for writing books that undermined the Christian ethic of the
Nineteenth Century and set the tone for the pornographic and depraved
literature of today. Leonard Woolf worked out the
details of the socialist drive for World Government. He was not only the
architect of the League of Nations but outlined the structure of the United
Nations.
Others of this perverted
group of Keynesians have set the tone in art, music, education, and religion.
Today [1971], alas, even the President of the United States says: “I am now
a Keynesian in economics.” It is disgusting!
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