This thread will explore the history of South Africa, the most successful and prosperous country on the African continent.
Re-released to celebrate @Lauren_Southern's ground-breaking documentary 'Farmlands.'
{PART 1}
https://twitter.com/BasedAndBritish/status/1017883543899443200
The story of South Africa is one of the most important for us in understanding racial dynamics and the iron law of demographics.
1652: The first White settlers arrive in South Africa. Jan van Riebeeck was sent to the tip of the continent by the Dutch East India Company.
Riebeeck was instructed to build a supply base for ships traveling to and from Asian territories. This was done in the capital Cape Town.
1657: The first White farmers were allocated lands and tasked with producing for harbored ships independently from the East India Company.
1680-1700 saw a dramatic increase in the White population, which helped expand the settlement. Slaves were imported to meet labor demands.
The native Bushmen of South Africa resented the new European settlers, though no major conflicts developed during this time.
White expansion continued to reduce the Bushmen's living space. Soon, they began stealing European livestock and other petty crimes.
After an inevitable clash the native Bushmen were forced to migrate further north to South West Africa, now called Namibia, where their descendants still live today.
1685: Mixed-racial marriages were outlawed. In spite of this, race mixing between Blacks and Whites continued until mixed race children dubbed the "Cape Coloreds" soon emerged.
The African-born Whites became known as the Boers, which is Dutch for "farmer." Many still spoke in Dutch. The Boers continued to expand further east.
The first major conflict was called the Kaffir Wars, which were a string of wars from 1781 between Europeans and the Xhosa tribe.
The Boers had been expanding east when they encountered the Xhosa tribe, who were moving southward. When they met, both expansions halted.
The Kaffir Wars ended in 1857. After consulting a witch doctor for advice, the Xhosa tribe killed all their cattle in hopes their ancestors would resurrect from their graves and drive Whites away from the land and into the ocean.
After Napoleon's defeat in the Napoleonic Wars, Britain purchased Cape Town from the Dutch. British soldiers landed permanently in 1806. The British would play a major role in the events in South Africa for the next 100 years.
1820: Mass British settlement began, with English becoming the official language of South Africa. This angered the Dutch speaking Boers, sowing much discord and division.
About 4,000 Settlers arrived in the Cape in around 60 different parties between April and June 1820.
1836: The Great Trek begins, with many Boers migrating further inwards to South Africa, hoping to escape Xhosa wars and the self-imposed British government.
The Trek Boers, or "Afrikaners" were met with equally hostile tribes in the Drakensburg mountains and were wiped out.
One group of Trek Boers made it to what would later be called the Orange Free State. The land was largely uninhabited due to the Difaqane wars.
It's here that the Boers first encountered the Zulus, a particularly aggressive tribe.
1836: The Zulus attacked and raided a trekker camp without warning at Vegkop. However, they were fought off and retreated over Limpopo River to present day Zimbabwe, and settled in an area between the Limpopo and the Zambezi Rivers that later became known as Matabeleland.
Piet Retief, leader of the Boer tribe, negotiated with Zulu king Dingaan, for a piece of territory. It appeared to be successful.
Retief and his party were later ambushed and killed by Zulus with the rest of the tribe killed 10 days later by thousands of Zulu tribesmen.
1838: The Battle of Blood River commenced. The Boer Trekkers and the Boers from the Cape united to defeat the Zulu armies for good. With 470 Voortrekkers and 10,000 to 15,000 Zulus, the Boers were clearly at a disadvantage.
However, they possessed superior and advanced weaponry.
Andries Pretorius, the elected General of the Boers, lead a devastating attack on the Zulus in which 1,000s were gunned down.
The attack decimated the Zulus, with the Ncome River running red with blood, hence "blood river." Only two Whites were harmed in the ordeal.
1878: The Zulus returned once again, with Zulu king Cetshwago expelling the British from Natal. The British responded in kind.
British forces invaded an area named Zululand and forced Zulus to disband. They refused to comply and attacked the British in Rorke's Drift.
The battle of Rorke's Drift was laughably one-sided, with the Zulus in the thousands and a mere 150 British soldiers. The British won.
The Zulus were defeated in the Battle of Khambula and then in the Battle of Ulundi. This was the final defeat for the Zulus.
1881: The First Anglo-Boer War begins after tensions between the British and the Boers reach critical point.
