← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · skemper
Thread ID: 4199 | Posts: 2 | Started: 2002-12-26
2002-12-26 20:50 | User Profile
Here is an article about the history of Haiti. It parallels the history that we are seeing unfold in Southern Africa. The sum of the article is that whites set up a society, blacks murder the whites and suffocate in their own excretment, and then the whites come again to clean up and the whole cycle starts again. Note the brutality of blacks when they get into power toward the whites and later when they subjegate their own kind.
article [url=http://www.natall.com/national-vanguard/114/haiti.html]http://www.natall.com/national-vanguard/114/haiti.html[/url]
Here are some excerpts:
[QUOTE]Saint-Domingue, alas, was not spared the intrigues and agitation which, in Europe, led to the disaster of the French Revolution. The Republicans and the Royalists both had their partisans among the colonists. In addition there were crazed zealots who deliberately sowed the seeds of rebellion among the Black slaves and the mulattoes. Some of these zealots were unhinged by the same egalitarian madness which led to the Reign of Terror in France; others, including a number of priests, seem to have been under the influence of radical Christian notions: together they were loosely organized in a semi-secret society known as Friends of the Blacks (Amis des Noirs).[/QUOTE
The Republicans and the Royalists remind me of the Afrikanners and the English. The crazed zealots remind me of the communist agents that planted rebellion in the blacks. The radical Christians remind me of the Marxist-Christian hybrid called liberation theology, which supports leftist governments around the world.
The Blacks rule their own with a brutal hand, like Mugabe does in Zimbabwe.
Is this going to be the end to the remaining whites in Zimbabwe?
This is one article that makes one pause.
2002-12-27 20:26 | User Profile
Yes, although not for a long time.
I read Lothrop Stoddard's "French Revolution in Santo Domingo", which is very well researched and widely printed in the first quarter of this century.
Attention to the actions of the Virigin Islands National Guard during a hurricane in the 1980s (covered in AmRen) is also recommended.