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How and why did the Khoikhoi, not make and have guns to fight off the Dutch?

If you are being attacked constantly by poison arrows, would you defend, or would you lay down and die - You answer that first.Next, consider this ..Economy, civil war and common senseOne must look at the entire history of South Africa in order to understand the background first, as to why exactly your question is innocently misinformed …Alana Logan's answer to Is it true that white South Africans stole land and now refuse to return it to the Khoi people?Only once reading the above link, as well as this entire answer, can one fully understand why the Khoina King has been trying to get the attention of the head office of the United Nations in New York, in order to present his legal documentation of secession of the Cape Province - Good Hope.Without this knowledge of South African historical background to present day, the reader will not understand the Khoina, or today's Boer /Afrikaner (who is today not “Dutch” anymore, but a mixture of Dutch, French, Flemish, Swiss, Portuguese, German and so on, due to generations of intermarriage), or how his nation survives the Communists of today.And one needs to understand what is the reason why the Khoina and Boer /Afrikaner leaders have decided to join forces for a new secession from South Africa -Today Boers together with the Khoina King have found a solution for all South Africans to live in peace …The Cape Secedes from South Africa, (see below link),... but in this interview the Khoina King needs to be corrected on one historical fact. He speaks of whites having “stolen Khoisan land”, and so on …The truth of the matter is that the Europeans traded for cattle and then required grazing land to grow the cattle and therefore sought new pastures for their cattle.The indigenous Khoisan people used to attack them with poison arrows, and this the Europeans took seriously because this was fatal and skirmishes occurred.There was no land stolen from indigenois Khoisan because there were no borders then, and no legal territories which one required permission to enter then, as the country was a mere wilderness.Populations were small and there was an entire southern continent of land available for grazing.The Khoisan attacks on Europeans were therefore baseless, and mere mischief. Retalialions naturally occurred.Another tragedy to befall both Khoisan and Europeans was smallpox which the Khoisan were not as immune to as the Europeans were. Smallpox was brought to land by the Dutch seafarers.It was nobody's fault, a natural occurrence, even more natural than being struck by a poison arrow, however the British and Communists locally and internationally have always painted the then Dutch and today Boer / Afrikaner as evil.Why you might ask? …The British empire - Always having to demonise and thumb-suck to alter history, in order to save face for having their army defeated for the first time ever in Africa, by the small numbers of defending Boers (farmers not soldiers), during the first Anglo Boer war.The Communists - Demonising and thumb-sucking to alter South African history and heritage of Dutch /Boer /Afrikaner settlers, is the only way that they can garner international and national support against legitimate Boer (not pure Dutch anymore) /Afrikaner lands, and claim it for themselves. Land was fairly traded with treaties by Piet Retief and others.The Cape Secedes from South Africa! Khoi King Khoebaha III Declares State of Good Hope IndependentSecession is the only way for minority whites to protect themselves in south Africa - Not civil warCommunists have for many generations been putting forth this myth that all original Europeans and their descendants to South Africa were, and still are “Dutch”, who came to the African continent to kill and oppress the locals, just because they can??It's a myth, diriving out of ignorance - Ignorance, which has been dirived out of the fact that the Bantu didn't want to be educated and burned down the schools, universities and municipalities white South Africans built for them. And further generational indoctrinations of South African black (Bantu) youth by the British and Chinese /Lithuanian Communists Communists which will be explained further on …And still today Bantu Communist leaders force their youth to burn, vandalise and loot everything, right before every single election.Yet, then and now, white South Africans were and are Portuguese, Dutch, Afrikaner, German, Fleming, Swiss, French, English from Britain, Italian, and originally from a few more European countries. Today we have whole Serbian and Jewish communities among others too, for instance.So … we ask the world very nicely, to refrain from calling us “Dutch”, as most of us today are a mixture of all European countries and locals, due to the most part of 400 years, of intermarriage. The first European man to set foot on African Cape soil was Portuguese, not Dutch.The Khoina, Saan and Xhosa peoples were non-Bantu tribes, who did not have such technological knowledge to make guns or anything which we typically regard as first world. The wheel was not yet invented by the indigenous Khoina peoples.At that point the Europeans, Asians and Westerners had long ago invented it and have since kept on reinventing