The First Boer War resulted in a massive defeat for the British, after four consecutive losses to the greater-numbered Boers.
Despite this initial defeat, the British weren't finished with the Boers yet. They returned in 1886 to inspect and obtain gold.
The discovery of precious stones such as diamonds, brought an increasing amount of British intrigue with a newly found interest in South Africa.
1888: Cecil Rhodes, a Rothschild agent, along with the Jewish Barney Barnato establish the DaBeers company which will control the world's diamond production throughout the 20th Century.
1895: Around 500 British soldiers attempt to seize control of South Africa from the Boers. The invasion was led by Leander Starr Jameson.
The invasion is suppressed by the Boers. Britain sends more troops. After refusing to withdraw them the Second Anglo Boer War begins.
Now we approach the 20th century.
In Part 2, we will delve into the Second Anglo-Boer War, Nelson Mandela's rise to power, the eventual displacement of the White population and the fall of South Africa.
{END OF PART 1}
Here is Part 2 covering the history of South Africa from the turn of the 20th century to the present day. Read below.
https://twitter.com/BasedAndBritish/status/1018240274148089856
This thread will detail the history of South Africa through the 20th century to the present day, and the current crisis facing White South Africans.
{PART 2}
We start the 20th century in South Africa in the heat of the Second Anglo Boer War which began in 1899.
After foreigners immigrated in large numbers to South Africa due to the diamonds and gold in the area of Johannesburg, Boers were rapidly becoming outnumbered.
The Boer government grew fearful of losing control and began denying these new immigrants voting rights, classing them as "Uitlanders", which was Afrikkaans for "outsider."
Rising tensions between the immigrants and the Boers escalated into the 2nd and final Boer War. Boer President Paul Kruger tried to mediate the situation but to no avail.
The Boers had many initial victories in the war, but could not compete with the numbers of British soldiers.
Despite this, the Boers continued their assaults. The British resorted to building concentration camps to hold the Boer population.
Thousands of Boer women and children perished in these camps due to malnutrition, illness and typhus. This terrified the Boer forces.
Finally, the Boers surrendered at the Treaty of Vereenging in 1902 due to diminished numbers and the threat of complete extermination.
1910: The Union of South Africa is created, unifying the four colonies and placing them under British rule. Cape Town becomes the capital city.
1913: The Natives Land Act is passed, which segregates both the Natives and Whites, providing both races with living spaces of their own.
The Whites could not purchase more native land nor could the natives purchase White land.
1914: The Maritz Rebellion breaks out after the British in South Africa declare war on Germany.
The Boers refuse to take the side of the Brits due to their history of interference, mistreatment and war, which built up much resentment over the many years.
1922: An uprising began called The Rand Revolt, which arose due to non-Whites taking the jobs of White miners. It was ultimately suppressed by British forces.
The South African Communist Party came into existence during this time and was founded by various Jews inspired by the Red Revolution.
James Hertzog, leader of the National Party, resigns after South Africa joins World War 2. Hertzog had been campaigning for neutrality.
1961: South Africa gains its independence from British rule and becomes known as the Republic of South Africa, or "The White Republic."
1966: Hendrik Verwoerd, leader of the National Party, is assassinated in Parliament by being stabbed multiple times. It was the second attempt on his life.
His killer was a mixed-race man known as Dimitri Tsafendas, who joined the South African Communist Party in the 1930s.
During this era, South Africa was undeniably the superpower of Africa. They provided modern medicine to both Whites and Blacks. This lead to a decline in Black mortality rates and an increase in Black birth rates.
It is all downhill from here for White South Africans.
1961: A Communist named Joe Slovo establishes the group "Umkhonto we Sizwe" (Spear of the Nation) along with college friend Nelson Mandela.
In December of that year, Slovo and Mandela's group carpet bombs critical infrastructure. A total of 57 bombs were dropped in total.
1964: Mandela is arrested and imprisoned after police find him in possession of 40,000 Soviet-made mines and 140,000 hand grenades.
He was given a life sentence for conspiring to overthrow the South African government.
The policy of Apartheid, introduced in 1948, was an attempt to integrate Blacks in to White areas. Blacks had to carry a "passbook."
This "passbook" was a form of ID for Black South Africans, and needed to be held when working in a White area before its abolishment in 1986.
