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Slavery Perpetrated by All, Ended by Whites.

 

  • Slavery has been practiced world wide for thousands of years. 
  • In the USA, Blacks frequently owned slaves [1, 2, 3]. 
  • Whites were enslaved, frequently by Arabs  
  • Slavery is still widely practiced today [8,9,10], largely in Africa  [20].

It seems [Hearsay Disclaimer] it was the high morality of Whites who outlawed slavery [22] for themselves and forced other societies to end slavery. [Europeans Abolished Slavery; Africans/Muslims Still Practice It ... ]

White guilt towards Muslims would subside, if Europeans knew the truth about centuries of Muslim wholesale enslavement of Whites and Blacks alike.

I am no historian, so the reader please verify my uninformed musings [Hearsay Disclaimer].

 

The Roots of Slavery - BBC

The term slave has its origins in the word slav. The slavs, who inhabited a large part of Eastern Europe, were taken as slaves by the Muslims of Spain during the ninth century AD. [...]
In Africa there were a number of societies and kingdoms which kept slaves, before there was any regular commercial contact with Europeans, including the Asanti, the Kings of Bonny and Dahomey. [

continue at The Roots of Slavery - BBC

 

]

 

African Slave Owners. |BBC

GROWING RICH WITH SLAVERY
ROYALTY

In the early 18th century, Kings of Dahomey (known today as Benin) became big players in the slave trade, waging a bitter war on their neighbours, resulting in the capture of 10,000, including another important slave trader, the King of Whydah. King Tegbesu made £250,000 a year selling people into slavery in 1750 [Continue at African Slave Owners|BBC]

 

 

The Untold Story of White Slavery

From a number of sources, therefore, Prof. Davis estimates that the death rate was about 20 percent per year. Slaves had no access to women, so replacement was exclusively through capture. His conclusion: “[B]etween 1530 and 1780 there were almost certainly a million and quite possibly as many as a million and a quarter white, European Christians enslaved by the Muslims of the Barbary Coast.” This considerably exceeds the figure of 800,000 Africans generally accepted as having been transported to the North American colonies and, later, to the United States.
Why is there so little interest in Mediterranean slavery while scholarship and reflection on black slavery never ends? As Prof. Davis explains, white slaves with non-white masters simply do no fit “the master narrative of European imperialism.” The victimization schemes so dear to academics require white wickedness, not white suffering.
[...] for centuries, Europeans lived in fear of the lash themselves, and a great many watched redemption parades of freed slaves, all of whom were white. Slavery was a fate more easily imagined for themselves than for distant Africans.
With enough effort, it is possible to imagine Europeans as preoccupied with slavery as blacks. If Europeans nursed grievances about galley slaves the way blacks do about field hands, European politics would certainly be different. There would be no groveling apologies for the Crusades, little Muslim immigration to Europe, minarets would not be going up all over Europe, and Turkey would not be dreaming of joining the European Union. The past cannot be undone, and brooding can be taken to excess, but those who forget also pay a high price.  [continue at The Untold Story of White Slavery]



End of summary

Supporting texts and links follow below


PIG
You can search on your own on PIGS: Politically Incorrect Google Search [?]
 


10 Facts About The Arab Enslavement Of Black People Not Taught In Schools - Atlanta Black Star The Number of People Enslaved The number of people enslaved by Muslims has been a hotly debated topic, especially when the millions of Africans forced from Share Save ATLANTABLACKSTAR.COM · 99,578 SHARES
Some historians estimate that between A.D. 650 and 1900, 10 to 20 million people were enslaved by Arab slave traders. Others believe over 20 million enslaved Africans alone had been delivered through the trans-Sahara route alone to the Islamic world. Dr. John Alembellah Azumah in his 2001 book, The Legacy of Arab-Islam in Africa estimates that over 80 million Black people more died en route.
Arab Enslavers Practiced Genetic Warfare The Arab slave trade typically dealt in the sale of castrated male slaves. Black boys between the age of 8 and 12 had their scrotums and penises completely amputated to prevent them from reproducing. About six of every 10 boys  bled to death during the procedure, according to some sources, but the high price brought by eunuchs on the market made the practice profitable. Some men were castrated to be eunuchs in domestic service and the practice of neutering male slaves was not limited to only Black males. “The calipha in Baghdad at the beginning of the 10th Century had 7,000 black eunuchs and 4,000 white eunuchs in his palace,” writes author Ronald Segal in his 2002 book, Islam’s Black Slaves: The Other Black Diaspora.


