Friday, April 19, 2013

Britons’ shameful moment

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

shut your mouth!
britons joyful moment.

Anonymous said...

Thatcherite claptrap.

Son-of-man said...

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Sander:

While you confirm my “convincement” of your shamelessness and mental illness, you somehow are able to descend to new lows. I confess I am not able in my wildness imagination capable of conceiving a more mentally disturber Negro like yourself.

While you have been branded with the mark of treachery , and inducted into the company of reprobates like “SIR” Francis Drake and other pirates, your suggestions that the mass killer racist Thatcher should be honored by Black people is your latest submergence into the pit of self-hatred, but knowing Negroes like yourself there is one step left before you enter the realm of infinity, and it will be attained when your Pirate Queen dies later in the year from her “LA-JEE-GIT” causing you to die from grief “sha-gweh”.

Son-of-man said...

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Sander and Slave trading

Drake accompanied his second cousin Sir John Hawkins in making the third English slave-trading expeditions, making fortunes through the abduction and transportation of West African people, and then exchanging them for high-value goods.[38] The first Englishman recorded to have taken slaves from Africa was John Lok, a London trader who, in 1555, brought to England five slaves from Guinea.[39] A second London trader taking slaves at that time was William Towerson whose fleet sailed into Plymouth following his 1556 voyage to Africa and from Plymouth on his 1557 voyage. Despite the exploits of Lok and Towerson, John Hawkins of Plymouth is widely acknowledged to be an early pioneer of the English slave trade. While Hawkins made only three such trips, ultimately the English were to dominate the trade.[40]

Around 1563 Drake first sailed west to the Spanish Main, on a ship owned and commanded by John Hawkins, with a cargo of people forcibly removed from the coast of West Africa. The Englishmen sold their African captives into slavery in Spanish plantations. In general, the kidnapping and forced transportation of people was considered to be a criminal offence under English law at the time, although legal protection did not extend to slaves, non-Protestants or criminals. Hawkins' own account of his actions (in which Drake took part) cites two sources for their victims. One was military attacks on African towns and villages (with the assistance of rival African warlords), the other was attacking Portuguese slave ships.[41]

Son-of-man said...

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MORGAN THE PIRATE: ---- A befitting companion for the Negro Ronnie.

Sir Sander and Sir Henry Morgan (Harri Morgan in Welsh; ca. 1635 – 25 August 1688) was an Admiral of the English Royal Navy, a pirate[3][4][5] who made a name for himself during activities in the Caribbean, primarily raiding Spanish settlements and killing Arawak and Carib people.

He earned a reputation as one of the most ruthless KILLERS among those active along the Spanish Main.

Son-of-man said...

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Sanders,

if you are not pushing Drugs, particularly Sugarcane drugs to poison people, you're praising pirates like mass murderer Thatcher and kneeling at the feet of your white pirate Queen like a Kneegro house-nigger. How much does the CIA pay you?

opaque said...

Son-of-man can you ever just post one short comment and shut the hell up. Geez!!

Son-of-man said...

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George Galloway has denounced the decision to spend £10m on the "canonisation of this wicked woman", a reference to Lady Thatcher's funeral on Wednesday.
The Respected MP Galloway said on BBC2's Daily Politics: "We're spending £10m on the canonisation of this wicked woman, this woman who laid waste to industrial Britain, to the north, to Scotland, to south Wales."

"Mrs Thatcher did her best to destroy what was good about this country and did destroy more than a third of our manufacturing capacity, reducing us to the state we're in now. People are very angry in Britain, and it's not reflected in your studio and it's not reflected on the BBC."

Anonymous said...

.
opaque,

fish not, with this melancholy bait,
For this fool gudgeon, this opinion.



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