How the British Invented Communism

By KATHERINE SARVIS

How the British Invented Communism - KATHERINE SARVIS
  • Release Date: 2026-05-06
  • Genre: European History

Description

You were told the Bolshevik Revolution was a workers' uprising. You were told communism spread because the conditions were right. You were never told who built the infrastructure, wrote the ideology, and managed the outcome — and why they needed you to believe the official story. How the British Invented Communism pulls back the curtain on three centuries of deliberate political engineering, tracing the hidden hand from the London radical clubs of the 1780s to the World Economic Forum's Great Reset agenda of 2020. What you will find inside: • The French Revolution decoded — how the Jacobin clubs were a British organisational franchise, not a French political invention • Karl Marx exposed — the aristocratic patrons, the commissioned manifesto, and the Manchester factory profits that funded the theory of workers' revolution • The Bolshevik money trail — documented evidence of the financial networks that delivered Lenin to the Finland Station • The sealed train question — why British intelligence, with networks across Switzerland, chose not to disrupt the operation that changed the world • Churchill's calculated lie — the anatomy of the 1920 article that pointed history in the wrong direction for a century • The Fabian thread — how gradual institutional permeation replaced violent revolution as the preferred method of the same network • The Round Table to Davos pipeline — the unbroken institutional genealogy from Milner's secret society to Klaus Schwab's annual gathering • The Great Reset in historical context — why a fully prepared global governance agenda appeared eleven weeks into a pandemic • The gatekeeping system named — the foundations, journals, and labelling mechanisms that have kept this story out of the mainstream • Reading history against the grain — practical analytical tools for evaluating any official narrative on its actual evidential merits This book is for readers who have sensed that the standard account of modern history is missing something structural — and who want evidence, not reassurance. Pick up your copy and read the history they spent a century making unspeakable.