It's a hot topic, from time to time. I always point out that Americans did not invent slavery. But we usually don't go into too much depth about the history of slavery. I came across some interesting info that none of us are taught in school.
- Columbus landed on Hispaniola in 1492.
- Starting in 1494, Spain and Portugal entered into a series of treaties that attempted to divide the New World between themselves. That worked for South America, but the English and French didn't really pay any attention regarding North America.
- In 1500, a Portuguese explorer, Pedro Alvarez Cabral, landed in modern day Brazil, and claimed it for Portugal.
- The first colony in Brazil was established in 1516.
- Portugal began to import African slaves to Brazil in the 1550's.
- Portugal was by far the #1 European country involved in the African slave trade, and the primary destination was Brazil.
- The first British colony in North America was at Jamestown (Virginia) in 1607.
- About 3% of the African slave trade made it to what is now the USA. The other 97% was the Caribbean, South America, and the rest of the world.
What about prior to 1492?
- In the 1430's, the Portuguese sailed all along the African coast in search of gold. They established trading posts, and among the commidities traded were human.
- Many black African tribes went to war against each other. The victors enslaved their fellow man, and sold them into slavery to foreigners.
- But the Portuguese did not invent slavery.
- The Indian Ocean Slave Trade went back 3,000 years. People from India, Persia, the Middle East, Africa, and Europe were all involved with slavery.
- The Roman Empire had slavery.
- The Athenians, who started the first democracy (it was the city state of Athens, not all the Greek people), actually had more slaves living in Athens than citizens.
- The Egyptian pyramids were built with slave labor.
In the beginning, slavery was a punishment for a crime. They didn't have maximum security prisons back then, as we do today. So, what to do with the outlaws?
The 13th Amendment to the US Constitution says, "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted ..."
It started as a punishment by means of paying restitution, then became the capturing of the defeated as a method of plunder in wartime, and ultimately a dehumanizing trafficking of humans.
The trafficking of humans started at least 1,000 years before Columbus set foot in the New World.
If we could magically go back in a time machine to the year 1491, was there any country on Earth that did NOT have slavery? It existed in Europe. White people were slaves, too. It existed among the indians in the Americas, with the Aztecs and the Myans -- long before the Europeans arrived. It existed in Asia, as it still does today. It existed in the Middle East, as it still does today. And of course, it existed in Africa -- by Africans -- as it still does today.
Food for thought.
Wait until the BLM and ANTIFA crowds realize that we are all debt slaves to the Federal Reserve.
The FBI groomed these groups to hate racist slavers. They are about to have that plan backfire in their face BIG TIME. When BLM / ANTIFA realize that children are being trafficked and sold into slavery TODAY, they will turn their fury upon their creators.
I wonder what they will think when they find out about the Clintons and Haiti.
Urchins of Occupy Wall Street had that figured out ten years ago which is why NWO rebranded to Globohomo, Inc. and created a race-hustling subsidiary.
The Stefan Molyneux video 'The Truth About The Fall Of Rome' makes the point that slavery existing in rome postponed the start of the industrial age by almost 2000 years. They had advanced metalworking, craftsmen and tool-makers, they used water & wind wheels to run archimedes screws style pumps and milling operations for grain. Most importantly, they had a society stratified and developed enough to have the dedicated scientists, mathematicians, philosophers and enough affluence to fund programs that could have made sealed boilers and steam-engines. It was not a large leap, and an empire that size could have tooled up production-line style and spread the innovations to all the territories and provinces under their control.
But slavery means that they never had the drive for innovation spurred by a constant need to cut labor cost with automation.. since there were always more hands they could throw at any given problem for cheap. No incentive to invent engines, machine-powered tools etc means it didn't get done.
Archive of the video is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGYVWrjRMXU
Interesting...
The Egyptian pyramids were not built with slave labor. That's a Hollywood myth.
https://www.egypttoday.com/Article/4/88439/Hawass-‘The-Great-Pyramids-were-not-built-by-slaves’
Did you ever read "Sugar Blues" by William Dufty? It's about the history of mankind's sugar addiction. First published in the early 70's I believe. My copy is very old and falling apart.
Sugar was a huge part of the motivation for the African slave trade according to Dufty's research.