Leftist Slave Labor Camps

China has officially abolished slavery several times — in the 14th century, in the 18th, and again in the 20th. But it never really took: China’s Communist dictators operate more than a thousand 1,000 slave-labor camps.

The camps are called “laogai,” a contraction of “láodòng gǎizào,” which means “reform through labor.” They were conceived under Mao; unlike Stalin’s gulags, they never closed — though the CCP has tried to abolish the name “laogai.”

In the Nineties, it redesignated the camps “prisons.” The conditions, though, don’t seem to have changed. Our picture of life in the laogai is murky, but here’s what has been reported: The prisoners are given uniforms and shoes. They have to purchase their own socks, underwear, and jackets. There are no showers, no baths, and no beds. Prisoners sleep on the floor, in spaces less than a foot wide. They work 15-hour days, followed by two hours of evening indoctrination; at night they’re not allowed to move from their sleeping-spots till 5:30 rolls around, when they’re woken for another day of hard labor. Fleas, bedbugs, and parasites are ubiquitous. The prisoners starve on meager supplies of bread, gruel, and vegetable soup. Once every two weeks they get a meal of pork broth.   [Read more at: Nationalreview]


The Roots of Slavery - BBC

The term slave has its origins in the word slav. The slavs, who inhabited a large part of Eastern Europe, were taken as slaves by the Muslims of Spain during the ninth century AD.
The Greeks and Romans kept slaves as soldiers, servants, labourers and even civil servants. The Romans captured slaves from what is now Britain, France and Germany. Slave armies were kept by the Ottomans and Egyptians.

In Imperial Russia in the first half of the 19th century one third of the population were serfs, who like slaves in the Americas, had the status of chattels and could be bought and sold. They were finally freed in 1861 by Emperor Alexander II. Four years later slavery was abolished in the southern states of America following southern defeat in the American Civil War.

In Africa there were a number of societies and kingdoms which kept slaves, before there was any regular commercial contact with Europeans, including the Asanti, the Kings of Bonny and Dahomey. [

continue at The Roots of Slavery - BBC

 

]

 

African Slave Owners. |BBC

Many societies in Africa with kings and hierarchical forms of government traditionally kept slaves. But these were mostly used for domestic purposes. They were an indication of power and wealth and not used for commercial gain. However, with the appearance of Europeans desperate to buy slaves for use in the Americas, the character of African slave ownership changed.

GROWING RICH WITH SLAVERY
ROYALTY

In the early 18th century, Kings of Dahomey (known today as Benin) became big players in the slave trade, waging a bitter war on their neighbours, resulting in the capture of 10,000, including another important slave trader, the King of Whydah. King Tegbesu made £250,000 a year selling people into slavery in 1750 [Continue at African Slave Owners|BBC]

Historians Challenge Northam’s ‘Indentured Servants’ Remark [Amren]

[...]Historians say they were “shocked” and “mystified” when Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam wrongly used the term “indentured servants” Sunday in reference to the first Africans to arrive in English North America 400 years ago.  [...]
Northam released a statement Monday to explain his use of the term. He said he spoke at a recent event about the arrival of the Africans “and referred to them in my remarks as enslaved.”
“A historian advised me that the use of indentured was more historically accurate … the fact is, I’m still learning and committed to getting it right,” Northam said.
Guasco, the Davidson College professor, said some historians did use the term from the 1970s to 1990s. That’s because a very small number of the first Africans became free decades later. But he said historians have since confirmed through records, including censuses, that most remained enslaved.
The “indentured servant” remark is the governor’s latest misstep in a blackface scandal that has shaken Virginia to its foundation. [Original Article]