the wheel, among everything else that is today enjoyed by all in Africa.The earliest known inhabitants of South Africa were Pygmies and Khoisan. The latter, speakers of the so-called "click language," included the Hottentot or Khoi people, and the San or Bushmen. The Khoisan, hunter-gatherers with a rich oral tradition who produced some of Africa's most striking rock art, arrived in the area many thousands of years ago, but were ultimately displaced by the Bantu peoples. The Bantu, a large language group whose common characteristic is their word for "people,"bantu,originated in and around what is now Nigeria in about 1200B.C.Though they did not develop a written language, they were an Iron Age civilization whose higher level of technological advancement gave them dominance over the native peoples of southern Africa. Ultimately they seized the best land, forcing the Pygmies into the less desirable rain forest while the Khoisan retreated to the Kalahari Desert.A Portuguese explorer, Bartolomeu Dias, was the first European to set foot on the southern coast of the African continent in 1488, thereby discovering a trade route to the Far East, around the southernmost Cape, which he named Cabo das Tormentas - Cape of Storms.In 1647, a captain of the Dutch East India Company ship called Pieter Pietersz, sailed back to his home island in the Netherlands from Batavia, (now called Indonesia).His ship was caught in a storm and was wrecked on the rocks of the Cape coastline. The crew were forced to wait on the Cape coast for another company ship to arrive to rescue them.The next ship arrived a year later, which gave the men enough time to plan a refreshment station on the Cape coast for any future company ships that need water, fresh fruit, vegetables, medication and accommodation for crews of future wrecked ships.The station eatablished later in 1652 by Jan van Riebeeck, was not a trading post, nor an attempt to establish more settlements or colony. But five years later it became necessary to establish private farms in the now Rondebosch area below the eastern slopes of Table Mountain to provide wheat.In 1679, Simon van der Stel went to the Cape to become the new governor and twenty settlers were granted land in now Stellenbosch.The population in the Cape grew with the immigration of white women to the Cape and servants and seamen were recruited from Europe.In 1689, 180 persecuted French Calvanist Huguenot refugees emigrated to Franschhoek in the Cape. Later on, Germans, Scandinavians, Flemings and Swiss, followed.Migrant farmers moved to the interior in 1750. There was plenty of water in the interior and they employed Khoina to tend to their cattle. The Dutch East India Company followed.The Saan frequently attacked them with poisoned arrows and hunted their cattle. And, naturally the migrant farmers, on the Great Fish River frontier reacted in defense - The poison arrows were fatal - a serious matter. And for similar reasons there were clashes with the Xhosa too who had also not yet invented the wheel.Neither Khoina nor Xhosa had any borders to the land they occupied, no government, no flag no currency, no farms, no infrastructure, no written languages etc.There was literally nothing Western, European or Eastern in Africa, before the non-African set foot on African soil.You can therefore imagine a rather primitive society by Western standards, yet the Pygmy, Khoina and Xhosa were highly sophisticated by their own standards of having survived so long in the wilderness without a way to advance themselves.Thus, they only made rudimentary weapons like arrows and spears then. More modern weapons, like guns, were invented by the Western, Eastern and European nations and brought to Africa.Evolutionists say the original Saan hunter-gatherer groups lived in Africa about 100000 years before the Khoina did in southern Africa ...Both Saan and Khoina tribes are practically extinct, due to intermarriage over the centuries, and no longer present their original pure ethnicity, therefore are today locally referred to as the Coloured (mixed race) people of South Africa, as they have intermarried with Bantu, White, Indian and Malay ethnic groups.But, if you are a Christian, then such timelines, as those given online and above, will have no bearing, as Dr. Kent Hovind, science professor, famous for recently having been persecuted by the Communists in the United States, gives compelling evidence for a young earth of about 6,000 years, and that we owe the complexity of all life, and the provisions on earth to sustain life, to an uncreated intelligent Creator, and not a brainless, mindless process called “evolution" ...https://archive.org/details/KentHovind_Part1_HowOldIsTheEarthSo then given the Creationist perspective above, the following dates of the arrival of the Khoina and existence of Saan peoples to southern Africa, needs to be re-evaluated by Evolutionists ...The Khoina people's were an early Iron Age ethnicity, commonly known as Hottentots, by the Dutch in the Western Cape, due to the sounds they made when speaking, and hailed from a region north of where the South African border is today, namely the current country of Botswana, and migrated to the Cape, the southern most tip of what is the South Africa today, about 2000 hears ago, about 1000 years before the Dutch arrived