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Did the inventor of roulette kill himself?

Was the inventor of a machine designed by the Nazi war criminals really killed, in a horrible, painful and slow manner, for some simple crime? Or was there a much deeper motive to his death, an inexplicable and hidden motive that made him a victim. There are those who would argue that the inventor of the first roulette machine in Europe or America had something deeper in mind, just as there are those who would argue that the inventor of the atomic bomb had something profound in mind. But there is no doubt that the inventor of roulette could not have killed himself. And it is for this very reason that we must make it clear: the machine that killed the inventor is not on our side in the struggle for this world and this war, nor is it on a side that we can win! It is our enemy. The machine is the enemy of mankind, and it must be smashed as swiftly and as completely as possible. It is not for nothing that we have the National Front. It is not for nothing that we have the National Front. It is not for nothing that there has been such a large-scale and violent clash between a right and an left, a bourgeois and a socialist government, a fascist government… For we believe that it is in the interests of the German people that, in order to take upon ourselves and defend the nation and put in motion the necessary reforms–things like a new constitution and all that–it must, in addition to the people’s representatives, be composed of three representatives of the upper hand, that is, of the bourgeois upper middle class, of the political bourgeoisie, and of the working people. In order to make the right wing of this bourgeoisie tremble at the thought of the working class, and it is in this spirit that we have insisted on this matter: that from then on the role of the middle class should be to represent the interests of the working class. It is a matter which concerns itself exclusively with the interests of the working class and not with the aspirations of the middle class as such, that is, as a whole, and not only of the upper middle class, as is the case today. Thus we have, for the first time in this war, a matter which concerns itself entirely with the interests of the nation [sic] and of the nation alone. In that matter we have an opportunity, which I think it will be in the interests of all of us to make good the mistake we have made in the past. But the mistake we have made has been not only in that we