Colonialism and Colonial Boundaries for Negroes FE(1)
This is the Full Edition of our video on colonial boundaries and colonialism, Colonialism . The Slave Master was forced by the abolitionists and Quakers to stop the evil slave trade. However the slave masters’ greed and lack of humanity made him to accept colonization as a replacement for the slave trade. Colonialism metamorphosed to Neo-colonialism and the slave master is still in charge of those countries unfortunately through their slave hunting accomplices..
It also shows how the British and their slave hunting accomplices still work together today against the Negroes in both Biafra and Ambazonia.
Full Videos can also be found on odyssey.com and crystalviews.net
It is also on youtube for Channel members
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
Marwick, W. (1897). William and Louisa Anderson: A Record of Their Life and Work in Jamaica and Old Calabar. Andrew Elliot.
N.A(1940) The Fatherland Volume III August, 1915-February, 1916
Bleeker, S. (1969). The Ibo of Biafra. Morrow.
Roberts, J. J. (1869). African Colonization: An Address Delivered at the Fifty-second Annual Meeting of the American Colonization Society, Held in Washington, DC, January 19, 1869. A Branch Office of the American Colonization Society.
Lang, J. (1910). The Land of the Golden Trade (West Africa).
Koehler, H. (1940). Inside the Gestapo.
Newton, J. (1788). Thoughts upon the African Slave Trade.
M'Queen, J. (1840). A Geographical Survey of Africa: Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Population, Etc: With a Map on an Entirely New Construction to which is Prefixed a Letter to Lord John Russell Regarding the Slave Trade and the Improvement of Africa:
Goldie, H. (1890). Calabar and Its Mission. Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
Moll, H. (1712). A Map of New France Containing Canada, Louisiana & c. in Nth. America.
Koehler, H. (1940). Inside the Gestapo.
The Golden Calf for Negroes FE(3)
This is the Full Edition of our video series on the Golden Calf for Negroes and further on how the Slave master and his accomplices give Negroes a counterfeit of everything. Also, a continuation of the counterfeit Benin Kingdom of today. The video gives a clue that the present-day Benin Kingdom is a creation of the Slave Masters and a counterfeit created after the slave masters destroyed the original Benin Kingdom in 1897. The so-called Oba of Benin is also a creation of the Slave master and his slave-hunting Accomplices.
It also shows how the Slave Master leverages on the Fallacy of Appeal to Authority to exploit the Negroes such that whatever he says is believed without proof or evidence.
Full video is available on Patreon.com, Odysee.com, and crystalviews.net among others.
Please note that we did not restrict the full video to Patreon out of a desire to make money but because we observed that the descendants of the slave hunters flag our videos when the full videos are posted openly.
Full Videos can be found on odyssey.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
Pinnock, J. (1897). Benin: The Surrounding Country, Inhabitants, Customs, and Trade. Journal of Commerce.
Roth, H. L. (1903). Great Benin: Its customs, art and horrors. F. King.
Bindloss, H. (1898). In the Niger country. W. Blackwood and sons.
Burdo, A. (1880). The Niger and the Benueh: Travels in Central Africa. R. Bentley & son.
Tanner, B. T. (1869). The Negro's Origin; And, Is the Negro Cursed?. African ME Book Depository.
Botsford, G. W. (1911). A History of the ancient world. Macmillan.
Bacon, S. R., & Overend, W. H. (1897). Benin: The city of blood. London: Arnold.
This is the Full version of this video where we continue to examine the current state of the Negroes and how the slave master and his slave hunting partners are still working together to enslave and subjugate the Negroes and as they say, “forever”.
It also shows how the slave master is able to set up the Negroes against themselves in one way or another.
Full video is available on Patreon and at Odysee.com, and crystalviews.net among others.
Please note that we did not restrict the full video to Patreon out of a desire to make money but because we observed that the descendants of the slave hunters flag our videos when the full videos are posted openly.
Full Videos can be found on odyssey.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
Johnston, H. H. (1913). A History of the Colonization of Africa by Alien Races:... with Eight Maps. Cambridge University Press.
Roberts, B.H.E(1861) History of the Colonial Empire of Great Britain
Johnston, H. H.,(1899). history of the colonization of Africa by alien races.
Harris, N. D., & Shotwell, J. T. (1914). World Diplomacy: Intervention and Colonization in Africa. Houghton Mifflin.
Lenshie, N. E., & Gambo, J. Y. (2014). The United Nations Plebiscites in the Northern Cameroons: Post-Colonial Issues and Challenges in Sardauna Local Government Area of Taraba State, Nigeria. International Institute for Science, Technology and Education, IISTE.
King James(1611) King James Version of the Bible
Biafra Freedom and the Slave Master FE(4)
This is the Full Edition of the continuation of our video about a Freedom Seeking group(I.P.O.B) in what was Negroland and Guinea looking for Freedom from the Colonial and slavery structures of the Slave master and his accomplices.
However, as you would expect in every Negro gathering, there must be saboteurs, disunity, snitching etc. In this case, the group called Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB) is currently looking for freedom from the colonial and Slave masters and the Yoke of One Nigeria. As expected, the slave master connived with his slave hunting accomplices to abduct the leader of the Group and then infiltrated another group called Directorate of State(D.O.S).
