A Short History of the British Empire
04 10 07 - 12:51 Up until the 1970s, the teaching of history in British schools included much about Geopolitics; philosophy; race; the balance of power, and natural resources. Since then, Britain has continued its predicted decline into a nation of idiots and mongrels, soon to be slaves of others.
The creation of the Empire could be considered to have been something of a fluke as it resulted from the lucky defeat of the Superpower at the time, Catholic Spain, in 1588. This under populated, wet and windswept land of sheep farmers and wool spinners, gained the confidence to undertake an imperial age.
We found ourselves with the right breed of men at the right moment of naval skill and technology to take advantage of the Spaniards’ new source of wealth in the New World. The creation and State sanction of Privateers (pirates) allowed plundered gold from the Spanish Main to flood the royal coffers.
England’s first colony was Newfoundland , in the New World, colonised in 1583 - but it failed, due to factors such as bad planning, bad luck and cultural differences between the Europeans and the Native Americans.
Safe from the Catholic threat (Spain), the new Protestant religion allowed freedom of literature - for example, this was the time of Shakespeare. English merchants began to trade as far away as India. The new freedom in England emboldened religious extremism. Puritans, inspired by tales of protestant martyrs were seen as a dangerous political sect and their seeking freedom led to the first American colony: Virginia.
England’s increasing wealth and trade allowed the expansion of the population and a new colonisation of Newfoundland in 1611. In 1620, the Pilgrim Fathers landed at Cape Cod, in the future United States.
Under the Stuart Kings of England, religious dissenters were further persecuted, and the number of colonials to the New World grew.
In 1638, the British East India company founded the city of Madras, to consolidate trade to the Orient. Events were about to change. The republic Cromwell established after the English civil war laid the groundwork for the return of the Jews, previously expelled from England by Edward I., in 1290. Dutch-based financiers helped Cromwell financing his war against British royalty. When he later turned his back on them it led to a war in 1652 with Holland. The war concerned disputes over trade and was fought entirely at sea. It concluded with an English naval victory, forcing the Dutch to concede an English monopoly on trade with England and English colonies.
In 1660 “The Restoration” began. The term is supposed to refer to the English monarchy being restored after Cromwell’s death, when parliament came to an agreement with Charles II. This period, however, may be considered more to correspond with a restoration of certain materialistic and degenerate aspects into English life which had been noticeably absent for nearly 400 years previously.
Charles II’ s reign corresponded with a resurgence of modern Freemasonry - a movement ostensibly dedicated to humanity and tolerance. King Charles greatly favoured this, in part perhaps because his father had been persecuted and the King was, of course, admitted as a Freemason.
A little known fact is that the highest holy relic in Freemasonry is the Black Dwarf statue, which symbolises humanity; hunchbacked, female and Black, with a wig made from the pubic hair of at least one of Charles II ‘s mistresses. This information was discovered during the Third Reich seizure of Freemason archives, and described in “Secrets of Freemasonry” published by NSDAP-AO. It was also mentioned in a television documentary presented by a mainstream historian.
The Great Plague hit in 1666 and this time was also the beginning of a corrupt new stage of the Empire, now based upon the slave trade. Charles II granted a charter to the Royal African Company to begin the trade in Black slaves to the New World. The White communities that were emerging in the previously uninhabited Caribbean were also targeted for the import of slaves, which has resulted in these islands now having a very different ethnic population to those who first went.
Rapidly, private commercial interests became the driving force behind the Empire, rather than national or patriotic motivation. There were some definite benefits, such as the colonial creation of South Africa (by Britain to some extent), New Zealand, Australia, Canada and the US. These were populated by the children of England, as England itself was the child of Germania. Agricultural innovation and trade increased the population, and an excellent well of fighting men with the latest weapons, plus increasing domination of the Sea lanes, swelled Britain’s power.
The groundwork for the establishment of a British army had been laid by Cromwell with his “new model army”. As the Empire expanded, so the threats to it increased. The American rebellion, followed by war with France and Spain called for an efficient fighting machine.
The 1760s saw the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution and rapid technological development. The British were now the spearhead of the Indo-European exploration advancement and expansion. When the British put a limit on European settlement in the Americas in order to protect the Native Americans, America rebelled. In time, America would become the largest concentration of Germanics on the planet and possibly is the last hope for Germanic survival.
The 19th Century became a century of consolidation for Britain. Subjugating natives, expanding the Empire and populating the new territories with their own blood.
The Opium trade to China and the exploitation of precious natural resources in India, South Africa etc was instigated by wealthy families such as the Sassoons and Rothschilds. Nathan Mayer Rothschild famously said: “The man who controls Britain's money supply controls the British Empire, and I control the British money supply.”
Gaining citizenship in Britain these men worked their way through the judiciary to positions in Parliament. While doing so, they made sure they were in positions of influence, that allowed them to be a deciding force regarding the most opportune moment for the British Empire to end - and the import of non-Europeans from the colonies to begin. (International Capitalism thrives upon cheap labour and upon communities that are divided, and consequently with weakened powers of resistance.) This new process began shortly after WWII. From this moment, America was favoured by these manipulators of world events as a better location from which to start a new kind of empire.
Despite Darwin’s discoveries concerning evolution and the emergence of man through the struggle for existence, and despite Darwin’s son calling for Eugenic reform, British aristocracy began to wither. At the same time, the moron class exploded in numbers.
The 20th Century saw the first disaster came with the Boer War. Here, the Nero of the age, Winston Churchill, invented the concept known as a “concentration camp”. Euopean (Dutch descent) women and children were killed by the tens of thousands. Churchill was in fact a mad aristocrat. Churchill was also a senior Freemason. He was the architect of the death of the Empire and set Britain itself on a path to destruction. His incompetent ideas (Gallipoli, Q-boats) reveal his true character as a buffoon and a Toad of Toad Hall type character. In 1926, he even authorised the military in Britain to shoot striking miners. His hatred of Germany and Germania was pathological even to the extent of accepting the ideas of Henry Morgenthau to sterilise the Germanic people - which implied even 90% of the population of Great Britain. Churchill found that pleasing certain powerful forces would take care of his financial problems (he had bad debts).
Britain’s true aristocrats fought and died on Flanders (World War I) and a hundred other battlefields, their low birth rate condemned Britain to a leaderless future as surely as would a Bolshevik purge. And so, at the end of Elizabeth II’s reign, we see the British teetering on the edge of extinction. The International Financiers laugh up their sleeves at Churchill’s words that the “Battle of Britain” was Britain’s “finest hour” - because, in 2040 it is doubtful much will be left of Britain as a nation at all.
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