August 03, 2015

Spingola and Friends 8/3/2015

Karin Smith will talk about the following: The myths surrounding the "theft" of land from the blacks, the Anglo Boer War and concentration camps, the REAL Nelson Mandela, the handing over of South Africa to the ANC(African National Congress) in 1992 (the referendum was held that year), the consequences of handing over the country and the fate of whites including the Genocide Watch report. Suggested web sites: http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.com
http://ajkraad.wix.com/genocide-museum
http://mikesmithspoliticalcommentary.blogspot.com

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2 comments:

Thugnacious said...

the Anglo-Boer War was largely fought for jewish business interests, the same with the Opium Wars where David Sassoon had the opium trade monopoly, the British Empire was the Jewish Empire like the American Empire is today.

Deanna said...

In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, leading Baghdadi families, such as the Sassoons, Eliases, Kadoories, Abrahams, Hardoons, Ezras, Solomons, and Gubbays, arrived to pursue commercial interests, especially in Hong Kong, Shanghai (the International Settlement) and Harbin (the Trans-Siberian Railway). When Western commercial interests opened China after the First Opium War, Jews, under British protection, were the first group to settle in China. Many of these Jewish settlers came from India or the Ottoman Empire, because of British colonialism in those areas. They constituted the most active and largest group of opium dealers in China.

Warren Delano II, grandfather of Franklin D. Roosevelt, collaborated with Russell and Company in Canton which delivered Sassoon’s opium to China and returned with tea. The British owned their own poppy fields in India while their American competitors had to purchase their opium in Turkey, which decreased their profits. American traders wanted a bigger share of China’s opium business and greater concessions in that market but it would require the U.S. government’s intervention due to Britain’s established monopoly and her treaties with China.

In order for the opium traders to get government support, they had to have willing sympathetic officials who might share in those profits, as in the case of Britain’s queen. Therefore, they financed and supported the campaigns of men who would replace uncooperative officials.