Friends, the influenza virus is 39 degrees Celsius, no more updates

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As the title says, the thermometer showed a fever of 38.9 degrees, I kept coughing, had a fever for a whole day, and my whole body ached.

I took ibuprofen in the morning and felt better by noon, but unexpectedly the fever started again in the afternoon.

I went to see the doctor, who told me it was influenza A and prescribed some oseltamivir.

I had a low-grade fever on New Year's Day, but I took ibuprofen and got over it.

I didn't expect that just a week later, influenza A broke out again.

No update today, sorry, really sorry.

Chapter 479: The Far East is complicated

Yuan Shikai was having heated business talks with the Americans. At the same time, a ship sailing to the Ussuri Far East Autonomous Region also carried the hopes of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party.

Joseph Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili, or Stalin as he was better known to later generations, was leaning on the deck railing, looking at the endless sea of ​​whales, his thoughts gradually drifting away.

Stalin was a Georgian, the son of a shoemaker, and studied theology from a young age.

However, his father looked down on him and repeatedly claimed, "You are the son of a shoemaker, and you want to be a priest? Don't even think about it! I am a shoemaker, and as my son, you must be a shoemaker in the future too!"

The extremely bad relationship with his father made Stalin develop a rebellious character since childhood, and also laid the foundation for him to understand "revolutionary books" and come into contact with Marxism when he was studying later.

In early 1898, he joined the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party, intending to study while engaging in party activities.

However, the school suddenly raised tuition fees, and he was unable to pay and had to give up the final exam and was expelled from the school.

 This incident also became an opportunity for him to go to the Far East.

After the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party reached an aid agreement with Yan Fu, the top leaders decided to send a group of members to the Far East, hoping to develop an organization to "make revolution" in the Ussuri Autonomous Region, a place not under the jurisdiction of the Russian Tsarist government.

After the establishment of the Ussuri Autonomous Region, the Russians there were not expelled, but some of them still returned to European Russia.

But at the same time, there are also many people who did not go back and took root in the Ussuri Autonomous Region.

In Lenin's view, the fact that the latter did not obey the "Tsar's instigation" and return to Europe showed that they were very dissatisfied with the current situation in Russia.

The occurrence of this situation means that developing proletarian organizations among these stranded Russians may have unexpected effects.

Therefore, Stalin and his group were selected by Lenin and sent to the Far East.

However, the rebellious character developed since childhood makes the ideas of Stalin and Lenin somewhat different today.

He leaned on his arm, looked at the waves on the sea, turned around to look at the yellow-skinned passengers coming and going on the deck, shook his head, and took a deep breath of the slightly humid air.

There were waves on the sea. Compared with the situation in Europe and Russia where white people were everywhere, the biggest difference that Stalin felt in the Far East was the yellow people who could be seen everywhere.

It's not that he hates the yellow race, he just hasn't gotten used to it yet.

Especially when facing the yellow people who defeated the Russian army, Stalin's feelings were still somewhat complicated.

At this time, although Stalin hated the Tsar, he did not want to harm Russia.

Find familiar groups

He always believed that after overthrowing the Tsar, establishing a Russian republican government led by the Social Democratic Labor Party was the right path.

Therefore, he still felt a little sad when he saw that Mother Russia had lost a large piece of territory in the Far East.

The young Stalin was not like Lenin, who was determined to establish a proletarian dictatorship from beginning to end. At least that was what he thought before the February Revolution in Russia.

In the original time and space, he truly changed his mind and decided to establish a proletarian Russia led by the Bolsheviks. This was after the Russian Provisional Government took action against the Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies and forced them to go to the front line to fight against Germany.

"Is it really possible to save Russia from the Chinese? I heard from my friends who attended the Munich Conference that what they established seems to be a peasant-oriented organization.

Can such a peasant organization lead the working class?"

Thinking of this, Stalin shook his head in self-mockery.

In any case, as a representative of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party, he had no better choice.

