Rocksolid Light

Welcome to novaBBS (click a section below)

mail  files  register  newsreader  groups  login

Message-ID:  

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a bipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer


aus+uk / uk.sport.cricket / Re: The crimes of Genocidal Maniac Winston Churchill who is WORSE than HITLER but WORSHIPED by BRITS

SubjectAuthor
o Re: The crimes of Genocidal Maniac Winston Churchill who is WORSERH

1
Re: The crimes of Genocidal Maniac Winston Churchill who is WORSE than HITLER but WORSHIPED by BRITS

<b2728e9e-bcd2-49e7-b0b5-e95e0340db93n@googlegroups.com>

  copy mid

https://www.novabbs.com/aus+uk/article-flat.php?id=19882&group=uk.sport.cricket#19882

  copy link   Newsgroups: uk.sport.cricket
X-Received: by 2002:a05:620a:31a0:b0:67d:7500:1752 with SMTP id bi32-20020a05620a31a000b0067d75001752mr10098460qkb.485.1647259234240;
Mon, 14 Mar 2022 05:00:34 -0700 (PDT)
X-Received: by 2002:a25:7182:0:b0:629:4c53:c56b with SMTP id
m124-20020a257182000000b006294c53c56bmr18488765ybc.168.1647259233566; Mon, 14
Mar 2022 05:00:33 -0700 (PDT)
Path: i2pn2.org!i2pn.org!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!border2.nntp.dca1.giganews.com!nntp.giganews.com!news-out.google.com!nntp.google.com!postnews.google.com!google-groups.googlegroups.com!not-for-mail
Newsgroups: uk.sport.cricket
Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2022 05:00:33 -0700 (PDT)
In-Reply-To: <LZoXJ.100904$LN2.59736@fx13.iad>
Injection-Info: google-groups.googlegroups.com; posting-host=86.146.196.90; posting-account=0D9iZgoAAAD2LGS-n9hhjG0rSgrcZyzI
NNTP-Posting-Host: 86.146.196.90
References: <LZoXJ.100904$LN2.59736@fx13.iad>
User-Agent: G2/1.0
MIME-Version: 1.0
Message-ID: <b2728e9e-bcd2-49e7-b0b5-e95e0340db93n@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: The crimes of Genocidal Maniac Winston Churchill who is WORSE
than HITLER but WORSHIPED by BRITS
From: anywhere...@gmail.com (RH)
Injection-Date: Mon, 14 Mar 2022 12:00:34 +0000
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Lines: 585
 by: RH - Mon, 14 Mar 2022 12:00 UTC

