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Rhodesia didn't have to die. It stood for what the West stood for up until the disastrous 20th century: Liberty. Prosperity. Hierarchy.
Liberty and prosperity for whites. "Hierarchy," meaning brutal apartheid, for everyone else.
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Rhodesia didn't have to die. It stood for what the West stood for up until the disastrous 20th century: Liberty. Prosperity. Hierarchy.
What, from the above quote of my post, leads you to believe that I advocate for apartheid being "OK", desired, or acceptable?Quote:
all while trying to bring a backward population into the 20th century but being honest and transparent about the system they had, as flawed as it may have been.
What you write above is apt, and I agree with it, save for the above in bold. The purpose, or the design, of the African colonies was to make as much profit as possible and for there to be promising economic opportunities for both the European countries as well as their citizens/representatives. There was no plan to fracture tribes and potential nations, it was economic subjugation which was morally justified via the prevalent racial beliefs of the time. Any thing positive, or negative, that resulted from colonization was a by product of savage capitalism veiled under a dose of nationalism.Quote:
The point of the colonies was not to advance Africans. Not in the least. The colonies were designed to fracture the African nations and tribes as much as humanly possible. To render them unable to unite or develop except as the European powers allowed them to. The modern borders of Africa nations were not designed to make sense geographically, sociologically, or historically.
It didn't start with the transatlantic trade and it certainly didn't end with it. If anything, the Transatlantic Slave trade was a brief blip in the history of depradations/enslavement of Africa coming from the Middle East/Mediterranean.Sapper Redux said:
The point of the colonies was not to advance Africans. Not in the least. The colonies were designed to fracture the African nations and tribes as much as humanly possible. To render them unable to unite or develop except as the European powers allowed them to. The modern borders of African nations were not designed to make sense geographically, sociologically, or historically. They were designed to facilitate resource extraction by European powers with minimal investment into the land. It's why you have roads and railroad tracks that lead only to mines and plantations, certainly not to population centers, and when independence comes, it's couched in terms that still benefit European companies at the expense of wealth in Africa for the native population.
And the death toll in Africa is absolutely staggering. Starting from the Transatlantic slave trade and European forts through direct colonization, we're talking tens of millions of people who suffered and died. Do we need to rehash what happened in the Belgian Congo, or German South West Africa? It's easy to say, "well it would have happened anyway," but that's an unprovable assumption. We know what did happen and the consequences of it. Africa today is not some natural continent with a blip of colonialism. It's a continent shaped and absolutely fractured by colonialism.
Sapper Redux said:
Rhodesia is a difficult topic because there's a lot of mythologizing around it and a lot of extremely loaded assumptions and claims around race coupled with poor archival material for the African side of the conflict. Fighting for Time is the only good, comprehensive history of the Bush War that I've seen.
WestAustinAg said:Sapper Redux said:
Rhodesia is a difficult topic because there's a lot of mythologizing around it and a lot of extremely loaded assumptions and claims around race coupled with poor archival material for the African side of the conflict. Fighting for Time is the only good, comprehensive history of the Bush War that I've seen.
in other words....
"Sometimes a country would do better with communism run by murderous dictactors than a capitalist mostly democratic country."
The next time that is true will be the first time...
Sapper Redux said:WestAustinAg said:Sapper Redux said:
Rhodesia is a difficult topic because there's a lot of mythologizing around it and a lot of extremely loaded assumptions and claims around race coupled with poor archival material for the African side of the conflict. Fighting for Time is the only good, comprehensive history of the Bush War that I've seen.
in other words....
"Sometimes a country would do better with communism run by murderous dictactors than a capitalist mostly democratic country."
The next time that is true will be the first time...
Lol. "Mostly democratic." Pathetic revisionist horse*****
carl spacklers hat said:
Cecil Rhodes used to sleep with a bucket of diamonds under his bed. And some people simply cannot rule themselves - a statement that bears out time and again if you study the history of Africa.
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Are you saying Africa should be run by racist oligarchs?
RGV AG said:Quote:
Are you saying Africa should be run by racist oligarchs?
In the 18th, 19th, and most of the 20th centuries being racist was prolly a requirement of being an oligarch. The world was a whole lot different back then. It will always be wrong when viewed from today.
Given the times, the real as they actually were times, how should have European's treated Africa? Was there any scenario, or prior precedent in "development/expansionism", where there was not going to be subjugation and colonization as it was seen?
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The nature of extractive colonialism of the 19th century was quite new. There's nothing inevitable about historical processes and nothing that required subjugating the population and turning them into forced labor