Compared to St. Petersburg, Moscow and the Caucasus, where secret police are everywhere, the Far East is undoubtedly a safer place.

If we cannot even mobilize the Russians here, then it would be even more unrealistic to mobilize the Russians in the above-mentioned places to rise up against the Tsar.

"Joseph, what are you thinking about?" Just as Stalin was lost in thought, a companion wearing round-frame glasses and with flowing hair walked up to him.

"Lev, can't you stay in the cabin any longer?" Stalin pulled out a pack of cigarettes he had bought when the ship docked in Busan. He then took out a box of matches, lit them, and started smoking.

"Try it. The cigarettes made by the Chinese taste different from those made by the French."

Lev Davidovich Bronstein, or more famously Trotsky, took the cigarette from Stalin and smoked it with ecstasy.

In the previous two years, Trotsky had actively participated in the workers' movement in southern Russia and spontaneously organized several riots of industrial workers in southern Russia. As a result, he was issued a wanted warrant by the Tsarist government.

2At the beginning of this year, Trotsky traveled to Minsk, Belarus, and attended the secret founding meeting of the Russian Social Democratic Labor Party. Since then, he has been operating in secret near Minsk.

9 Stalin, also wanted, was forced to flee from the Caucasus to Minsk.

Since both of them were in Minsk, they became familiar with each other and conducted research and debates on the future development of the Social Democratic Labor Party many times.

0After attending the Munich Congress of the Second International, Lenin, considering that Trotsky had already been a figurehead of the Tsarist government and was no longer suitable to organize the workers' movement in Russia in the short term, decided to send him and Stalin to the Far East to establish a proletarian organization there.

The two people who were incompatible in the Siyuan time and space are not only friends in Minsk in this time and space, but now they are on the same ship and are sent to the Far East together. It has to be said that this is a kind of fate.

“Joseph, you should take a look at this. Perhaps we should change our view of the Far East.

At least this place doesn't seem to be ruled by a peasant party." Trotsky took out a stack of documents and handed them to Stalin.

Lu "This is this..." Stalin took it and looked at it carefully. The more he looked, the more surprised he became.

In Trotsky's hand was a leaflet of the "Ussuri Autonomous Region Administrative Committee" that he had obtained from the Chinese on the ship. The leaflet was written in Chinese, Russian, English, Japanese and other languages.

Seafood fishing cooperatives, farmland cooperatives, agricultural product sales cooperatives, credit loan cooperatives

Even though Stalin had been involved in revolutions in Europe for several years, he was still confused when he saw these "special terms" on the propaganda page.

Isn’t it said that there isn’t much of a working class in the Far East and that it’s basically all peasants?

What are these organizations?

This large number of cooperatives with various names seem to be intended to give birth to the working class on the basis of farmers' organizations?

In this case, the original idea of ​​expanding only among the Russians in the Far East will have to change.

It is not impossible to spread the ideas of the Social Democratic Labour Party among the yellow race.

"The situation in the Far East is too complicated." Trotsky frowned, looking at the leaflet in his hand, and said slowly:

"It seems that we must first put aside the idea of ​​fighting alone and not just ask for material support from the Chinese as we thought when we set out.

I think we need to have in-depth contact with the local Red Confucian Society before making any further decisions."

Chapter 480 Meeting at the Dock

"Judging from your appearance, do you think you are comrades from Russia?"

As soon as he stepped onto the Vladivostok dock, Stalin heard a Russian call from not far away. He raised his head and soon saw a young yellow man with short, neat hair walking towards him.

"Who are you?" Trotsky looked around vigilantly, and after finding that no one else was approaching, he looked up and down at the person in front of him.

As soon as he got ashore, he was stopped by someone. Trotsky thought that it was the Tsar’s secret police who had tracked him down all the way to the Far East, and his vigilance suddenly soared.

It's not that he is too timid, but these seven things have indeed happened to him.