COMMENT to above article

Fabricio14 hours ago
Yes,surprisingly enough, blacks could work their way into freedom, and many did (albeit a small minority).
Some blacks were brought initially as indentured servants, and would work for a few years and be released. Some were permanently enslaved. Slavery as a practice varied enormously, even with the U.S.
Slaves were allowed to earn money from tips, side gigs, overtime, and extra jobs on their free time, rendered to their master, or to others. Slaves were also routinely loaned to other owners (and would be able to collect tips from them as well) and rented as well (and sometimes self-rented, a quasi-autonomous "ronin" slave arrangement).
Slaves not only could receive and own money and personal effects, but also property, including businesses and real estate—even while still being slaves.
While no doubt having no upper hand in society, slaves had nonetheless myriad options of betterment through work and accumulation of resources, and it is no surprise that some exceptional individuals, intelligent and motivated, proceeded to do just so. Many accumulated enough money to buy their freedom and live in comfort. Some becoming entrepreneurs and business owners, many becoming slave owners themselves.
Blacks being blacks, it's also no surprise that this negro elite was a small minority, and most blacks exhibited high time preference, weighing more heavily in their personal scales of preference the immediate pleasures of life—food, tobacco, alcohol, leisure, women—than potential future long term endeavors (such as buying their freedom); and thus spent their money accordingly (just as many still do to this day, cf. bitchez, booze, drugs, bullets).
The rabidly anti-white middle-school teacher/Roots narrative of slavery is completely spurious. Slaves were not kept in chains day and night, being continually beaten and tortured, the destruction of black bodies being the end goal of their masters yadda yadda yadda . . .
See:
https://dailykenn.blogspot....
https://www.youtube.com/wat...
https://www.youtube.com/wat...
https://www.youtube.com/wat...

 

Slavery: Racially Incorrect Facts

As was recently shown, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement, with its central claim that police around the country are hunting and killing innocent black men, is a lie. 
Yet the BLM myth is enmeshed within a larger narrative, a narrative of eternal White Racism. And couched within this tale are distortions and outright crucially false ideas of slavery. 
In the interest of that “honest discussion” of race that the Eric Holders and Barack Obamas of the world claim to want, I submit considerations without which no such discussion can be had.
One glaringly inconvenient truth that, odds are, few folks of any race are aware is that the very first legal slave owner in America was one Anthony Johnson—a black man.  More specifically, Johnson was an Angolan who himself had been an indentured servant in the colony of Virginia before he became a tobacco planter himself.  One of the African indentured servants who worked Johnson’s 300 acre plot of land was John Casor.[...]
Europeans didn’t get involved with African slavery until the 15th century—very late in the game, historically speaking.  For at least the preceding 800-900 years, Arab Muslims had been trafficking in African slaves—all, of course, as even Obama’s friend and black Harvard professor, Henry Louis Gates is at pains to show, with the cooperation of African leaders who had been enslaving their fellow Africans for even longer than this.
In their Peoples and Empires in West Africa: West Africa in History, 1000-1800, George T. Stride and Caroline Ifeka show that while slavery was endemic throughout the continent, there were several groups like, to note just some examples, the Oyo, Kaabu, and the Imbangala peoples that were particularly ruthless and brutal at enslaving.  Some African slave holders, as the black American thinker Thomas Sowell has noted as well, used their slaves as human sacrifices in religious rituals.
In his Black Rednecks, White Liberals, in a chapter titled, “The Real History of Slavery,” Sowell’s commentary on the brutality of Arabic Muslims’ treatment of African slaves is particularly difficult to digest.  Muslims, he says, “marched vast numbers of human beings from their homes [in Africa] where they had been captured to the places where they would be sold, hundreds of miles away, often spending months crossing the burning sands of the Sahara.”
Sowell adds: “The death toll on these marches exceeded even the horrific toll on packed slave ships crossing the Atlantic.”
But it wasn’t just scores of black Africans who were brutalized by Muslim slave traders. As books like Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, The Barbary Coast, and Italy, 1500-1800 and White Slaves, African Masters: An Anthology of American Barbary Captivity Narratives confirm, so too were millions of white Europeans and, in the 19th century, white Americans.