by ship, at the southern most tip of todays South Africa, known as the Cape. Then known as the Cape of Good Hope - Goedehoop.They murdered, and enslaved the Saan people's who are more commonly known as Bushmen by South Africans today - Bushmen - because they fled to go live in the bushes.The Khoina were almost completely genocided by the Xhosa tribes which arrived and met up with them in southern Africa during the 1820's in the Zuurveld region of Southern Africa - the same time in which the Dutch arrived by ship in the southern most tip of what is South Africa today.And this is why the Communist Xhosa today as well as the Communist Zulu descendants today, are frantically trying to rewrite South African history, all over the Internet, and using every other possible media vehicle, as the SACP/ANC Communist government tries to steal white and Coloured (mixed race, partly from Khoina / Saan ancestry) property and land, by amending the Constitution to make it legal to do so, and using the arrival of Jan van Riebeeck in southern Africa in 1652, as scapegoat, to blame all white South Africans today, for the tragically incompetent and highly corrupt Communist ANC government's - and sub-political parties -own State economic failures and therefore publicly calling for the genocide of all white South Africans, by sowing incitement to racial hate, resulting in black on white violence - which then evolved into Black on ALL ethnicity violence and oppression.The Dutch bartered copper in exchange for cattle with the Khoina peoples to be able to provide supplies for their ships stopping off at the Cape point to replenish at the refreshment station they built. From there, they grew their own herds of cattle.This was a mutually beneficial arrangement. The Dutch did not conquer or enslave the Khoina people's and the Dutch East India Company gave Jan van Riebeeck strict orders not to establish a colony, nor to convert the locals to Christianity.The Dutch intermarried with the locals and that is how and when the Coloured (mixed race) ethnicity originated pre-South Africa.Tragically Dutch, as well as Khoina people's succumbed to an epidemic of smallpox, carried in by the ships, but neither were completely wiped out because of it.Later on, the Cape became ruled by the Batavian republic which introduced one of the first liberal democratic Constitutions in the world.Unless Jan van Riebeeck arrived in 1652 to establish a half way stop for ships, (not a colony as today's Communist government and it's supporters eternally propagate), to supply and replenish fresh fruit and vegetables to merchants of the Dutch East India Company, which sailed back and forth between Europe and the Far East - and unless the 1820 Voortrekkers and then later on the British arrived on the continent, South Africa would not necessarily have been established and become a sovereign, fully independant, fully functional, first world country with her own government, flag, infrastructure, currency and 11 written languages - As neither the Khoina, the San, the Xhosa, nor the Zulu Bantu had any wherewithall to do so, having been less advanced then, and not yet invented borders or anything considered modern, by then.The Dutch East India Company known as V.O.C. established districts such as Swellendam and Graaff- Reinet in order to maintain a border over the frontier and to prevent ongoing violence, but violence could not be prevented, because the Europeans were regularly attacked and they were always vastly outnumbered then, as they still are today.Due to European medical advances, and non-European polygamy, the life expectancy of non-Europeans increased exponentially, causing the Europeans to become forever minorities in the country they built over generations.The frontier migrant farmers kept on moving across the border so that their cattle could graze. A number of frontier wars followed with Xhosa due to Xhosa hunting them down, and the farmers learnt to live with regular occurrences of theft, arson and murder …Just as we white South Africans still do today …In 1806, the British seized the Cape of Good Hope, which they named the Cape Colony. The Boers or Afrikaners, as the descendants of the Dutch called themselves, ceded the Cape to Great Britain in an 1814 treaty.Subsequent decades saw an influx of slaves from the West Indies; Natal became the site of sugar cane plantations, which saw the arrival of large numbers of indentured Indian laborers beginning in about 1860.Then came the arrival of French Protestant refugees known as Huguenots, German dairy farmers and missionaries.The Retief Massacre of 6 February 1838 revisited - Piet Retief's original land title …http://www.tokencoins.com/pietretief.htmBattle of Blood River. Afrikaner (Boer) victory ... 