1976: The Soweto uprising occurred, as huge numbers of Black students began violently protesting the Afrikaans Medium Decree of 1974 which forced the Afrikaans language upon its Black students.
According to Desmond Tutu, Afrikaans was viewed as "the language of the oppressor."
1990: Nelson Mandela is released from prison after the South African government caves in from outside pressure. He returns to a hero's welcome.
Finally, in 1994, the Whites lose their power as the Nelson Mandela is elected leader of South Africa by a majority Black vote.
In the next 20 years, Mandela's rule turns South Africa, the once crowning jewel of the African continent, into a Third World country.
As of 2018, Cape Town is now experiencing a water shortage, making it the first capital city in the world to run out of water.
Life for the White population currently living in South Africa is plagued with hardship and danger.
Over 10% of Whites are currently living in poverty, with no prospects of improving themselves in their present conditions.
Enough Whites are currently being killed by Blacks in South Africa, that it can easily be classified as a form of genocide against the White population.
For a first hand look into the violence and its victims, watch @Lauren_Southern's 2018 documentary 'Farmlands.'
In 2015, Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini openly admitted that South Africa was better off under White rule.
Despite his portrayal in the western media, Nelson Mandela and his former wife Winnie Mandela, were really nothing more than Communist terrorists.
People still worked on behalf of Mandela while he was imprisoned. Mandela was never a man worth idolatry.
Even many anti-Communist Blacks were murdered by "necklacing." This form of torture was used frequently by Winnie Mandela who openly called for the "neclacing" of ideological enemies.
The legacy both Mandelas left on South Africa is a very dark one indeed.
Finally, in 2018, the South African government chose to seize White farmers' lands without compensation.
In 2016, Julius Malema joked that they "are not calling for the mass killing of Whites. At least not yet..."
In Part 1, I referred to South Africa by calling it the most successful and prosperous country in Africa. Under White rule, it was.
However, when Whites de-colonised and handed power to Blacks, South Africa fell into ruin and despair, with the White minority persecuted.
What can we learn from the story of South Africa? First World nations can only exist and be maintained under a First World population.
Now you know the story of South Africa. It's founding, creation and subsequent fall from grace. Demographics are destiny.
THE END
Re-released to celebrate @Lauren_Southern's ground-breaking documentary 'Farmlands.'
{PART 1}
https://twitter.com/BasedAndBritish/status/1017883543899443200
The story of South Africa is one of the most important for us in understanding racial dynamics and the iron law of demographics.
1652: The first White settlers arrive in South Africa. Jan van Riebeeck was sent to the tip of the continent by the Dutch East India Company.
Riebeeck was instructed to build a supply base for ships traveling to and from Asian territories. This was done in the capital Cape Town.
1657: The first White farmers were allocated lands and tasked with producing for harbored ships independently from the East India Company.
1680-1700 saw a dramatic increase in the White population, which helped expand the settlement. Slaves were imported to meet labor demands.
The native Bushmen of South Africa resented the new European settlers, though no major conflicts developed during this time.
White expansion continued to reduce the Bushmen's living space. Soon, they began stealing European livestock and other petty crimes.
After an inevitable clash the native Bushmen were forced to migrate further north to South West Africa, now called Namibia, where their descendants still live today.
1685: Mixed-racial marriages were outlawed. In spite of this, race mixing between Blacks and Whites continued until mixed race children dubbed the "Cape Coloreds" soon emerged.
The African-born Whites became known as the Boers, which is Dutch for "farmer." Many still spoke in Dutch. The Boers continued to expand further east.
The first major conflict was called the Kaffir Wars, which were a string of wars from 1781 between Europeans and the Xhosa tribe.
The Boers had been expanding east when they encountered the Xhosa tribe, who were moving southward. When they met, both expansions halted.
The Kaffir Wars ended in 1857. After consulting a witch doctor for advice, the Xhosa tribe killed all their cattle in hopes their ancestors would resurrect from their graves and drive Whites away from the land and into the ocean.
After Napoleon's defeat in the Napoleonic Wars, Britain purchased Cape Town from the Dutch. British soldiers landed permanently in 1806. The British would play a major role in the events in South Africa for the next 100 years.
1820: Mass British settlement began, with English becoming the official language of South Africa. This angered the Dutch speaking Boers, sowing much discord and division.