 

 


 

 

 

Ten Reasons Why Reparations for Blacks is a Bad Idea for Blacks - and Racist, Too!

 


 

The Untold Story of White Slavery

Whites have forgotten what blacks take pains to remember.

Robert C. Davis, Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, the Barbary Coast, and Italy, 1500-1800, Palgrave Macmillan, 2003, 246 pp., $35.00.
As Robert C. Davis notes in this eye-opening account of Barbary Coast slavery, American historians have studied every aspect of enslavement of Africans by whites but have largely ignored enslavement of whites by North Africans. Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters is a carefully researched, clearly written account of what Prof. Davis calls “the other slavery,” which flourished during approximately the same period as the trans-Atlantic trade, and which devastated hundreds of European coastal communities. Slavery plays nothing like the central role in the thinking of today’s whites that it does for blacks, but not because it was fleeting or trivial matter. The record of Mediterranean slavery is, indeed, as black as the most tendentious portrayals of American slavery. Prof. Davis, who teaches Italian social history at Ohio State University, casts a piercing light into this fascinating but neglected corner of history.
A Wholesale Business
The Barbary Coast, which extends from Morocco through modern Libya, was home to a thriving man-catching industry from about 1500 to 1800. The great slaving capitals were Salé in Morocco, Tunis, Algiers, and Tripoli, and for most of this period European navies were too weak to put up more than token resistance.

 

The trans-Atlantic trade in blacks was strictly commercial, but for Arabs, memories of the Crusades and fury over expulsion from Spain in 1492 seem to have fueled an almost jihad-like Christian-stealing campaign. “It may have been this spur of vengeance, as opposed to the bland workings of the marketplace, that made the Islamic slavers so much more aggressive and initially (one might say) successful in their work than their Christian counterparts,” writes Prof. Davis. During the 16th and 17th centuries more slaves were taken south across the Mediterranean than west across the Atlantic. Some were ransomed back to their families, some were put to hard labor in north Africa, and the unluckiest worked themselves to death as galley slaves.
What is most striking about Barbary slaving raids is their scale and reach. Pirates took most of their slaves from ships, but they also organized huge, amphibious assaults that practically depopulated parts of the Italian coast. Italy was the most popular target, partly because Sicily is only 125 miles from Tunis, but also because it did not have strong central rulers who could resist invasion.
Large raiding parties might be essentially unopposed. When pirates sacked Vieste in southern Italy in 1554, for example, they took an astonishing 6,000 captives. Algerians took 7,000 slaves in the Bay of Naples in 1544, in a raid that drove the price of slaves so low it was said you could “swap a Christian for an onion.” Spain, too, suffered large-scale attacks. After a raid on Granada in 1566 netted 4,000 men, women, and children, it was said to be “raining Christians in Algiers.” For every large-scale raid of this kind there would have been dozens of smaller ones. [...]
From a number of sources, therefore, Prof. Davis estimates that the death rate was about 20 percent per year. Slaves had no access to women, so replacement was exclusively through capture. His conclusion: “[B]etween 1530 and 1780 there were almost certainly a million and quite possibly as many as a million and a quarter white, European Christians enslaved by the Muslims of the Barbary Coast.” This considerably exceeds the figure of 800,000 Africans generally accepted as having been transported to the North American colonies and, later, to the United States.
The European powers were unable to stop this traffic. Prof. Davis reports that in the late 1700s, they had a better record of controlling the trade, but there was an upturn of white slavery during the chaos of the Napoleonic wars.
American shipping was not exempt from predation either. Only in 1815, after two wars against them, were American sailors free of the Barbary pirates. These wars were significant operations for the young republic; one campaign is remembered in the words “to the shores of Tripoli” in the Marine hymn. When the French took over Algiers in 1830, there were still 120 whites slaves in the bagno.
Why is there so little interest in Mediterranean slavery while scholarship and reflection on black slavery never ends? As Prof. Davis explains, white slaves with non-white masters simply do no fit “the master narrative of European imperialism.” The victimization schemes so dear to academics require white wickedness, not white suffering.
Prof. Davis also points out that the widespread European experience of slavery gives the lie to another favorite leftist hobby horse: that the enslavement of blacks was a crucial step in establishing European notions of race and racial hierarchy. Not so; for centuries, Europeans lived in fear of the lash themselves, and a great many watched redemption parades of freed slaves, all of whom were white. Slavery was a fate more easily imagined for themselves than for distant Africans.
With enough effort, it is possible to imagine Europeans as preoccupied with slavery as blacks. If Europeans nursed grievances about galley slaves the way blacks do about field hands, European politics would certainly be different. There would be no groveling apologies for the Crusades, little Muslim immigration to Europe, minarets would not be going up all over Europe, and Turkey would not be dreaming of joining the European Union. The past cannot be undone, and brooding can be taken to excess, but those who forget also pay a high price.  [continue at The Untold Story of White Slavery]]

