Saturday, June 24, 2017

Rise and Fall of South Africa - the Dutch and Christian Influence - overview



The mere mention of South Africa in a discussion provokes deep images of institutional racism, discrimination and horrific violence. Stefan Molyneux is joined by Simon Roche for an in-depth look at the controversial history of South Africa, the untold story of Apartheid, rising criminality, an astronomical murder rate, President Jacob Zuma's reign of terror, the epidemic slaughter of white farmers, Afrikaner boer land confiscation and the growing possibility of civil war.

Simon Roche is Head of the Office of the HQ of the world’s largest non-state civil defense organization, Suidlanders of South Africa. Once an ANC activist, Simon Roche now works with Suidlanders to prepare for impending catastrophe in the Rainbow Nation.

Website: http://www.suidlanders.org

https://suidlanders.org/who-we-are/ We are primarily a Bible believing Christian conservative group. We call on our members to personally prepare for an emergency situation like major civil unrest. With the help of thousands of our members we have prepared and identified extraction routes and safe areas where trained and capable members will become self-reliant and proficient to provide assistance and support to the inevitable flow of refugees during crisis. Through experience, especially in Africa, we have learned that we cannot depend on international bodies to assist during a conflict. We intend to, through God’s provision, help ourselves. We also believe in the words of a century old Prophet called Niklaas van Rensburg who clearly warned the Boer of an impending civil conflict. We invite the international community to contact us so that we may work together in preparing to resist a global persecution. Welcome to the Suidlanders.

White this is a very very long interview .. but it is necessary to go over the context of the history of this country and region.



Onto the south end of Africa arrived Dutch Calvinists in the 1650s to build a fort at Cape Town on the Cape of Good Hope .. French Huguenots followed as did German Lutherans which together became the Boers or Afrikaners of South Africa. Later, driven inland due to British war and subsequent colonization the Boers would break ground yet again and farm all the way to the post-WWII environment when the British Empire started to collapse to allow South Africa to gain independence and to thrive in the last half of the 20th century to the unraveling of this nation since the end of apartheid.



Learnings:



  • British were the 1st to utilize concentration camps well before the Germans did in the 1930s/1940s
  • British established what would be known as apartheid against the AdHoc system the Afrikanners allowed before the British took over control of South Africa and left them with this system
  • Muslim slavery techniques (14 MILLION to the Arabian peninsula) included castration of all male slaves to keep slave populations under control
  • Black African treatment of fellow blacks was horrendous .. a dominate black tribe reduced the population of another tribe numbering 3 million to 1 million.
  • It took a TWO YEAR expedition to locate suitable "broad shouldered" black people for the slave trade going inland from Capetown in the late 1700s up toward the existing slave trade ports on the east side of Africa. This proves that the South Africa region was sparsely populated for sure before blacks started migrating to this region years later when it was heard that stability (no tribal wars) and good food could be found.
  • TBC [to be continued]

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