About 4,000 Settlers arrived in the Cape in around 60 different parties between April and June 1820.
1836: The Great Trek begins, with many Boers migrating further inwards to South Africa, hoping to escape Xhosa wars and the self-imposed British government.
The Trek Boers, or "Afrikaners" were met with equally hostile tribes in the Drakensburg mountains and were wiped out.
One group of Trek Boers made it to what would later be called the Orange Free State. The land was largely uninhabited due to the Difaqane wars.
It's here that the Boers first encountered the Zulus, a particularly aggressive tribe.
1836: The Zulus attacked and raided a trekker camp without warning at Vegkop. However, they were fought off and retreated over Limpopo River to present day Zimbabwe, and settled in an area between the Limpopo and the Zambezi Rivers that later became known as Matabeleland.
Piet Retief, leader of the Boer tribe, negotiated with Zulu king Dingaan, for a piece of territory. It appeared to be successful.
Retief and his party were later ambushed and killed by Zulus with the rest of the tribe killed 10 days later by thousands of Zulu tribesmen.
1838: The Battle of Blood River commenced. The Boer Trekkers and the Boers from the Cape united to defeat the Zulu armies for good. With 470 Voortrekkers and 10,000 to 15,000 Zulus, the Boers were clearly at a disadvantage.
However, they possessed superior and advanced weaponry.
Andries Pretorius, the elected General of the Boers, lead a devastating attack on the Zulus in which 1,000s were gunned down.
The attack decimated the Zulus, with the Ncome River running red with blood, hence "blood river." Only two Whites were harmed in the ordeal.
1878: The Zulus returned once again, with Zulu king Cetshwago expelling the British from Natal. The British responded in kind.
British forces invaded an area named Zululand and forced Zulus to disband. They refused to comply and attacked the British in Rorke's Drift.
The battle of Rorke's Drift was laughably one-sided, with the Zulus in the thousands and a mere 150 British soldiers. The British won.
The Zulus were defeated in the Battle of Khambula and then in the Battle of Ulundi. This was the final defeat for the Zulus.
1881: The First Anglo-Boer War begins after tensions between the British and the Boers reach critical point.
The First Boer War resulted in a massive defeat for the British, after four consecutive losses to the greater-numbered Boers.
Despite this initial defeat, the British weren't finished with the Boers yet. They returned in 1886 to inspect and obtain gold.
The discovery of precious stones such as diamonds, brought an increasing amount of British intrigue with a newly found interest in South Africa.
1888: Cecil Rhodes, a Rothschild agent, along with the Jewish Barney Barnato establish the DaBeers company which will control the world's diamond production throughout the 20th Century.
1895: Around 500 British soldiers attempt to seize control of South Africa from the Boers. The invasion was led by Leander Starr Jameson.
The invasion is suppressed by the Boers. Britain sends more troops. After refusing to withdraw them the Second Anglo Boer War begins.
Now we approach the 20th century.
In Part 2, we will delve into the Second Anglo-Boer War, Nelson Mandela's rise to power, the eventual displacement of the White population and the fall of South Africa.
{END OF PART 1}
Here is Part 2 covering the history of South Africa from the turn of the 20th century to the present day. Read below.
https://twitter.com/BasedAndBritish/status/1018240274148089856
This thread will detail the history of South Africa through the 20th century to the present day, and the current crisis facing White South Africans.
{PART 2}
We start the 20th century in South Africa in the heat of the Second Anglo Boer War which began in 1899.
After foreigners immigrated in large numbers to South Africa due to the diamonds and gold in the area of Johannesburg, Boers were rapidly becoming outnumbered.
The Boer government grew fearful of losing control and began denying these new immigrants voting rights, classing them as "Uitlanders", which was Afrikkaans for "outsider."
Rising tensions between the immigrants and the Boers escalated into the 2nd and final Boer War. Boer President Paul Kruger tried to mediate the situation but to no avail.
The Boers had many initial victories in the war, but could not compete with the numbers of British soldiers.
Despite this, the Boers continued their assaults. The British resorted to building concentration camps to hold the Boer population.
Thousands of Boer women and children perished in these camps due to malnutrition, illness and typhus. This terrified the Boer forces.
Finally, the Boers surrendered at the Treaty of Vereenging in 1902 due to diminished numbers and the threat of complete extermination.