 


Black Slaveowners: Free Black Slave Masters in South Carolina, 1790-1860 |Amazon

Most Americans, both black and white, believe that slavery was a system maintained by whites to exploit blacks, but this authoritative study reveals the extent to which African Americans played a significant role as slave masters. Examining South Carolina's diverse population of African-American slaveowners, the book demonstrates that free African Americans widely embraced slavery as a viable economic system and that they--like their white counterparts--exploited the labor of slaves on their farms and in their businesses. Drawing on the federal census, wills, mortgage bills of sale, tax returns, and newspaper advertisements, the author reveals the nature of African-American slaveholding, its complexity, and its rationales. He describes how some African-American slave masters had earned their freedom but how many others--primarily mulattoes born of free parents--were unfamiliar with slavery's dehumanization.

Black Slaveowners: A Review

It is widely believed that slavery in 19th-century America was the exclusive province of whites. However, as historian Larry Kroger reveals in Black Slaveowners, free black people in the United States owned slaves, fought for their right to do so and had little sympathy for abolition.
A five-year investigation of federal census data, wills, mortgages, bills of sale, tax returns and newspaper ads from 1790 to 1860 provided the foundation for Koger's examination of black slave masters in the Palmetto state, culminating in his illuminating book, Black Slaveowners: Free Black Slave Masters in South Carolina, 1790-1860 (McFarland, 1985). Charleston City, in which 72.1% of African-America households owned slaves, was a valuable primary documentation source. Records that survived the Civil War indicated the existence of 260 black slave masters.
This well-sourced book, which contains lengthy appendices of federal census data and well over 600 citations, represents an earnest attempt to examine a difficult and complex topic that too few have addressed: the phenomenon of black slaveowners.
According to Kroger's comprehensive and well-researched volume, black slave owners lived in every Southern state that allowed slavery and even Northern states, including Maryland. The practice of black slave ownership was widespread and stretched from New York to Florida to Missouri, Kentucky, Louisiana and Mississippi. According to the 1830 federal census, free blacks owned 10,000 slaves, including in New York City eight free blacks who reportedly owned 17 slaves. Many black slave owners were large planters who raised cotton, rice, and sugar cane. Many inherited slaves from relatives or white kinsfolk who transported them from Africa to the New World.
As the economy of Charleston City expanded in the early 19th century, many free blacks were able to buy slaves, making the city the center of black slave holding in South Carolina. Between 1820 and 1840, most free black heads of households in Charleston owned slaves. Freed slaves in business customarily used slave labor, hired slaves out for a fee to non-slave owners or used slaves as collateral to secure loans. Former slaves bought slaves for economic benefit in a society in which slavery was an acceptable form of labor. They had no qualms about using slaves and were well assimilated into the white slaveowner culture. Often, free blacks purchased enslaved kinfolk to buy their freedom. [Read more: americanthinker]


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-39567632

 


This map shows where the world’s 30 million slaves live. There are 60,000 in the U.S.

 


The slaves that time forgot - Daily Kos

  So many Irish slaves were sent to Barbados, between 12,000 and ... More Irish slaves were sold in the American colonies between 1651 and ...