1828/1839The Boers had founded two republics, the Transvaal or South African Republic in 1852 and the Orange Free State tThe Boers discovered precious resources in their area—diamonds in 1867, which spurred Britain to annex the Transvaal in 1877. In 1880 the British made war on the Boers.The Boers discovered gold in 1882—and thereafter South Africa would be famous for its vast natural wealth.However, it would also be famous for conflict, with the next stage of political tension in the region centering around British ambitions to conquer the entire land.When the British got wind that the Boers had discovered gold and the First Anglo-Boer War (1880-81) ensued, where the British army at first were defeated by the Boers.The Boers having been vastly outnumbered, they became the very first nation in Africa to defeat the armies of the British empire.The British retalialion next was devastating as Boer women and children were rounded up in concentration camps where most were starved to death and died of all sorts like diseases.This became the first genocide of the Boers - 28 000 murdered.But, this same war also became a genocide of the Bantu, where 20 000 were genocided by the British.Even today the British continue to rewrite the South African history all over the Internet, but thankfully a British woman then, Emily Hobhouse recorded it all for future historical posterity.She was banished from Britain and British children even today are forbidden to speak Afrikaans in their homes.Around 28,000 women and children and at least 20,000 black people died in the camps - the death toll represented almost 10 per cent of the Boer population.https://www.google.co.za/amp/s/www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4850592/amp/Photos-reveal-plight-Afrikaners-concentration-camps.html--------Any and every day is a great day to celebrate the selfless life of Emily Hobhouse ... God bless her soul.https://www.reformationsa.org/index.php/history/307-heroine-of-the-anglo-boer-war-emily-hobhouseShaka (c. 1787-1828) conquered most of what is now Natal Province. King Shaka was assassinated by his half-brothers in 1828, however, and the Boers defeated his successors at the Battle of Blood River in 1838.By 1836, the Boers of the Cape had become so dissatisfied with British rule that some 16,000 undertook a mass migration inland which came to be known as "The Great Trek."Next occurred the second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). It established British imperial dominance over all ethnic groups in Southern Africa.In 1910 the former Boer states merged with Cape Province and Natal to form the Union of South Africa.As a part of the British Empire, South Africa took part in World War I, its principal action being the seizure of German Southwest Africa. In 1919, following the end of the war, South Africa received a mandate to the former German colony, the present-day nation of Namibia.It fought against Nazi Germany in World War II as well.The British then introduced the separation of ethnic groups, an ideology forced upon all in southern Africa, which was called ‘Separation’.Translated directly into Afrikaans, the word ‘separation’, is ‘apartheid’.The British tradition of self-rule for all nations within the Empire and a way to prevent Bantu inter-tribal wars and to prevent Bantu wars on whites, perpetuated this institution of separation- apartheid.Growing Afrikaner resistance to British rule led to a decision, through a 1960 referendum among whites, to give up status as a British dominion. A new republic was born on May 31, 1961, and South Africa withdrew from the British Commonwealth.Separation - Apartheid was inherited with the victory of the Nationalist Party in 1948, but the ideology of apartheid had been undergoing positive reforms for many years, with the ideas of Hendrik Verwoerd (1901-66), in favour of Bantu independence from white governance.All Bantu were given the most fertile homelands, called Bantustans to govern themselves, with white support, leaving only one homeland for the whites.Altogether nine homelands, because even by then, the Bantu populations had multiplied exponentially, making whites more and more minorities in the country their forefathers established, South Africa.The Bantu were given everything they required to facilitate their own governance.Besides their own homelands, and their own Bantu councils, the Bantu were given their own educational facilities, houses, electricity, water, their own public transportation, their own public restrooms, and their own beaches and parks, all with full fascilities on them.Bophuthatswana, Ciskei, Transkei, and Venda were granted full independence.In 1950, the Group Areas Act, established residential and business sections in urban areas, for each of the four ethnic groups: Whites, Blacks, Coloreds, and Asians for which each homeland citizen was given a passport, ‘dompas’, and all that was required was for it to be presented to cross borders to enter other homelands to seek employment.The first major anti-apartheid riots broke out at Sharpeville, where only 9 policemen defended themselves against some 3000 aggressive PAC protesters charging at them and shot 69 of them ...Sharpeville / Soweto riots ...Forty Years Since the Soweto Riots - American RenaissanceSource: “Verrat an Südafrika”, Klaus D Vaque Copyright 1988, Varama Publishers, ISBN 0-620-12978-6, pg 172-175.Mike Smith's Political CommentaryBloggerA series of riots in 1976 led to the Bantu on Bantu murders of some 600, and the murder of resistance leader Stephen Biko (1946-1977) in 1977 led to increased tension.The 1960s and 1970s saw Nelson Mandela, Mkonto We Sizwe military wing leader and supporters of the SACP/ANC/PAC saw bombings, unrest, massive riots and necklacings, encouraged by ANC Winnie Mandela and British Communist entities like Ronnie Kasrils, against supporters of the peaceful Bantu Inkatha Freedom Party, led by Dr Mangosuthu Buthelezi, who were forced to retaliate in self-defense …January 19808 – The South African Defence Forcebegins withdrawal from southern Angola.16 – The South African Railways inaugurates the MetroBlitz interurban high speed train service between Pretoria and Johannesburg.