Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela
18th of July 1918 to 5th of December 2013
Nelson Mandela, the former South African president has died.
South Africa is
going to go through an unprecedented period of mourning, see: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-25249520.
I actually suspect he died a few months ago and his death was hushed up because
of the effect that it would have (I drafted this obituary at the time). He was
without a doubt the most popular individual in the country; he's even known as
"the Father of the Nation", or "Madiba", an affectionate
clan name from his background in the Xhosa people of South Africa. The people
who loved him so much will be full of melancholy over his passing. Some might
even be ready to give up on life themselves, judging by the reports of their
reaction to his decline in health; although being the age he was, ninety-five,
it must have been an eventuality they were preparing themselves for. However
lots of them are worried about which direction the country will take now he’s
gone and I share their concerns greatly. Like Robert Mugabe and many other
native leaders who took power in African countries after
"independence", Mandela is of royal blood, being a prince in the
Thembu Tribe. Some people refer to these bloodlines as the "Black
Illuminati"; that's not entirely accurate, but there's no doubt there is
an analogy here with the Illuminati. (That's a big subject that will need its
own article, and it's an area of study in progress.) He was born in 1918 into a
country that was ruled by foreign white colonists and his fellow native blacks
were treated as little more than slaves. The terrible injustice of this
situation instilled him with a desire to change it and gain freedom for Africa .
As a person of nobility he was given a Western style education and was taught
how the only advanced human culture came from the white man, that African
blacks were subhuman savages by nature and the country was completely barbarous
before white imperialists landed, but he didn't believe it; nor did the Zulu
historian Credo Mutwa; I strongly recommend this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7PqvBeNKuSA.
As he got older Mandela grew into a political revolutionary and trained as a
lawyer. In 1943, he joined the African National Congress, the political party
he would eventually lead and via which be elected President of South Africa
fifty years later.
It's not only in his homeland that Nelson Mandela was
revered; he was a hero across the world, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize and numerous
other accolades. For the political Left he was a hero… nay a secular saint; no other political figure since Lenin has been
so glorified in history by Western left-wingers. Does he deserve this halo of
political divinity? In truth, I think he was a man who was motivated by a
genuine desire to do good; but he was full of frailty and failings, just like
anybody else, and he made some terrible mistakes. In 1948 the South African
government instituted a policy called Apartheid,
"Separation" in Afrikaans. The president at the time, Hendrik
Verwoerd, said it was all about "good neighbourliness", giving all
the cultures in the Rainbow Nation their own land and allowing them to rule
themselves, away from the interference of others, but in truth it was set of laws
keeping the black people on little strips of the worst land in the country,
called "Homelands" to live and die in poverty while the white people
got the lion's share of everything else. Black people, “Kaffirs” as they were
derogatorily called, had to carry ID cards and passbooks to leave their
Homeland and were given all the dirtiest jobs; it was the kind of "good
neighbourliness" where you're rich and have a nice house while you force
your neighbour to live in the garden shed and eat rubbish from your bin! To
begin with, the world outside South Africa
fully supported this regime and IBM computers were used to store databases for
the people's racial categorization; this only changed when grass-roots
opposition grew. There were rallies, sanctions and even huge rock concerts,
see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GF85LG3qkyQ.
In truth the Apartheid government of South
Africa was merely a client state for a vast
network of industrial plutocrats, connected into the Illuminati, known as the
Rhodes Network after Cecil Rhodes, the architect of much of colonial southern Africa .
It includes the diamond transnational De Beers and Lonrho, the London Rhodesia
Company. In fact Dan Roodt (see link below) has described how Henry Kissinger
met with the South African minister Dr Dawid de Villiers in the late 1970's and
told him that the country's government would be "turned over to" the
ANC in the year 1995; he was one year out.
