Which Dictator Killed The Most People?

This infographic shows worldwide dictators ordered by the number of killings, one drop, one million dead.

Which dictator killed the most People

They say that it takes compassion for humanity, love for country, and a strong pursuit of justice and mercy to become a strong and respected leader of the masses. Every once in a while, however, there are those politicians or generals that decide to do things their own way. These cold-blooded dictators do not care for the value of life as much as they do achieving their selfish motives of domination, power, and immortality.

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Barack Hussein Obama In 1998: “I Actually Believe In Redistribution”

Fidel Castro: “I actually believe in redistribution”.
Result? Average monthly wage in Havana is 16 dollars a month.

Vladimir Lenin: “I actually believe in redistribution”.
Result? Millions dead as Russia slips into totalitarian nightmare.

Joseph Stalin: “I actually believe in redistribution”.
Result? Famine in Ukraine kills 15,000,000.

Pol Pot: “I actually believe in redistribution”.
Result? 20% of Cambodian population slaughtered in killing fields.

Mao Tse-tung: “I actually believe in redistribution”.
Result? 100,000,000 dead in Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution.

Barack Hussein Obama: “I actually believe in redistribution”.
Result? World economy on brink of collapse.

I’m sensing a pattern here.

An audio recording of President Barack Obama surfaced on social media Tuesday in which the president can be clearly heard telling a Loyola University audience in 1998 that he believes in the “redistribution” of wealth in America, something that his critics have long charged.

“I think the trick is figuring out how do we structure government systems that pool resources and hence facilitate some redistribution because I actually believe in redistribution — at least at a certain level to make sure that everybody’s got a shot,” Obama can be heard saying.

The audio file, which was posted on YouTube, purports to be from an Oct. 19, 1998 conference at Loyola University, where Obama, then an Illinois state senator, termed the substance of his speech policy research “for the working poor broadly defined.”

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