White Slaves,
African Slave Traders,
and the Hidden History of Slavery

 Andrew Guild

Contents
       
1 Introduction
2 Black slavery used as propaganda
3 A brief history of slavery
4 Slavery of Africans by Africans
5 Black slave owners in the United States
6 White nations and the banning of the slave trade
7 The White slave trade of the Arabs
8 White slavery in White countries
9 White slaves, Black slave owners in America
10 Convict slavery in Australia
11 White slavery in America
12 White partus slavery in the USA
13 White slavery as a cause of the American Civil War
14 White slavery in the Industrial Revolution
15 White slavery and the modern media
16 Conclusion
       
       
    Further reading
    References


Slavery Is Not Dead, Just Less Recognizable [Amren]

Slaves are cheap these days. Their price is the lowest it’s been in about 4,000 years. And right now the world has a glut of human slaves—27 million by conservative estimates and more than at any time in human history [...]
In his book “Disposable People,” Bales says ownership is no longer an attractive proposition for most slaveholders because the price of slaves is so low. In 1850, a slave would cost about $40,000 in today’s dollars. Now, you can buy a slave for $30 in the Ivory Coast. The glut “has converted them from being the equivalent of buying a car to buying a plastic pen that you use and throw away,” he says. That makes maintenance of the “investment” a low priority, and little care is taken for slaves’ well-being.
The most common type of slavery is debt bondage which traps 15 million to 20 million in loan agreements they can never pay off. Others are lured by false promises into forced labor situations, where they are coerced to stay under threat of violence. Slavery also includes the worst forms of child labor and sexual exploitation of women and girls [...]
The conditions of those enslaved are usually filled with physical and mental abuse and violence—or at least the constant threat of it—and sometimes unimaginable deprivations. Girls are frequently “broken in” to the profession of prostitution, for instance, through beatings and rape, and if they are rebellious, they may end up dead. Long hours, sometimes 15 or more a day, with no days off, privacy, or adequate food are common.  [Slavery Is Not Dead, Just Less Recognizable [Amren]]

 
We don’t know what happened to Virginia Dare. If she survived, she might have been “adopted” by Indians, and married into the tribe. While you will hear, below, that slavery began in America when white people brought Africans to America, in fact the Indians used to kidnap and enslave each other all the time, without needing the example provided by the white adoption of the African custom of slavery. They were quite capable of kidnapping and enslaving a white  child, if available. Indeed, it's not impossible that they ate her.
Now, as Steve Sailer has pointed out in Retconning American History: The 1619 Project Vs. The Wretched Refuse, , the big project of America’s Ruling Class is to make 1619, the date that African slaves were first imported onto American soil, the date of the founding of the real America: [Source]

The African Slave Trade, White Guilt,
And The Other Guilty Party

Reprinted with Permission From vdare

Colby Cosh notes that
more and more African politicians and educators are calling for an honest appraisal of Africa’s role in making the intercontinental slave trade possible. In some cases this has involved a strange twist on “white guilt”: i.e., contemporary Africans from poor countries apologizing for crimes against the ancestors of present-day middle-class American citizens:
He quotes Sheldon Stern of the History News Network:
In 2000, at an observance attended by delegates from several European countries and the United States, officials from Benin publicized President Mathieu Kerekou’s apology for his country’s role in “selling fellow Africans by the millions to white slave traders.” “We cry for forgiveness and reconciliation,” said Luc Gnacadja, Benin’s minister of environment and housing. Cyrille Oguin, Beninâ's ambassador to the United States, acknowledged, "We share in the responsibility for this terrible human tragedy." It's Time to Face the Whole Truth About the Atlantic Slave Trade HNN.us, By Sheldon M. Stern, August 13, 2007
While large parts of America once had slavery, it's not essentially an American idea, it's an African idea. It still goes on in Africa, and America is where a Civil War was fought to stop it. American slave traders bought slaves in Africa not because they either liked or disliked Africans, but because it was the only place in the world people were for sale.
Of course, they're apologizing to other Africans here—don't expect apologies to the United States anytime soon, although the analogy with drug pushers is pretty obvious.
Also, remember, while the Atlantic Slave Trade and the horrors of the Middle Passage are what every American learns about in school, it wasn't the only slave trade, and they weren't the only horrors.
Long before Columbus discovered America, Africans were selling other Africans to Arab slave traders in the North of Africa, and marching them north through deserts where many of them died. Perhaps the Beninese could apologize for that? In the meantime, while whites are apologizing all over the place for their distant ancestors' role in African slavery, (Clinton apologized, George W. Bush apologized, the next President will probably apologize) slavery still goes on in Africa, including Benin.
Child Slave Trade in Africa Highlighted by Arrests New York Times, 10 August, 1997 LAGOS, Nigeria — Three recent arrests have cast a spotlight on what authorities say is a growing slave trade in children in this region of West Africa.
In neighboring Benin, police said that in July they had rescued more than 100 children who were being transported to Nigeria, on their way to central Africa to be sold.