On Sunday, March 13, 2022 at 4:29:34 PM UTC, FBInCIAnNSATerroristSlayer wrote:
> The crimes of Genocidal Maniac Winston Churchill who is WORSE than
> HITLER but WORSHIPED by BRITS
>
> =================================================================================
>
>
> https://medium.com/@write_12958/the-crimes-of-winston-churchill-c5e3ecb229b3
>
> The crimes of Winston Churchill
>
> Churchill was a genocidal maniac. He is fawned over in Britain and held
> up as a hero of the nation — voted ‘Greatest Briton’ of all time. Below
> is the real history of Churchill. The history of a white supremacist
> whose hatred for Indians led to four million starving to death. The man
> who loathed Irish people so much he conceived different ways to
> terrorise them. A racist thug who waged war on black people across
> Africa and in Britain. This is the trial of Winston Churchill, the enemy
> of all humanity.
>
> Afghanistan:
>
> Churchill found his love for war during the time he spent in
> Afghanistan. While there he said “all who resist will be killed without
> quarter” because the Pashtuns need “recognise the superiority of race”.
> He believed the Pashtuns needed to be dealt with, he would reminisce in
> his writings about how he partook in the burning villages and peoples homes.
>
> “We proceeded systematically, village by village, and we destroyed
> the houses, filled up the wells, blew down the towers, cut down the
> great shady trees, burned the crops and broke the reservoirs in punitive
> devastation.” — Churchill on how the British carried on in Afghanistan,
> and he was only too happy to be part of it.
>
> Churchill would also write of how “every tribesman caught was speared or
> cut down at once”. Proud of the terror he helped inflict on the people
> of Afghanistan Churchill was well on the road to becoming a genocidal
> maniac.
>
> Cuba:
>
> Churchill wrote that he was concerned Cuba would turn in to “another
> black republic” in 1896. By “another” he was referring to Haiti which
> was the first nation in modern times to abolish slavery. Haiti has been
> punished for doing so ever since.
>
>
>
> Egypt:
> “Tell them that if we have any more of their cheek we will set the Jews
> on them and drive them into the gutter, from which they should never
> have emerged” — Winston Churchill on how to deal with Egypt in 1951.
>
> Greece:
>
> The British Army under the guidance of Churchill perpetrated a massacre
> on the streets of Athens in the month of December 1944. 28 protesters
> were shot dead, a further 128 injured. Who were they? Were they
> supporters of Nazism? No, they were in fact anti-Nazis.
>
> The British demanded that all guerrilla groups should disarm on the 2nd
> December 1944. The following day 200,000 people took to the streets, and
> this is when the British Army on Churchill’s orders turned their guns on
> the people. Churchill regarded ELAS (Greek People’s Liberation Army) and
> EAM (National Liberation Front) as “miserable banditti” (these were the
> very people who ran the Nazis out). His actions in the month of December
> were purely out of his hatred and paranoia for communism.
>
> The British backed the right-wing government in Greece returned from
> exile after the very same partisans of the resistance that Churchill
> ordered the murder of had driven out the Nazi occupiers. Soviet forces
> were well received in Greece. This deeply worried Churchill. He planned
> to restore the monarchy in Greece to combat any possible communist
> influence. The events in December were part of that strategy.
>
> In 1945, Churchill sent Charles Wickham to Athens where he was put in
> charge of training the Greek security police. Wickham learned his tricks
> of the trade in British occupied Ireland between 1922–1945 where he was
> a commander of the colonial RUC which was responsible for countless terror.
>
> In April 1945 Churchill said “the [Nazi] collaborators in Greece in many
> cases did the best they could to shelter the Greek population from
> German oppression” and went on to say “the Communists are the main foe”.
>
> Guyana:
>
> Churchill ordered the overthrowing of the democratically elected leader
> of ‘British Guiana’. He dispatched troops and warships and suspended
> their constitution all to put a stop to the governments nationalisation
> plan.
>
> India:
>
> “I’d rather see them have a good civil war”. — Churchill wishing
> partition on India
>
> Very few in Britain know about the genocide in Bengal let alone how
> Churchill engineered it. Churchill’s hatred for Indians led to four
> million starving to death during the Bengal ‘famine’ of 1943. “I hate
> Indians. They are a beastly people with a beastly religion” he would say.
>
> Bengal had a better than normal harvest during the British enforced
> famine. The British Army took millions of tons of rice from starving
> people to ship to the Middle East — where it wasn’t even needed. When
> the starving people of Bengal asked for food, Churchill said the
> ‘famine’ was their own fault “for breeding like rabbits”. The Viceroy of
> India said “Churchill’s attitude towards India and the famine is