[2][3][4]30 – Patrick McCall of the Stander gang is killed by police in a raid on the gang's hide-out in Houghton, Johannesburg.February3 – A bomb destroys the offices of the Ciskei consulate in Durban.23 – An Escom installation in Georgetown is slightly damaged by an explosion.29 – Two bombs explode at Mandini, one at a sub-station and the other at the police station.March11 – The Mobil fuel depot in Ermelo is rocked by four explosions and five storage tanks are destroyed.12 – During a skirmish with insurgents, two policemen are seriously injured.16 – South Africa and Mozambiquesign the Nkomati Accord, a non-aggression treaty, at Komatipoort.23 – Dorothy Nyembe is released from Kroonstad Prison after serving 15 years.April3 – The African National Congressdenies responsibility after a car bomb explodes on the Victoria Embankment, Durban, killing three and injuring twenty.5 – The Transkei consulate in Botshabelo is destroyed by a bomb.An insurgent is killed at De Deur.May2 – South Africa, Mozambique and Portugal sign an agreement on electricity supply from the Cahora Bassa dam.5 – Over 7,000 people attend an Afrikaner Volkswag rally in Pretoria.12 – A bomb explodes at the Trust Bank in Durban.13 – The Mobil Oil Refinery in Durban comes under RPG-7 attack by Umkhonto we Sizwe insurgents who are all killed afterwards in a running battle with police.16 – Outside the Jabulani Police station in Soweto an explosion destroys two private vehicles belonging to policemen.18 – The railway line near Lenasia is damaged by an explosion.29 – Prime Minister P.W. Botha and minister of foreign affairs Pik Bothavisit Austria, Belgium, France, Great Britain, Italy, Portugal, Switzerland and West Germany.Mutineers systematically kill most camp administration members at Umkhonto we Sizwe’s Pango training camp in Angola.June21 – An explosion damages a sub-station in Berea, Durban and disrupts electricity supply.28 – Jeannette Schoon and her six-year-old daughter Katryn are killed by a letter bomb at Lubango, Angola.July9 – South Africa signs the amendment of the International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas.12 – One policeman is killed and one is injured when their vehicle is attacked in Jabulani.28 – The South African Railways Police charge office in KwaMashu, Durban is attacked with hand grenades.August3 – A guerrilla is killed in the Ellisrasarea.7 – Tshabalala Dry Cleaners in Soweto is extensively damaged by Umkhonto we Sizwe.7 – An Escom sub-station is destroyed in Glenmore, Durban.12 – The Department of Internal Affairs of Johannesburg is hit by an explosion that causes minor damage.16 – Two Limpet mines destroy two floors of the South African Police HQ, Soweto East in Roodepoort, injuring the District Commander, four policemen and two civilians.17 – A guerrilla is killed while resisting arrest in Mapetla.23 – Explosions destroy 4th floor offices of the government in a building in Booysens, Johannesburg.24 – A bomb explodes in Anchor Life Building in Johannesburg, destroying the South African Railways Police regional offices and the Department of Internal Affairs offices.September3 – A limpet mine placed by Mo Shaik explodes at the Department of Internal Affairs in Johannesburg.3 – During riots in the Vaal Triangle instigated by the Vaal Civic Association (VCA) supported by the UDF and COSAS, councillors Caesar Motjeane and Kuzwayo Dlamini are doused with petrol and burned alive and the police resort to sharp ammunition to restore order.[5]5 – An explosion destroys an Escom sub-station at Rustenburg and disrupts power to Rustenburg and a large area of Bophutatswana.7 – VCA vice-chairman Esau Raditsela admits to VCA chairman Lord McCamel and UDF leader Frank Chikane that he had started the riots four days before, but the UDF continues to blame the government and police.[5]13 – A Limpet mine causes damage to a Durban sub-station.14 – The position of Prime Minister is abolished.14 – P.W. Botha is inaugurated as the first executive State President of South Africa.[1]14 – A bomb explodes at the Department of Community Development in Krugersdorp.October8 – South Africa, Mozambique and Renamo hold talks in Pretoria to end the civil war in Mozambique.16 – Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.December11 – A section of railway line near Durban and a goods train are damaged by an explosion.14 – A guerrilla is killed and a policeman is injured in a skirmish in Ingwavuma.18 – Foreign minister Pik Botha and President of Somalia Siad Barre hold talks in Mogadishu.25 – Another guerrilla is killed in Ingwavuma.Unknown DateThe government imposes a state of emergency that would stay in place for six years.February 1981 -Two people are injured when a bomb explodes in a Durban shopping centre.14 – A section of railway line between Richards Bay and Vryheid is destroyed by Umkhonto we Sizwe and coal trucks are derailed.21 – Limpet mines explode and destroy two transformers at a sub-station in Durban.May6 – The railway in the Hoedspruit area