Gollner, Max.
Hamburger illustrierte, 9/1943.
Translation from German to Russian by Pavel Ragozin
How the Soviets steal German Inventions.
the Bolshevik Leica is an undeniable example of theft. The German soldiers were very perplexed when these products of Soviet industry fell into their hands, fully replicating the German patented inventions. It is not known which is worse: the blatant theft of developments or the ostentatious “successes” of Soviet industry. The dishonest Jewish-Bolshevik rulers steal German developments to gain an industrial advantage.
(Photo: engraving on the top cover of the FED camera)
Caption: A terrible symbol. The initials posted on Leica’s copy — the FED camera — belong to the first leader of the Bolshevik Cheka, Felix Dzerzhinsky. This fact connects the camera with a number of political crimes. "Bolshevik Leica" bears a bloody trail!
(Photo: FED and Leica)
Caption: The best proof of copying. The FED camera was created on the basis of the German Leica, but it is only a low-quality fake. The accuracy of German work has no competitors in the world.
(Photo: a man in a hat holds a camera.)
Caption: In the service of espionage. The FED in the Soviet Union is by no means like the Leica in Germany - a practical miniature camera accessible to everyone - in USSR only state security officials, commissioners and politicians can possess such a camera.
Does FED look like a German product? FED is a copy of Leica in form and materials. Even loading film is done in the same way as in a German camera. In fact, that FED is the same Leica- the world famous camera, recreated in great detail. The size, materials of manufacture, the optical layout of the lens, the format of the film, etc. were repeated.
However, the possibilities of the industry of the Soviets under Jewish leadership do not sufficiently allow imitating German work, high-quality and accuracy. If you carefully examine FED with a magnifier, you will notice signs of surprisingly mediocre work. The most important optical parts of the camera often diverge by more than half a millimeter. Imagine what happened in the German workshop of precision engineering, where combining two different parts with an accuracy of one thousandth of a millimeter is the norm! Apparently, the Soviet Union adopted a different attitude to work.
The main trouble is that the state Photo-Cinema-Trust (Foto-Kino-Trest) was not ashamed to sell third-rate cameras, offering them at a low price, not to mention the terrible, bloody symbol associated with the "Bolshevik Leica" - the "honorary name" of the first head of the Cheka : Felix Edmundovich Dzerzhinsky. If you combine the initial letters of the name of the killer, you get the designation FED! And even if we discard all the circumstances of the theft of German developments by the Soviets, the shadow of this person will forever remain an indirect recognition of the evil behind the Soviet regime.

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