> negligent, hostile and contemptuous”. Even the right wing imperialist
> Leo Amery who was the British Secretary of State in India said he
> “didn’t see much difference between his [Churchill] outlook and
> Hitler’s”. Churchill refused all of the offers to send aid to Bengal,
> Canada offered 10,000 tons of rice, the U.S 100,000. Churchill was still
> swilling champaign while he caused four million men, women and children
> to starve to death in Bengal.
>
> Throughout WW2 India was forced to ‘lend’ Britain money. Churchill
> moaned about “Indian money lenders” the whole time.
>
> The truth is Churchill never waged war against fascism. He went to war
> with Germany to defend the British Empire. He moaned “are we to incur
> hundreds of millions of debt for defending India only to be kicked out
> by the Indians afterwards”.
>
> In 1945 Churchill said “the Hindus were race protected by their mere
> pullulation from the doom that is due”. The Bengal famine wasn’t enough
> for Churchill’s blood lust, he wished his favourite war criminal Arthur
> Harris could have bombed them.
>
> When India was partitioned in 1947 millions of people died and millions
> more were displaced. Churchill said that the creation of Pakistan, which
> has been an imperialist outpost for the British and Americans since its
> inception, was Britain’s “bit of India”.
>
> Iran:
>
> “A prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams” — Churchill on
> Iran’s oil
>
> When Britain seized Iran’s oil industry Churchill proclaimed it was “a
> prize from fairyland beyond our wildest dreams”. He meddled in Iranian
> affairs for decades doing his utmost to exclude Iranians from their
> natural resources. Encouraging the looting of the nation when most lived
> in severe poverty.
>
> In June 1914 Churchill proposed a bill in the House of Commons that
> would see the British government become become the major shareholder of
> the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company. The company would go on to refrain from
> paying Iran its share of the dividends before paying tax to the British
> exchequer. Essentially the British were illegally taxing the Iranian
> government.
>
> When the nationalist government of Mohammad Mosaddegh threatened British
> ‘interests’ in Iran, Churchill was there, ready to protect them at any
> cost. Even if that meant desecrating democracy. He helped organise a
> coup against Mosaddegh in August 1953. He told the CIA operations
> officer that helped carry out the plan “if i had been but a few years
> younger, I would have loved nothing better than to have served under
> your command in this great venture”.
>
> Churchill arranged for the BBC to send coded messages to let the Shah of
> Iran know that they were overthrowing the democratically elected
> government. Instead of the BBC ending their Persian language news
> broadcast with “it is now midnight in London” they under Churchill’s
> orders said “it is now exactly midnight”.
>
> Churchill went on to privately describe the coup as “the finest
> operation since the end of the war [WW2]”. Being a proud product of
> imperialism he had no issue ousting Mosaddegh so Britain could get back
> to sapping the riches of Iran.
>
> Iraq:
>
> “I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against the
> uncivilized tribes… it would spread a lively terror.” — Churchill on the
> use of gas in the Middle East and India
>
> Churchill was appointed ‘Secretary of State for the Colonies’ in 1921.
> He formed the ‘Middle East Department’ which was responsible for Iraq.
> Determined to have his beloved empire on the cheap he decided air power
> could replace ground troops. A strategy of bombing any resistance to
> British rule was now employed.
>
> Several times in the 1920s various groups in the region now known as
> Iraq rose up against the British. The air force was then put into
> action, indiscriminately bombing civilian areas so to subdue the population.
>
> Churchill was also an advocate for the use of mustard and poison gases.
> Whilst ‘Secretary for War and Air’ he advised that “the provision of
> some kind of asphyxiating bombs” should be used “for use in preliminary
> operations against turbulent tribes” in order to take control of Iraq.
>
> When Iraqi tribes stood up for themselves, under the direction of
> Churchill the British unleashed terror on mud, stone and reed villages.
>
> Churchill’s bombing of civilians in ‘Mesopotamia’ (Kurdistan and Iraq)
> was summed up by war criminal ‘Bomber Harris’:
>
> “The Arab and Kurd now know what real bombing means within 45
> minutes a full-sized village can be practically wiped out, and a third
> of its inhabitants killed or injured, by four or five machines which
> offer them no real target, no opportunity for glory as warriors, no
> effective means of escape”. — Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris.
>
> Ireland:
>
> “We have always found the Irish a bit odd. They refuse to be
> English” — Churchill
>
> In 1904 Churchill said “I remain of the opinion that a separate
> parliament for Ireland would be dangerous and impractical”. Churchill’s