After the Sino-Russian War, in order to quell the domestic riots caused by dissatisfaction with the defeat, the Tsar arrested a large number of dissidents who were causing trouble and packed them up and threw them all onto a train to Siberia.

A considerable number of Russians who had lived in Europe all their lives were driven to the sparsely populated North Asia and lived in camps called "exile villages" just because they expressed dissatisfaction with the Tsar's defeat.

Unfortunately, the Tsarist government had not built much cold-resistant infrastructure here, and the brave Slavic people could only rely on their own clothes to withstand the cold. As long as the temperature dropped a little more, hundreds of people doing hard labor in each camp would freeze to death.

Some people in the camp saw that the Tsar was determined not to let them live, and when they heard that there were a large number of people in the Ussuri Autonomous Region and that there were many Russians, they began to think about escaping.

Gradually, this trend of escape spread throughout the Siberian exile camps.

In order to punish these escaped prisoners, Tsar Nicholas II sent people to the Ussuri Autonomous Region to capture them.

However, due to the special nature of the Ussuri Autonomous Region, the Tsar could only send secret police and could not arrest people on a large scale.

"My name is Zhang Zuolin. I'm sent by the Red Confucian Society's Vladivostok organization to greet you." While Zhang Zuolin stated his own identity, he was also confirming the identities of the two.

Zhang Zuolin was originally an undercover member of the Red Confucian Society's underground branch in Vladivostok. He drew a large number of maps of the Russian army's fortifications, supply points, gunpowder storage points, etc. in the Vladivostok area, making a significant contribution to the victory of the National Revolutionary Army in the war against Russia.

After the war, he returned to Vladivostok.

However, this time, he was no longer an intelligence officer, but a civil affairs officer. Since he had a wide circle of friends, was a generous person, and could speak Russian, he was sent to deal with some matters related to the Russians.

Looking at the two figures in front of him, one tall and one short, Zhang Zuolin narrowed his glasses.

According to the information provided by the organization, the foreigners who came today are different from those from the Second International before. This time they are two Russians.

Of the two men, one was short and his left arm was shorter than his right arm; the other wore round-frame glasses and had a goatee that was not common among foreigners.

After looking the two people in front of him up and down, Zhang Zuolin nodded, feeling that he was probably not mistaken.

"Zhang...Zuo...Lin" Stalin pronounced the three words in Russian with difficulty.

"Or you can also call me Boris. This is the name my Russian teacher gave me." Zhang Zuolin, wearing a thick leather jacket, grinned and laughed.

"Boris, so you are Boris!" Trotsky's brows relaxed, and he took a step forward and shook Zhang Zuolin's hand:

"I didn't expect that the contact person Boris, whom the party told us about before coming here, was actually a Chinese."

"Who says Chinese people can't have foreign names?" Zhang Zuolin turned around, got on a rickshaw, and turned around again and said with a smile:

"You two, please follow me and get in the car. We have a long way to go. Maybe you will also choose a Chinese name in the future."

A few days ago, Zhang Zuolin had sent people to the Vladivostok dock to welcome several groups of foreigners who had traveled across the ocean.

However, the previous inspection teams for political parties in Western European countries were organized by the Second International, and there were no personnel from the Russian Social Revolutionary Labour Party.

As for such a party that was "of special concern" in terms of organization, Zhang Zuolin did not dare to delegate the task to others and could only choose to welcome them personally.

The rickshaw quickly drove out of the city.

After leaving the bustling and narrow Vladivostok port area, what comes into view is a vast and vibrant field.

The fields are full of crops waiting to be harvested.

"Boris, are these all the results of your land reform?" Stalin couldn't help asking as he looked at the neatly divided fields.

"Yes, that's right. These are the lands liberated from the Tsar by Mao Zedong, and the peasants living on them." Zhang Zuolin explained:

These peasants had farmed here before, but at that time they were under the oppressive rule of the Russian agricultural aristocracy.

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