is damaged.14 – The United Nations General Assembly publishes a blacklist of 65 multi-national companies and some 270 sports persons who have links with South Africa.21 – A bomb explodes and damages the Port Elizabeth rail link to Johannesburg and Cape Town.25 – A pamphlet bomb explodes in Durban.25 – The Fort Jackson Police station is attacked.25 – The railway line near Soweto is damaged.25 – The railway line on the NatalSouth Coast is damaged.25 – Power lines are cut in Vrede.25 – A series of terrorist actions in support of Republic Day protests are admitted by Umkhonto we Sizwe.27 – A bomb explodes in Durban destroying a South African Defence Force recruiting building.June1 – Three offices of the Progressive Federal Party are firebombed in Johannesburg, with no injuries.4 – The police station in Meyerton is attacked by terrorists.11 – The railway line on the Natal North coast is maliciously damaged.16 – The railway line near East London is maliciously damaged.26 – Two bombs explode at the Durban Cenotaph.28 – The railway near Empangeni is maliciously damaged.July3 – A limpet mine is found at the fuel storage yard in Alberton and defused.21 – Six bomb explosions at sub-stations in Pretoria, Middelburg, and Ermelo disrupt power supply.26 – Two bombs explode at 05:50 and 06:10 in central Durban. Three people are injured and extensive damage is caused to motor vehicle firms.August6 – A bomb explodes in an East London shopping complex minutes before rush hour.8 – A bomb explodes in a Port Elizabeth shopping centre in similar manner to the East London bomb.11 – The Voortrekkerhoogte Military Base outside Pretoria is attacked with RPG-7s. Two British citizens, Nicolas Heath and Bonnie Lou Muller, are identified as accomplices in the assault.19 – The railway line near East London is maliciously damaged.September2 – Two policemen and two civilians, one a child, are killed during an attack on Mabopane Police station.12 – A bomb damages the main railway line at Delville Wood near Durban.October10 – Umkhonto we Sizwe attacks government offices of the Department of Co-operation and Development. Four civilians are injured.21 – Umkhonto we Sizwe destroys a transformer in Evander and a water pipeline feeding Sasol III (Secunda CTL) in Secunda.26 – Two policemen are killed during an attack on Sibasa Police station.November1 – The Jeppes Reef House near the Swaziland border, occupied by the South African Defence Force, comes under RPG-7 attack.9 – A bomb explodes at the Orlando Magistrates Court in Soweto.12 – Rosslyn sub-station in Pretoria is damaged by 4 limpet mines.December4 – South Africa grants Ciskeiindependence.9 – The offices of the Chief Commissioner of the Department of Co-operation and Development in Cape Town is attacked.14 – A Pretoria sub-station is bombed.23 – Eastern Cape provincial buildings in Duncan Village are damaged in an Umkhonto we Sizwe attack.26 – The Wonderboompoort Police station is attacked.January31 – State President P.W. Botha offers a release proposal to imprisoned African National Congress deputy leader Nelson Mandela.31 – Dr Gerrit Viljoen, Minister of Cooperation and Development, announces that the forced removal of Blacks will be suspended.Three guerrillas and a policeman are killed in a skirmish near Nongoma.February9 – An explosion damages the Old Defence Force offices in Marshall Street, Johannesburg.10 – Nelson Mandela rejects P.W. Botha's offer of conditional release.A Limpet mine destroys a police vehicle in Mamelodi.Two guerrillas are killed and one captured in the Eastern Transvaal.A special branch policeman's home in Tembisa comes under grenade attack.May2 – An explosion rocks the building housing the gold mining companies of Anglo American and Anglovaal in Johannesburg and causes R170,000 in structural damage. Both companies are engaged in mass dismissals of mine workers.9 – Two grenade attacks occur in Pretoria townships.15 – Three explosions damage the Brakpan Police barracks.15 – Insurgents attack the buildings of the Brakpan Commissioners court and offices of the Messenger of the court.28 or 30 – A Limpet mine causes structural damage to the Military Medical Centre in Hillbrow, Johannesburg.31 – Insurgents attack the Southern Cross Fund offices and injure 14 people.Three limpet mines explode at the Natalia Development Board buildings in Lamontville.Three limpet mines explode at the Umlazi Police station in Durban.An Eskom sub-station in Durban is damaged by explosion.A bomb damages the offices of AECI, which is involved in a labour dispute.An explosion destroys a TranskeiDevelopment Corporation bulk fuel depot in Umtata and disrupts water and power supplies to the town.Insurgents throw petrol bombs and hand grenades at the home of Amichand Rajbansi.July20 – P.W. Botha declares a state of emergency in 36 magisterial districts.Limpet mines destroy a sub-station in Durban.A Soweto group, dubbed the Suicide Squad, attacks the homes of two Soweto policemen.A hand grenade is thrown at a bakery in Umlazi, Durban, where workers are on strike.A hand grenade is thrown at the former community councillor in Gugulethu.Two insurgents and a policeman are killed in a shootout at a police roadblock near East London.August2 – Two insurgents and a policeman are killed at a roadblock near Mount Ruth.10 – Police defuses a limpet mine