> ancestry is linked to loyalism to Britain. He is a direct descendent of
> the ‘Marquis of Londonderry’ who helped put down the 1798 United
> Irishmen rising. He would live up to his families reputation when it
> came to suppressing revolutionary forces in Ireland.
>
> The Black and Tans were the brainchild of Churchill, he sent the thugs
> to Ireland to terrorise at will. Attacking civilians and civilian
> property they done Churchill proud. Rampaging across the country
> carrying out reprisals. He went on to describe them as “gallant and
> honourable officers”.
>
> It was also Churchill who conceived the idea of forming the Auxiliaries
> who carried out the Croke Park massacre. They fired into the crowd at a
> Gaelic football match, killing 14. Of course this didn’t fulfill
> Churchill’s bloodlust to repress a people who he described as “odd” for
> their refusal “to be English”.
>
> He went on to advocate the use of air power in Ireland against Sinn Fein
> members in 1920. He suggested to his war advisers that aeroplanes should
> be dispatched with orders to use “machine-gun fire or bombs” to “scatter
> and stampede them”.
>
> Churchill was an early advocate for the partitioning of Ireland. During
> the treaty negotiations he insisted on retaining navy bases in Ireland.
> In 1938 those bases were handed back to Ireland. However in 1939
> Churchill proposed capturing Berehaven base by force.
>
> In 1941 Churchill supported a plan to introduce conscription in the
> North of Ireland.
>
> Churchill went on to remark”the bloody Irish, what have they ever done
> for our wars”, reducing Ireland’s merit to what it might provide by way
> of resources (people) for their imperialist land grabs.
>
> Kenya:
>
> Britain declared a state of emergency in Kenya in 1952 to protect its
> system of institutionalised racism that they established throughout
> their colonies so to exploit the indigenous population. Churchill being
> your archetypical British supremacist believed that Kenya’s fertile
> highlands should be only for white colonial settlers. He approved the
> forcible removal of the local population, which he termed “blackamoors”.
>
> At least 150,000 men, women and children were forced into concentration
> camps. Children’s schools were shut by the British who branded them
> “training grounds for rebellion”. Rape, castration, cigarettes, electric
> shocks and fire all used by the British to torture the Kenyan people on
> Churchill’s watch.
>
> In 1954 during a British cabinet meeting Churchill and his men discussed
> the forced labour of Kenyan POWs and how to circumvent the constraints
> of two treaties they were breaching:
>
> “This course [detention without trial and forced labour] had been
> recommended despite the fact that it was thought to involve a technical
> breach of the Forced Labour Convention of 1930 and the Convention on
> Human Rights adopted by the Council of Europe”
>
> The Cowan Plan advocated the use of force and sometimes death against
> Kenyan POWs who refused to work. Churchill schemed to allow this to
> continue.
>
> Caroline Elkins book gives a glimpse into the extent that the crimes in
> Kenya were known in both official and unofficial circles in Britain and
> how Churchill brushed off the terror the colonial British forces
> inflicted on the native population. He even ‘punished’ Edwina
> Mountbatten for mentioning it, “Edwina Mountbatten was conversing about
> the emergency with India’s prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the
> then colonial secretary, Oliver Lyttleton. When Lyttleton commented on
> the “terrible savagery” of Mau Mau… Churchill retaliated, refusing to
> allow Lord Mountbatten to take his wife with him on an official visit to
> Turkey”.
>
> Palestine:
>
> “I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the
> manger.”
>
> In 2012 Churchill was honoured with a statue in Jerusalem for his
> assistance to Zionism.
>
> He regarded the Arab population Palestine to be a “lower manifestation”.
> And that the “dog in a manger has the final right to the manger”, by
> this he meant the Arabs of Palestine.
>
> In 1920 Churchill declared “if, as may well happen, there should be
> created in our own lifetime by the banks of the Jordan a Jewish State
> under the protection of the British Crown which might comprise three or
> four millions of Jews, an event will have occurred in the history of the
> world which would from every point of view be beneficial”.
>
> A year later in Jerusalem he told Palestinian leaders that “it is
> manifestly right that the Jews, who are scattered all over the world,
> should have a national centre and a National Home where some of them may
> be reunited. And where else could that be but in this land of Palestine,
> with which for more than 3,000 years they have been intimately and
> profoundly associated?”.
>
> At the Palestine Royal Commission (Peel) of 1937, Churchill stated that
> he believed in intention of the Balfour Declaration was to make
> Palestine an “overwhelmingly Jewish state”.
>
> He went on to also express to the Peel Commission that he does “not
