Join 51,000+ Looksmaxxing Members!

Register a FREE account today to become a member. Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox.

  • DISCLAIMER: DO NOT ATTEMPT TREATMENT WITHOUT LICENCED MEDICAL CONSULTATION AND SUPERVISION

    This is a public discussion forum. The owners, staff, and users of this website ARE NOT engaged in rendering professional services to the individual reader. DO NOT use the content of this website as an alternative to personal examination and advice from licenced healthcare providers. DO NOT begin, delay, or discontinue treatments and/or exercises without licenced medical supervision. Learn more

Argue with me

This is so retarded that I won’t even engage

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


 

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


NOT THIS NlGGA NOW
 

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


NNIGGAA WROTE A WHOLE ASS SCHOOL PRESENTATION IM DYING BRUH
@Night @Kaari
😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹😹👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻
 

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


Colonial crackers I can’t
 

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


IMG_4050.jpeg
 

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


nobody reading this bro

1759966144931.png
1759966165794.png1759966175696.png
 
bro lowkey
I will give u a copy of the regimen sanitastis skull
:peepoclap:
bro like id even sneak you some chloroform when you where having surgery to make sure you didnt die of shock 💀
 
it's not random dude he just got told some heavy shit

heaving shit being "nobody reading this bro"
We’ve gone too far might as well start turning this into a bird thread and start tagging random people I’m wheezing
 

COLONIAL GENOCIDE COMMITTED BY THE CRACKERS

1.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish, Portuguese, British, French, Dutch
  • Victims: Indigenous peoples of North, Central, and South America
  • Period: 15th–19th centuries
  • Details: Massive depopulation due to violence, forced labor, and disease following European conquest and colonization.

2.​

  • Perpetrator: German Empire
  • Victims: Herero and Nama peoples (Namibia)
  • Period: 1904–1908
  • Details: Germany’s colonial forces carried out extermination orders, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths.

3.​

  • Perpetrators: British colonists
  • Victims: Aboriginal Australians
  • Period: 18th–20th centuries
  • Details: Frontier violence, massacres, and policies like the forced removal of children ("Stolen Generations").

4.​

  • Perpetrator: Belgium (under King Leopold II)
  • Victims: Congolese population
  • Period: 1885–1908
  • Details: Forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings during rubber extraction; millions died.

5.​

  • Perpetrator: British government (debated as genocide)
  • Victims: Irish population
  • Period: 1845–1852
  • Details: British policies during the famine exacerbated suffering and death; some scholars argue genocidal intent.

6.​

  • Perpetrator: British settlers
  • Victims: Indigenous Tasmanians
  • Period: 19th century
  • Details: Violent displacement and extermination led to near-total destruction of the population.

7.​

  • Perpetrators: Spanish colonists
  • Victims: Indigenous Caribbean peoples
  • Period: Late 15th–16th centuries
  • Details: Enslavement, violence, and disease decimated populations after Columbus’s arrival

OPPRESSIONS POST-CONQUERED SOCIETIES FACED​

Economic Exploitation

  • Former colonies were left with extractive economies focused on raw materials, not self-sufficiency.
  • Wealth flowed to Europe, while local populations remained impoverished.
  • Many nations inherited debt and unequal trade relationships that persist today.

2.​

  • Colonial powers imposed racial hierarchies that privileged Europeans and marginalized locals.
  • These hierarchies often continued post-independence, influencing social mobility, education, and employment.

3.​

  • Indigenous languages, religions, and traditions were suppressed or replaced with European norms.
  • Missionary efforts and colonial education systems promoted Eurocentric worldviews, undermining native identities.

4.​

  • Arbitrary borders drawn by colonial powers ignored ethnic and cultural divisions, fueling conflict.
  • Post-independence governments often struggled with corruption, coups, and civil wars rooted in colonial legacies.

5.​

  • Indigenous and local populations were displaced from ancestral lands for plantations, mining, or settler colonies.
  • Land ownership laws often favored colonial settlers or elites, leaving locals landless.

6.​

  • Colonial emphasis on skin tone created lasting divisions within racial groups.
  • Lighter skin was often associated with privilege, affecting social dynamics in Latin America, Africa, and Asia.

7.​

  • Legal systems, police forces, and bureaucracies inherited from colonial rule often perpetuated discrimination.
  • Access to justice, education, and healthcare remains unequal in many post-colonial societies.

8.​

  • Generations grew up under colonial rule with diminished self-worth and fractured identities.
  • Post-colonial societies continue to grapple with the psychological impact of domination and cultural loss
LIST OF A FEW MAJOR WARS AND WHO STARTED THEM (ai)
Peloponnesian WarAthens vs. Sparta (Greek city-states)Europe431–404 BCE
Punic WarsRome vs. CarthageEurope/North Africa264–146 BCE
Hundred Years’ WarEngland vs. FranceEurope1337–1453
Thirty Years’ WarHoly Roman Empire, various European statesEurope1618–1648
Napoleonic WarsFrance (Napoleon Bonaparte)Europe1803–1815
American Civil WarUnion vs. Confederacy (U.S. factions)North America1861–1865
World War IAustria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire vs. AlliesEurope1914–1918
World War IINazi Germany, Japan, Italy vs. AlliesEurope1939–1945
Korean WarNorth Korea (backed by China and USSR) vs. South Korea (backed by U.S. and UN)Asia (American mingling)1950–1953
Vietnam WarNorth Vietnam (Viet Cong) vs. South Vietnam & U.S.Asia (American and European mingling)1955–1975
Rwandan Genocide & Civil WarHutu-led government vs. Tutsi minorityAfrica (European mingling)1990–1994
Syrian Civil WarSyrian government vs. various rebel groupsMiddle East (American mingling)2011–present
Russia–Ukraine WarRussia invaded UkraineEurope2022–present


In German South-West Africa (modern-day Namibia), the Herero and Nama peoples resisted colonial rule. In response, German forces under General Lothar von Trotha issued an extermination order in 1904. Tens of thousands were killed, and survivors were driven into the desert or placed in concentration camps. This genocide is considered one of the first of the 20th century and foreshadowed tactics later used in Europe. Under King Leopold II, the Congo Free State became a private colony where millions of Congolese were subjected to forced labor, mutilation, and mass killings. The rubber trade fueled this brutality, and estimates suggest that up to 10 million people died. The scale and cruelty of this genocide shocked the world and led to one of the first international human rights campaigns. European colonialism was often underpinned by racial theories that dehumanized non-European peoples. These ideologies justified not only conquest but also extermination. The belief in white supremacy created a framework where genocide was seen as a necessary step toward "civilizing" the world. European colonies endured profound hardships under imperial rule, often marked by exploitation, violence, and cultural erasure. Indigenous populations were frequently displaced from their lands, subjected to forced labor, and exposed to foreign diseases that decimated communities. Colonial administrations imposed heavy taxes and resource extraction policies that enriched European powers while impoverishing local economies. Resistance was met with brutal repression, including massacres, imprisonment, and the destruction of cultural institutions. In many cases, traditional governance systems were dismantled, and colonial education promoted European superiority, leaving lasting psychological and social scars. These hardships laid the foundation for long-term inequality and instability that many former colonies still grapple with today.


My n****r in Christ called up the department of Nigerian research for help with
this essay
IMG_3840.gif
Why aaa yu ranning?
 

Users who are viewing this thread

  • clovercloom
  • Almighty Sigma Wolf
Back
Top