1910: The Union of South Africa is created, unifying the four colonies and placing them under British rule. Cape Town becomes the capital city.
1913: The Natives Land Act is passed, which segregates both the Natives and Whites, providing both races with living spaces of their own.
The Whites could not purchase more native land nor could the natives purchase White land.
1914: The Maritz Rebellion breaks out after the British in South Africa declare war on Germany.
The Boers refuse to take the side of the Brits due to their history of interference, mistreatment and war, which built up much resentment over the many years.
1922: An uprising began called The Rand Revolt, which arose due to non-Whites taking the jobs of White miners. It was ultimately suppressed by British forces.
The South African Communist Party came into existence during this time and was founded by various Jews inspired by the Red Revolution.
James Hertzog, leader of the National Party, resigns after South Africa joins World War 2. Hertzog had been campaigning for neutrality.
1961: South Africa gains its independence from British rule and becomes known as the Republic of South Africa, or "The White Republic."
1966: Hendrik Verwoerd, leader of the National Party, is assassinated in Parliament by being stabbed multiple times. It was the second attempt on his life.
His killer was a mixed-race man known as Dimitri Tsafendas, who joined the South African Communist Party in the 1930s.
During this era, South Africa was undeniably the superpower of Africa. They provided modern medicine to both Whites and Blacks. This lead to a decline in Black mortality rates and an increase in Black birth rates.
It is all downhill from here for White South Africans.
1961: A Communist named Joe Slovo establishes the group "Umkhonto we Sizwe" (Spear of the Nation) along with college friend Nelson Mandela.
In December of that year, Slovo and Mandela's group carpet bombs critical infrastructure. A total of 57 bombs were dropped in total.
1964: Mandela is arrested and imprisoned after police find him in possession of 40,000 Soviet-made mines and 140,000 hand grenades.
He was given a life sentence for conspiring to overthrow the South African government.
The policy of Apartheid, introduced in 1948, was an attempt to integrate Blacks in to White areas. Blacks had to carry a "passbook."
This "passbook" was a form of ID for Black South Africans, and needed to be held when working in a White area before its abolishment in 1986.
1976: The Soweto uprising occurred, as huge numbers of Black students began violently protesting the Afrikaans Medium Decree of 1974 which forced the Afrikaans language upon its Black students.
According to Desmond Tutu, Afrikaans was viewed as "the language of the oppressor."
1990: Nelson Mandela is released from prison after the South African government caves in from outside pressure. He returns to a hero's welcome.
Finally, in 1994, the Whites lose their power as the Nelson Mandela is elected leader of South Africa by a majority Black vote.
In the next 20 years, Mandela's rule turns South Africa, the once crowning jewel of the African continent, into a Third World country.
As of 2018, Cape Town is now experiencing a water shortage, making it the first capital city in the world to run out of water.
Life for the White population currently living in South Africa is plagued with hardship and danger.
Over 10% of Whites are currently living in poverty, with no prospects of improving themselves in their present conditions.
Enough Whites are currently being killed by Blacks in South Africa, that it can easily be classified as a form of genocide against the White population.
For a first hand look into the violence and its victims, watch @Lauren_Southern's 2018 documentary 'Farmlands.'
In 2015, Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini openly admitted that South Africa was better off under White rule.
Despite his portrayal in the western media, Nelson Mandela and his former wife Winnie Mandela, were really nothing more than Communist terrorists.
People still worked on behalf of Mandela while he was imprisoned. Mandela was never a man worth idolatry.
Even many anti-Communist Blacks were murdered by "necklacing." This form of torture was used frequently by Winnie Mandela who openly called for the "neclacing" of ideological enemies.
The legacy both Mandelas left on South Africa is a very dark one indeed.
Finally, in 2018, the South African government chose to seize White farmers' lands without compensation.
In 2016, Julius Malema joked that they "are not calling for the mass killing of Whites. At least not yet..."
In Part 1, I referred to South Africa by calling it the most successful and prosperous country in Africa. Under White rule, it was.
However, when Whites de-colonised and handed power to Blacks, South Africa fell into ruin and despair, with the White minority persecuted.
What can we learn from the story of South Africa? First World nations can only exist and be maintained under a First World population.
Now you know the story of South Africa. It's founding, creation and subsequent fall from grace. Demographics are destiny.
THE END
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