Police in Porto-Novo, Benin's capital, said they had been alerted that three men were trying to find buses to take a group of 90 children to Lagos, Nigeria's main port city. They said they had arrested the three men, two of them from Benin and one from Nigeria.

A few days earlier, Benin's government-owned daily newspaper, La Nation, reported that a group of 42 children had been rescued by police in similar circumstances in another Benin city, Cotonou.

Trading in children is a common practice in both Benin and Nigeria. [Source: https://vdare.com/posts/the-african-slave-trade-white-guilt-and-the-other-guilty-party]



West African Slavery Lives On, 400 Years After Transatlantic Trade Began [Amren]

Angela Ukomadu and Nneka Chile, Reuters, August 8, 2019
{snip}
As the world marks 400 years since the first recorded African slaves arrived in North America, slavery remains a modern-day scourge. Over 40 million people are estimated to be trapped in forced labor, forced marriages or other forms of sexual exploitation, according to the United Nations.
{snip}
Africa has the highest prevalence of slavery, with more than seven victims for every 1,000 people, according to a 2017 report by human rights group Walk Free Foundation and the International Labour Office. The report defines slavery as “situations of exploitation that a person cannot refuse or leave because of threats, violence, coercion, deception, and/or abuse of power.”
{snip}
Trafficking of sex workers, many of them tricked into thinking they will get employment doing something else, is one of the most widespread and abusive forms of modern-day slavery.
{snip}
The intended final destination of people smuggled across Africa like this is often Europe, but few make it that far. Many are jailed or sold as indentured laborers when they get to Libya. Some are even sold on slave markets, according to aid groups — a chilling echo of the trans-Saharan slave trade of centuries past.
{snip}
Original Article

 


 

 

White Slavery Denial - Taki's Magazine

takimag.com/article/white_slavery_denial_jim_goad/print

May 16, 2016 ... Although the “Irish slaves myth” story was spread far and wide on several sites last week, no one bothered to contact the alleged primary ...

 

The Irish Slave Trade – The Forgotten “White” Slaves » Alex Jones ...

https://www.infowars.com/the-irish-slave-trade-the-forgotten-white-slaves/

May 29, 2012 ... The Irish slave trade began when James II sold 30,000 Irish prisoners as slaves to the New World. His Proclamation of 1625 required Irish ...

 

Irish Man Demands Reparations For Slavery! » Alex Jones' Infowars ...

https://www.infowars.com/irish-man-demands-reparations-for-slavery/

Nov 25, 2014 ... Irish Man Demands Reparations For Slavery! Unchain yourself from the mind control manipulating the way we see ourselves and each other.

 

Irish Slave Trade « Isegoria

www.isegoria.net/2007/08/irish-slave-trade/

Aug 31, 2007 ... Today, slavery is strongly associated with racism, not religious intolerance, and most people aren't even aware of the Irish slave trade that ...

 

Irish victimhood? Feck off! | Ireland | spiked

www.spiked-online.com/newsite/article/irish-victimhood.../19134

Dec 22, 2016 ... It mocked and celebrated Irish culture simultaneously and seamlessly. ... suffered by African slaves, and the indentured servitude of the Irish, ...

