The Enemy’s Friend for Negroes-A Reply FE(3)
This is the Full Edition of our response video, the Enemy’s Friend For Negroes-A Reply(3) And we are responding to some comments we received from our last video.
Mr Himself Alone
If Nigeria splits up tomorrow it will not change anything for the better or worse of the people who you think are not my people. (AAs). Now if it makes things better for Igbo than that would be great.
Mr Himself Alone
You ask silly questions like why would they want a person in a coma? The person is only knocked out temporarily when they come too, they find themselves compromised.
Mr Himself Alone
The "slave masters" tell us in their books what they bought people with. How can you be do naive as to think that the British don't have it documented what they purchased people with?
Full Videos can be found on odyssey.com, arisetube.com and Crystalviews.net
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
You are welcome to support us at https://www.paypal.me/OurRenaissance https://bit.ly/2OxCtF8 or at https://www.patreon.com/OurRenaissance
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
REFERENCES
Postlethwayt, M. (1746). The national and private advantages of the African trade considered: being an enquiry, how far it concerns the trading interest of Great Britain, effectually to support and maintain forts and settlements in Africa; belonging to the Royal African Company of England. London: John and Paul Knapton.
Shaw, F. L. (1905). Tropical dependency: An outline of the ancient history of the Western Soudan with an account of the modern settlement of Northern Nigeria.
MacQueen, J. (1840). A Geographical Survey of Africa: Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Populations, &c. with a Map of an Entirely New Construction, to which is Prefixed a Letter to Lord John Russell Regarding the Slave Trade and the Improvement of Africa. B. Fellowes.
Basden, G. T. (1966). Among the Igbos of Nigeria, frank cass and co Ltd.
Blum J. D.(1969 ) Who Cares About Biafra Anyway? Retrieved from https://www.thecrimson.com/article/1969/2/25/who-cares-about-biafra-anyway-pithis/
Tucker, S. (1856). Abbeokuta: Or, Sunrise Within the Tropics: an Outline of the Origin and Progress of the Yoruba Mission.
Rees, A. (1819). The cyclopædia; or, universal dictionary of arts, sciences, and literature.
Auberon,W.(1968) Britain and Biafra:The Case for Genocide Examined retrieved from http://archive.spectator.co.uk/article/27th-december-1968/10/britain-and-biafra-the-case-for-genocide-examined on 28th December, 2021
Kisch, M. S. (1910). Letters & Sketches from Northern Nigeria. Chatto & Windus.
Alexander, A. (1846). A history of colonization on the western coast of Africa. WS Martien.
Berlioux, E. F. (1872). The Slave Trade in Africa in 1872: Principally Carried on for the Supply of Turkey, Egypt, Persia and Zanzibar (Vol. 30). E. Marsh.
Goodrich, S. G. (1848). Illustrative anecdotes of the animal kingdom. CH Peirce and GC Rand.
Gibson, E. (1727). Two Letters of the Lord Bishop of London: The First, to the Masters and Mistresses of Families in the English Plantations Abroad; Exhorting them to give their Assistance towards the Instruction of the Negroes within their Several Parishes
Dowd, J. (1907). The Negro races: a sociological study (Vol. 1). Macmillan.
Hodgson, W. B. (1844). Notes on Northern Africa, the Sahara and Soudan.
Browne, P. A., & Prichard, J. C. (1850). The Classification of Mankind, by the Hair and Wool of Their Heads: With an Answer to Dr. Prichard's Assertion, that" the Covering of the Head of the Negro is Hair, Properly So Termed, and Not Wool": Read Before the American Ethnological Society, November 3, 1849. A. Hart.
Upton, G. P.(1912) David Livingstone Life Stories for Young People David Livingstone