Initially Mandela followed a policy similar to the campaign
for home rule in India
led by Pandit Nehru and Mahatma Gandhi that was contemporary with his own. This
advocated non-violent non-cooperation and legal negotiation. But after
sixty-nine unarmed ANC protesters were shot dead by the police at Sharpeville
he decided that a regime that uses violence against the people can only be
defeated by violence; he came to this conclusion very reluctantly. He formed
Spear of the Nation with fellow ANC members and also those in the outlawed
South African Communist Party. To begin with Spear of the Nation used sabotage
of roads, railways and power stations as a tactic, rather than attacks on
people, but this changed later on. They also planted bombs intended to kill and
injure as we've seen in numerous other guerrilla wars. This was Mandela's
biggest mistake; it's quite likely Spear of the Nation was a front for the
Apartheid government's own intelligence services anyway, especially in later
years. Most of these "anti-government" militias are. The bombs that
exploded in South Africa
during the Apartheid era were frequent and often untraceable; it's not possible
to know which ones were detonated by truly independent African nationalists
groups, cointelpro guerrilla movements or just simple false flags planted
directly by government forces. There are lots of other examples of governments
using this technique, for example see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GGHXjO8wHsA.
Many individuals who get sucked into guerrilla warfare also become deeply
self-righteous, amoral and promoters of social Darwinism. This may well be part
of the professional mind-control used by psychological warfare experts involved
in forming these balaclava belligerents; this is a good example of what I mean:
http://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.co.uk/2012/07/charlie-veitchs-armed-resistance.html.
Mandela was jailed for life in 1964. Despite the bravado of Verwoerd, Apartheid
was not universally accepted by white South Africans when it was introduced,
but the actions of Spear of the Nation... or whoever was behind the terrorism, helped to quench most of the sympathy
the whites had for their black compatriots. In the 1980's pressure from both within
and without South Africa
caused the Apartheid regime to crumble. Nelson Mandela was released from prison
in 1990 and duly became the country's first democratically elected president.
The protesters have now gone silent; South
Africa 's sorted now... but is it? The
country today is still ruled by the ANC; Mandela's presidency has been followed
by Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma, two of his fellow prison inmates, released when
he was. However the legacy of Nelson Mandela has not matched his vision. His
attempt at "Truth and Reconciliation" has not succeeded. The ANC
today is a weak and corrupt institution ruled by some of the most vicious individuals the world has ever seen. Mandela, to his great discredit, did not help
matters when he allowed a state visit by the Nation of Islam leader Louis
Farrakhan, a man who talks about the "filthy white seed of the Caucasian".
But despite this, it seems that the reverence of Nelson Mandela has been
keeping the more extreme elements of his party in check; what will they do now he’s
gone? The current rising star of the ANC is the young Turk Julius Malema, the
leader of the ANC's youth wing and almost certainly he will be elected a future
president. He is a bumptious and conceited individual who lives like a
millionaire, despite being an ardent Marxist and self-styled "people's
champion". He has publicly supported the monstrous regime of Robert Mugabe
in Zimbabwe and
has called for the indiscriminate murder of white people. He has changed the
lyrics of a popular ANC song to contain the lyrics "shoot the Boer!"
(In South Africa
"Boer" means "farmer" and is the Afrikaner's name for
themselves, but it can be used as a colloquial term for any white person.)
Sadly many black South Africans have taken him at his word and a campaign of
organized murder has been launched against the white people of South
Africa . The armed gangs carrying out these
crimes are not content with just shooting them, and they commit sadistic acts
against their victims that I can't bring myself to repeat. It is a true climate
of hatred, and rhetoric like Malema's helps fuel it. A white South African
called Dan Roodt is working to prosecute the ANC for incitement to genocide,
very justly I think, see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Lm6ZZCyMZY;
but really I think he should be prosecuting the Rhodes Network, not their lackeys
in Pretoria . The international
community is far more silent over the farm murders than they ever were during
the Apartheid era, perhaps because of the monstrous and destructive falsehood
that racism is something that can only done by white people to non-whites.
I don't think the South
Africa today was what Nelson Mandela planned
for or wanted, but then he never understood the true forces that run the nation.
The horrible irony is that the Rhodes Network still controls the country. The
passing of Apartheid has had no effect on the Network's power at all; for them
it’s just a change of image, a rebranding. The presidents who instituted and preserved
Apartheid were their puppets, but the modern black political leaders of the
nation are no less so. Whether he knew it or not, Mandela was in their pockets
too. They play the two sides off against each other like dog-baiters and
increase their wealth and power from every murdered farmer and every jailed
activists in the country's history. Only when the people of South
Africa , both black and white, become aware
of this will true change take place in that troubled land. Right now Nelson
Mandela will be standing in front of what Credo Mutwa calls Umgulongulu-The Great Spirit". I
don't know how that conversation is going; only the two of them know that. But
I hope Mandela fares well, I think he always intended well.
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