 

Europeans Abolished Slavery; Africans/Muslims Still Practice It ...

www.frontpagemag.com/.../europeans-abolished-slavery-africansmuslims-still -ilana-mercer

Aug 4, 2016 ... Europeans Abolished Slavery; Africans/Muslims Still Practice It ... Considering Europeans were not alone in the slave trade, Black, in particular, ..... The city of Dublin in Ireland was founded as the entrepôt for Irish slaves ...

 

 

Slavery in the Americas was Pretty Tame

therightstuff.biz/2015/08/23/slavery-of-blacks-was-pretty-tame/

Aug 23, 2015 ... And given that the slave plantations were on some of the richest land in .... sometimes called 'Irish slaves' and more frequently 'bound boys'.

 

 

Dienekes' Anthropology Blog: DNA of 17th century African slaves ...

dienekes.blogspot.com/.../dna-of-17th-century-african-slaves.html

Mar 10, 2015 ... Irish slaves do NOT predate African ones in the carribean. I am from the Dominican Republic, which is the first island to be formally colonized ...

 

 

More Racially Incorrect Facts Regarding Race and Slavery ...

www.frontpagemag.com/.../more-racially-incorrect-facts-regarding-race-and- jack-kerwick

Aug 8, 2016 ... Remembering the Americas' first slaves—whites. ... Were the indentured servants in your family Irish? It was very common for the Irish to come ...

 

 

Previous Caribbean Project: Jews, Slavery, and the Dutch Caribbean

www.occidentaldissent.com/.../caribbean-project-jews-slavery-and-the-dutch- caribbean/

Aug 27, 2012 ... African slaves in Dutch Curaçao toil for their Jewish masters Curaçao ... As previously noted, Jews were heavily involved in the slave trade in ...



Debunking a Myth: The Irish Were Not Slaves, Too - The New York ...

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/17/us/irish-slaves-myth.html

Mar 17, 2017 - Widespread memes used against African-Americans say America was built by Irish slaves whose history has been covered up. That's false ...

 

The curious origins of the 'Irish slaves' myth | Public Radio International

https://www.pri.org/stories/2017-03-17/curious-origins-irish-slaves-myth

Mar 17, 2017 - Irish Americans were slaves once too — or so a historically inaccurate and dangerously misleading internet meme would have you believe.

Irish slaves myth - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_slaves_myth

The Irish slaves myth is a conflation of the penal transportation and indentured servitude of Irish ... From the 17th to the 19th centuries, tens of thousands of British and Irish indentured servants emigrated to British North America. The majority of ...

Irish indentured servants - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_indentured_servants

Jump to Comparisons to slavery - Irish indentured servants were Irish people who became indentured ..... The Forgotten History of Britain's White Slaves in America that "slavery is not defined by time but by the experience of the subject," ...

The Irish Slave Trade – The Forgotten “White” Slaves - Global Research

www.globalresearch.ca/the-irish-slave-trade-the-forgotten-white-slaves/31076

Mar 17, 2015 - Ireland quickly became the biggest source of human livestock for English merchants. The majority of the early slaves to the New World were ...

White Cargo: The Forgotten History of Britain's White Slaves in ...

https://www.amazon.com/White-Cargo-Forgotten-History-Britains/dp/0814742963

White Cargo: The Forgotten History of Britain's White Slaves in America. +. To Hell or Barbados: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ireland. +. The Irish Slaves: Slavery, ...

Were the Irish Slaves in America, Too? - Snopes.com

www.snopes.com/irish-slaves-early-america/

Sep 24, 2016 - Questionable sources maintain that the plight of so-called "Irish slaves" in early America was worse than that of African slaves. Historians beg to ...

ENGLAND'S IRISH SLAVES by Robert E. West - EWTN.com

https://www.ewtn.com/library/HUMANITY/SLAVES.TXT

ENGLAND'S IRISH SLAVES by Robert E. West PEC Illinois State Director* - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Records are replete with references to early Irish Catholics in the ...

 


 



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