Dividends of the slave Trade For Negroes _FE(1)
This is the Full Edition of our video, on the Dividends or benefits of the slave trade to the slave masters. When today we see people in Biafra and Ambazonia being murdered just because they asked to be free, it is important that we closely try to understand what the slave master benefits from things like colonial boundaries or One Nigeria or Cameroon..
Full Videos can also be found on odyssey.com and crystalviews.net
It is also on youtube for Channel members
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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. (1899). history of the colonization of Africa by alien races.
Darwin, C. (1859). On the Origin of Species
Chalmers, T. (1826). Few Thoughts on the Abolition of Colonial Slavery. Chalmers & Collins.
Cobb, T. R. R. (1858). An Inquiry Into the Law of Negro Slavery in the United States of America (Vol. 1).
Haeckel, E. (1897). The evolution of man (Vol. 1).
‘Dowd, J. (1907). The Negro Races, Vol. I.
Herskovits, M. J. (1941). The myth of the negro past.
Barclay, J. (1792). A complete and universal English dictionary.
The slave trade Institutionalized_FE(1)
This is the Full Edition(FE) of our video on the slave trade institutionalized Part 1 . The video is to show how all institutions are created by the slave master along the lines of the slave trade and the slave masters belief that Negroes were created to be slave forever. It highlights hoe the slave master uses Negroes to fight against themselves like the case of Marcus Garvey and WEB Du Bois and today like Nnamdi Kanu’s IPOB and Simon Ekpa who is the slave masters agent working to destroy IPOB and the agitation for freedom of Negroes in Biafra.
Fulani the enemy within-A reply_FE(2)
This is the Full Edition of our response video, to a comment we received on a previous video about the slave hunters.
Comment 1
Simonsayss6849 • 4 days ago
Stop this goofy propaganda. It’s only a historical fact in American history the Fulani were one of the largest groups to be enslaved in the United States. Europeans preferred them for their knowledge of cattle raising and their intellectual abilities.
Comment 2
As an African American lady married to Nigerian, I am learning a lot from this series.
Although, I have to disagree when the host says it was only the Christians and muslims involved in the slave trade or Ma'afa.
In the U.S. the Jews often made the Locks & chains to be used to chain our people up. Jews also made $ On the Caribbean Islands of Nevis & St. Kitts, Jews were the predominant oppressors & enslavers, plus much more !!selling clothing for the enslaved People.
This is the Full Edition of our recent video The Mental Enslavement of Negroes(2)
This is a Full Version of our series The Conspiracy Against the Negroes(1)
In this video, we are trying to examine how the Slave masters and their slave hunting partners are still working together against the Negroes today. We tried to use the case of Biafra to show that the slave master and the slave hunters are still working together against the Negroes
The current so called Climate Change which manifested in the slave hunters of old Massacring Negro communities in what was Negroland and West and Central Africa today is also exmined and the history presented. The relationship between Biafra, Ambazonia and the slave trade with the Covid-19 lock down of last year was also examined.
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 slave hunters flag our videos when the full videos are posted openly.
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
Aloy Ejimako, an accomplice in the subterfuge against IPOB in an interview tried to asssociate Mazi Nnamdi Kanu with the criminality of Simon Ekpa who is not even an IPOB member.
It Is Written Vs Truth for Negroes-A Reply FE(1)
This is the Full Edition of the continuation of our response video to a comment we received on one of our previous videos. The comment is below
Lottie Spence
Lottie Spence • 1 month ago
Yes, the Holy Scriptures said this. Everything in the Holy Bible is facts & truths from the beginning to the end , no contradictions or confusions...period! The Most High God speaks about Every nation & WHAT he's doing to them right now...period. I'm a Negro, Cherokee from the tribe of Jacob's son Gad! Peace
Mr Himself Alone
4 days ago
I do not get how this idea is so complicated for you. They were held captive and items for given in exchange. Once the brandy, rum , cloth , pans, etc. were handed to the Africans of whatever tribe the captives were placed in the custody of the Europeans. Simple
Mr Himself Alone
3 weeks ago
Luke 12:47
“And that servant, which knew his lord's will, and prepared not himself, neither did according to his will, shall be beaten with many stripes.”
King James Version (KJV)
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
Malte-Brun, M. "Universal Geography, or A Description of All the Parts of the World." Vol. IV (1823).
Schön, J. F., & Crowther, S. (1842). Journals of the Rev. James Frederick Schön and Mr. Samuel Crowther: Who, Accompanied the Expedition Up the Niger, in 1841, in Behalf of the Church Missionary Society (Vol. 1). Hatchard and son.
Crowther, S., & Taylor, J. C. (1859). The Gospel on the Banks of the Niger.
Sharp, G. (2013). The just limitation of slavery in the laws of God: compared with the unbounded claims of the African traders and British American slaveholders. Cambridge University Press.
Rodwell, J. M. (1910). The Koran: Translated from the Arabic,
Thomas, N. W. (1913). Anthropological Report on the Ibo-speaking Peoples of Nigeria: English-Ibo and Ibo-English dictionary (Vol. 2). Harrison and Sons.
Hunt, J. (1863). On the Negro's place in nature. Trübner, for the Anthropological Society.
Dennett, R. E. (1910). Nigerian Studies: Or, The Religious and Political System of the Yoruba (Vol. 48). Macmillan and Company, limited.
N.A(1789) The Holy Bible
The Most Dangerous Slaves for Negroes_FE(2)
This is the Full Edition of our recent video The Most Dangerous Slaves for Negroes_FE(2)
The video provides some information about house slaves or house negroes like the Governments in what was Negroland or Ethiopia are used against the masses who are the Field Slaves. Please bear in mind that the Governments in the slave coast today called Nigeria are mere house slaves and work for the interest of the slave master than the interest of their own people. So ideally the slave master uses the Governors, the judges etc against the field slaves who are the Masses as Malcolm X rightly pointed out.
You are welcome to support us at https://www.paypal.me/OurRenaissance https://bit.ly/2OxCtF8
or at https://www.patreon.com/OurRenaissance
Shaw, F. L. (1997). A tropical dependency: An outline of the ancient history of the western Sudan with an account of the modern settlement of northern Nigeria. Black Classic Press.
Tucker, S. (1856). Abbeokuta: Or, Sunrise Within the Tropics: an Outline of the Origin and Progress of the Yoruba Mission.
Dan Jacobs. (1987). The Brutality of Nations.
Waugh, A., & Cronjé, S. (1969). Biafra: Britain's Shame.
Stanley, H. M. (1893). Slavery and the slave trade in Africa
Flickinger, D. K. (1871) Ethiopia; or twenty years of missionary life in western African
Scott, W. R. (1978). Black Nationalism and the Italo-Ethiopian Conflict 1934-1936. The Journal of Negro History, 63(2), 118–134. https://doi.org/10.2307/2717305
Smith, I. (2008). Bitter harvest : Zimbabwe and the aftermath of its independence : the memoirs of Africa's most controversial leader / Ian Smith ; with a foreword by Rupert Cornwell
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