> admit for instance, that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians
> of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong
> has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a
> higher-grade race, a more worldly wise race to put it that way, has come
> in and taken their place”.
>
> Four years later he wrote of his desire for a ‘Jewish state’to be
> established after the second war world. The establishment of the
> colonial settler state however was done by the British Labour Party
> under Attlee, who were always there to back their Tory counterparts when
> it came to British foreign policy.
>
> Russia:
>
> Churchill’s hatred and paranoia about communism saw him suggest that an
> atomic bomb should be dropped on the Kremlin. He believed this would
> “handle the balance of power”.
>
> Saudi Arabia:
>
> “My admiration for him [Ibn Saud] was deep, because of his
> unfailing loyalty to us.” — Churchill
>
> Prior to 1922 the British were paying Ibn Saud a subsidy of £60,000 a
> year. Churchill, then Colonial Secretary, raised it to £100,000.
>
> Churchill knew full well of the dangers of wahhabism. He gave a speech
> to the House of Commons in 1921 where he stated that Ibn Saud’s
> followers “hold it as an article of duty, as well as of faith, to kill
> all who do not share their opinions and to make slaves of their wives
> and children. Women have been put to death in Wahhabi villages for
> simply appearing in the streets… [they are] austere, intolerant,
> well-armed and bloodthirsty”. He was however content to use the House of
> Saud’s twisted ideology for the benefit of British imperialism.
>
> Churchill went on to write that his “admiration for him [Ibn Saud] was
> deep, because of his unfailing loyalty to us”. He showered Ibn Saud with
> money and presents — gifting Ibn Saud a special Rolls-Royce in the mid
> 1940s.
>
> South Africa:
>
> Thousands were sent to British run concentration camps during the Boer
> wars. Churchill summed up his time in South Africa by saying “it was
> great fun galloping about”.
>
> Churchill wrote that his only “irritation” during the Boer war was “that
> Kaffirs should be allowed to fire on white men”.
>
> It was Churchill who planted the seed to strip voting rights from black
> people in South Africa. In June 1906, Churchill argued that Afrikaners
> should be allowed a self-rule which would mean black people would be
> excluded from voting.
>
> He went on to state to Parliament that “we must be bound by the
> interpretation which the other party places on it and it is undoubted
> that the Boers would regard it as a breach of that treaty if the
> franchise were in the first instance extended to any persons who are not
> white”.
>
> In conclusion:
>
> There have been a number of attempts to rehabailtate the image of the
> British Empire in Britain in recent years. Particularly via the medium
> of cinema. The film Darkest Hour didn’t show you anything about
> Churchill’s crimes. On the contrary it presented him as a hero. Gary
> Oldham won an Oscar for his portrayal of one of the most evil,
> imperialists ever.
>
> British Nationalist groups in Britain hold Churchill up as their
> posterboy. And so they should. He was a racist to the core. In response
> to migration from the Caribbean to Britain he said England should “be
> kept white”. Throughout worl war two his cabinet obsessed over British
> people viewing American Black GI’s favourably. They were concerned that
> they would fraternised with white English women. A true believer in
> white supremacy, Churchill blamed the Native American and Aboriginal
> Australian people for their genocides. He said he did “not admit that a
> great wrong has been done to the red Indians and the black people of
> Australia.”
>
> Winner of the Noble Prize in Literature, Churchill actually plagiarised
> his most well known speech from an Irish Republican called Robert Emmet
> who was hanged and then beheaded by the British in 1803. Winston’s
> famous “we shall fight them on beaches” line was lifted from Emmet’s
> speech from the dock.
>
> When it came to his own fellow Brits he was less than complimentary and
> displayed a deep hatred for the working classes. He suggested “100,000
> degenerate Britons should be forcibly sterilised”. And that for “tramps
> and wastrels there ought to be proper labour colonies where they could
> be sent”.
>
> It needs to be put once and for all that Churchill was despicable,
> racist, war criminal. Some will argue his “sins” are expiated for his
> actions during the second world war. It is nothing but nonsense to
> suggest Churchill went out to fight fascism. He lauded Mussolini as a
> “roman genius”, donated to Nazi war criminal Erich Von Manstien’s
> criminal defence and sought to desperatly cling on to the British Empire
> from which Hitler himself took inspiration for his Reich. What we have
> to remember is Churchill was not a uniquely villianous British Prime
> Minister. He was not out of ordinary but in fact a true representation
> of Britain.


Click here to read the complete article
1
server_pubkey.txt

rocksolid light 0.9.8
clearnet tor