found on a petrol bowser at a fuel depot in East London.A hand grenade is thrown into the home of MP Barend Andrews.A hand grenade is thrown into the home of a Mamelodi policeman.Three limpet mines explode in department stores in Durban, causing limited damage but no injuries.A bomb explodes in a night club at an Umlazi hotel and 30 children are injured.August – In Queenstown, Eastern Cape, Bill Mentoor becomes the first person to be necklaced by having a petrol-filled car tyre placed around his neck and set alight.September27–28 – Limpet mines damage the basement of OK Bazaars in Smith Street, Game Stores and Checkers, all supermarkets in central Durban, while a limpet mine is defused in Spar in central Durban.24 – A limpet mine detonates whilst being armed at Grosvenor Girls School, Bluff, Durban, killing Zinto Cele, Mandlenkosi Ndimande and injuring Sibusiso Mazibuko.Four people are killed in 20 hand grenade attacks in the Cape Townregion.A bomb damages a central Johannesburg building housing the Institute of Bankers.Sasol 2 and 3 come under rocket attack and three insurgents are killed by police.An anti-tank mine explodes in the Soutpansberg area and four defence force members and four civilians are injured.A hand grenade explodes at a Barclays National Bank branch in Woodstock, Cape Town.December8 – The Chesterville home of a policeman is bombed.13 – A South African Army anti-mine troop carrier detonates an anti-tank mine in Messina and one soldier is injured.14 – A guerrilla is killed in Chiawelo.15 – Five people are killed, three of them children aged two, eight and ten, and five are injured when their vehicle detonates an anti-tank mine on the Chatsworth farm near Messina. A one-year-old boy survives the blast.17 – A limpet mine explodes at 03h00 and damages eight PUTCO buses at the Fleetline depot in Umlazi, Durban.19 – A farmer is injured when his vehicle hits an anti-tank mine in the Weipe area.21 – A limpet mine attached to minibus injures 8 or 13 people.23 – A bomb explodes in an Amanzimtoti shopping centre, kills five people and injures 40 others. Andrew Zondo, who is later arrested for planting the bomb, claims that he attempted to warn the mall but failed.29 – The police defuses a pamphlet bomb in Durban.A limpet mine explodes at 18h00 and causes structural damage to the Chatsworth Magistrates Court outside Durban.A grenade is thrown at a tourist kombi in central Durban.Charl van Wyk discusses the St James Church massacre:https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=477916459034768&id=129951390497945Tainted "Hero's"White law enforcement was necessary to protect the two Bantu factions from one another, and to protect Bantu children and babies carried on their mother's backs from becoming stampeded in their frenzied riotings.International journalists came to SA and completely misrepresented the political upheavals, painting the Communist SACP/ANC/PAC and their Communist military wing as the oppressed hero's, and the white authorities who were merely protecting the two factions, as the demons.Due to such skewed reporting, increasing worldwide disapproval of white South Africa escalated, and together with disgruntled British, who still hate the Boers - by now much intermarried with Afrikaners - for being the first nation in Africa to ever defeat the British, sided with, supported and instigated the Communist Bantu’s, who initiated every atrocity, massacre and tragedy of the Communist period in South Africa.International Communist propaganda, misinformation disinformation, including completely rewriting our entire South African history, (All South African history has been totally manipulated everywhere on the Internet, including a website called South Africa History Online and Wikipedia).Instigations and interference led to confusion over what apartheid really was, and resulted in a number of actions.Apartheid: "They did not oppress us" - YouTubeHow many people did apartheid kill?http://iluvsa.blogspot.com/2009/11/no-retribution-for-mbeki.html?m=1The Good Side of Apartheid - YouTubeSouth Afrikaner apologySouth Africa was banned from many international cultural exchange programs, and after 1960, its athletes were not allowed in the Olympic Games and other international competitions.The United Nations imposed an arms embargo, and passed resolutions condemning apartheid.A widespread popular reaction in the West, simmering for several decades, exploded in the 1980s, with anti-apartheid protests on many college campuses.Under pressure from stockholders, many foreign banks and multinationals broke their South African ties, and many in the United States called for full economic divestiture from South Africa.Meanwhile, South Africa was protecting her borders against the Communist Soviet Union and Cuban supported governments of Angolato her north and Mozambique during much of the 1980s, and also at the same time, defended the colony of Southwest Africa, against Communist SWAPO to her west.These combined were called the Cold Border Wars, where Cuba and the Soviet Union finally withdrew their support of South Africa’s enemies due to heavy financial losses and also as a result of respect for the way in which South Africans of all ethnicities fought that war, often sending Angolan child soldiers back to their leaders with messages and