viernes, 26 de febrero de 2016

Selective Amnesia: Rothschild Concentration Camps in South Africa (Video)

Selective Amnesia: Rothschild Concentration Camps in South Africa (Video)





The Rothschilds had decided upon the formula of a “managed conflict”
for World War I because of the difficulty they’d encountered in
defeating the Boers in South Africa between 1899 and 1901. After
illegally annexing the Transvaal in 1881, the British had been turned
back with a resounding defeat at the Battle of Majuba Hill (near
Volksrust, South Africa) by Paul Kruger. In 1889, as a result of the
discovery of vast wealth in gold and diamonds in South Africa, the
Rothschilds returned to loot the nation
with 400,000 British soldiers pitted against 30,000 “irregulars”
(farmers with rifles) whom the Boers could put into the field. The Boer
War was started by Rothschild’s agent, Lord Alfred Milner, against the
wishes of a majority of British citizens. His plans were aided by
another Rothschild agent, Cecil Rhodes, who later left his entire
fortune to the furtherance of the Rothschild program, through the Rhodes
Trust — a constant funding source for Rothschild agents, and the basis
of the entire “foundation” empire today.



The British fought a “no prisoners” scorched earth war, destroying
farms and mercilessly shooting down Boers who tried to surrender. It was
in this war that the institution of concentration camps — unsanitary
and fever-riddden — was brought to the world, as the British rounded up
and imprisoned anyone thought to be sympathetic to the Boers, including
many women and children. A report after the war concluded that 27,927
Boers (of whom 24,074 — roughly 50% of the Boer child population — were
under the age of 16) had died of starvation, disease, and exposure in
the concentration camps. In all, about one in four of the Boer inmates,
mostly children, died. This genocidal policy would next be used by the
Rothschild-financed Bolsheviks in Russia, who adopted the Boer War
concept to murder 66 million Russians between 1917 and 1967. There was
never any popular reaction to either of these atrocities due to media
control, which makes discussion of these calamities a taboo subject…