In 2015 the same leader was arrested, and detained by the Slave master and his accomplices for two years without trial. Following his arrest in 2015, the leadership group called D.O.S was found to have compromised and the then Deputy Dissolved the DOS. The slave master and his accomplices then went back to the drawing board and this time got the deputy and afterwards the DOS. He then went ahead to kidnap the leader while having the D.O.S under him.
This video continues to show that the D.O.S in IPOB is compromised and now being used by the slave master and his accomplices to destroy the movement from within.
Full video is available on Patreon.com, Odysee.com, and crystalviews.net among others.
Please note that we did not restrict the full video to Patreon out of a desire to make money but because we observed that the descendants of the slave hunters flag our videos when the full videos are posted openly.
Full Videos can be found on odyssey.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
Goldie, H. (1890). Calabar and Its Mission. Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
Brown, W. W. (1849). The narrative of William W. Brown, an American slave.
Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Select Committee on the whole house (1789). Minutes of Evidence Taken Before the Honourable House of Commons, in a Committee of the Whole House, to Whom it was Referred to Consider of the circumstances of the Slave Trade; Complained of in the Several Petitions which were presented to the House in the last Session of Parliament, relative to the State of the African Slave Trade
Walker, F. D. (1926). Africa and her Peoples. Edinburgh House Press.
Great Britain Parliament(1789) Reports of the Lords of the Committee of Council Appointed for the Consideration of All Matters relating to Trade and Foreign Plantations
Lugard, F. D. (1922). Dual mandate in British tropical Africa.
Twelvetrees, H. (1863). The story of the life of John Anderson, the Fugitive Slave
Colonialism and Colonial Boundaries for Negroes FE(1)
This is the Full Edition of our video on colonial boundaries and colonialism, Colonialism . The Slave Master was forced by the abolitionists and Quakers to stop the evil slave trade. However the slave masters’ greed and lack of humanity made him to accept colonization as a replacement for the slave trade. Colonialism metamorphosed to Neo-colonialism and the slave master is still in charge of those countries unfortunately through their slave hunting accomplices..
It also shows how the British and their slave hunting accomplices still work together today against the Negroes in both Biafra and Ambazonia.
Full Videos can also be found on odyssey.com and crystalviews.net
It is also on youtube for Channel members
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
Marwick, W. (1897). William and Louisa Anderson: A Record of Their Life and Work in Jamaica and Old Calabar. Andrew Elliot.
N.A(1940) The Fatherland Volume III August, 1915-February, 1916
Bleeker, S. (1969). The Ibo of Biafra. Morrow.
Roberts, J. J. (1869). African Colonization: An Address Delivered at the Fifty-second Annual Meeting of the American Colonization Society, Held in Washington, DC, January 19, 1869. A Branch Office of the American Colonization Society.
Lang, J. (1910). The Land of the Golden Trade (West Africa).
Koehler, H. (1940). Inside the Gestapo.
Newton, J. (1788). Thoughts upon the African Slave Trade.
M'Queen, J. (1840). A Geographical Survey of Africa: Its Rivers, Lakes, Mountains, Productions, States, Population, Etc: With a Map on an Entirely New Construction to which is Prefixed a Letter to Lord John Russell Regarding the Slave Trade and the Improvement of Africa:
Goldie, H. (1890). Calabar and Its Mission. Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
Moll, H. (1712). A Map of New France Containing Canada, Louisiana & c. in Nth. America.
Koehler, H. (1940). Inside the Gestapo.
The Golden Calf for Negroes FE(3)
This is the Full Edition of our video series on the Golden Calf for Negroes and further on how the Slave master and his accomplices give Negroes a counterfeit of everything. Also, a continuation of the counterfeit Benin Kingdom of today. The video gives a clue that the present-day Benin Kingdom is a creation of the Slave Masters and a counterfeit created after the slave masters destroyed the original Benin Kingdom in 1897. The so-called Oba of Benin is also a creation of the Slave master and his slave-hunting Accomplices.
It also shows how the Slave Master leverages on the Fallacy of Appeal to Authority to exploit the Negroes such that whatever he says is believed without proof or evidence.
Full video is available on Patreon.com, Odysee.com, and crystalviews.net among others.
Please note that we did not restrict the full video to Patreon out of a desire to make money but because we observed that the descendants of the slave hunters flag our videos when the full videos are posted openly.
Full Videos can be found on odyssey.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
Pinnock, J. (1897). Benin: The Surrounding Country, Inhabitants, Customs, and Trade. Journal of Commerce.
Roth, H. L. (1903). Great Benin: Its customs, art and horrors. F. King.
Bindloss, H. (1898). In the Niger country. W. Blackwood and sons.
Burdo, A. (1880). The Niger and the Benueh: Travels in Central Africa. R. Bentley & son.
Tanner, B. T. (1869). The Negro's Origin; And, Is the Negro Cursed?. African ME Book Depository.
Botsford, G. W. (1911). A History of the ancient world. Macmillan.
Bacon, S. R., & Overend, W. H. (1897). Benin: The city of blood. London: Arnold.
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