destroying or confiscating too much Soviet and Cuban deadly equipment.President P. W. Botha in 1986 ordered an end to pass laws and allowed blacks to take an advisory role in government.Under the administration of F. W. de Klerk, the government removed its ban on the ANC and released Mandela in 1990.In 1991, de Klerk announced plans to end apartheid, and in 1994 the nation held free elections in which the ANC won the majority, making Nelson Mandela the first president of the "new" South Africa.The end of apartheid has not brought an end to tension in the country, however.Fighting between the ANC and the Zulu Inkatha Party has killed thousands, and many whites have fled the country. Racial tensions between blacks and other groups has continued as well.White immigrants since have been typically of English heritage, since it is in the very nature of Afrikaner identity to stay put, because South Africa is their beloved motherland, and their blood is in the soil their forefathers established and died for South Africa before, during and after British presence in South Africa.British have never truly assimilated by way of letting go of their British motherland, the UK.Though the standard of living for Bantu in South Africa was higher than for most people living on the African continent, economic conditions still made immigration difficult.Africa News Service reported in 1999, much of the racism is black on black. South Africa has always experienced much higher immigration than emigration, but according to the News Service report, black hostility towards other Africans increased in the 1990s. Bantu South Africans even have derogatory ways of referring to black foreigners: “makwerere” - the local name given to insects that survive on cow and human faeces, and “orgirigamba” - people from nowhere."In 1989, M. J. Polonsky and others presented "A Profile of Emigrants from South Africa: The Australian Case" inInternational Migration Review.Polonsky et al. found that South African immigrants in Australia shared several characteristics: high levels of technical skill; significant professional qualifications; families with young children; and little or no financial assets remaining in South Africa—thus indicating a decision to leave the country for good. White South Africans also settled in Britain and Canada. Thus a 1998 article in the Canadian magazineMaclean'sreported that "South African doctors are still flocking to Canada, seeking a foreign haven from rising crime, a falling currency, and wrenching changes to the health-care system."As for those whites who have moved to the United States, both before and after the end of apartheid, a relatively large number have settled in Midwestern states such as Minnesota and Illinois. Thus some stores in Chicago, for instance, sell Marie biscuits, cookies often served by South Africans with tea. There are also pockets of South African immigrants on the East Coast, in areas such as Atlanta, which has a large population of South African Jews. A number of South Africans have also settled in Mid-Atlantic states such as Maryland, and in New York.Throughout the western United States, for instance in Arizona, California, and in the Pacific Northwest, there are small South African populations, though it would be hard to discern a pattern to such settlements. Unlike, say, the Irish, South Africans in general—both white and black—have tended to come to America individually rather than in large groups. Thus they can be found throughout the country.Today all white folk, INCLUDING British folk in South Africa, are being genocided by British and Chinese indoctrinated Bantu Communist youth, who shoot us dead with our own weapons of self-defense, stolen from us and our neighbours in similar attacks and murders - then these stolen weapons are sold on the black market …Once inside our homes or fortified walls, the first thing they do is lead us straight to our own gun safes, to steal our guns of “self defense”, and sell them on the black market, to more indoctrinated youth who return to attack again, and again and again, be it us they return to rape, loot and murder, or our neighbours, or other non-whites in the same or different areas …Massive fraud over land expropriation which also includes president Cyril RamaphosaBut we are always on 24 hour alert in South Africa.Black South African calls out South African media ...A black African lady explains how murdering white farmers, (Boers), in South Africa impacts her family …Australian Senator Fraser Anning addresses more than 3000 people in Perth who protested the genocide of white people in South AfricaSuch a pity Ramaphosa, the SACP/ ANC, Andile the BLF, PAC, DA, were left out of this complaint.Please learn from NON-COMMUNIST MEDIA about what was REALLY going on in South Africa for the most part of 400 years, and learn the truths about what is REALLY going on in South Africa today.Deirdre Fields:An interview with Deirdre Fields, part 1 - by Kevin Alfred Stromhttp://nationalvanguard.org/2015/08/stop-white-genocide-part-1/TO PERSECUTED MINORITIES OF SOUTH AFRICA PLEASE NOTE: DO NOT SEND PERSONAL INFO TO USAC ...USAC (United South Africa Center)This is why ...Tammy Fyke is USAC!PEOPLE v. FYKE | 190 Ill. App.3d 713 (1989) | pp3d7131827 | Leagle.com

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