Revolutions – Rewolusies

 

The French Revolution is notable for the abolishment of the French monarchy which had ruled for centuries; it demonstrated the power of the people and their ability to truly make a difference.      The Haitian Revolution to be the most successful slave rebellion in the Western world, its impact felt across the Americas.   The revolution of 1911 was a critical moment in Chinese history because of how it paved the way for the Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949, an uprising that established the People’s Republic of China.   And there are the Russian revolution in 1917.    

Russia

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In South Africa

The founding conference of the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA) took place in Cape Town from 30 July to 1 August 1921. The party was founded mainly by radical White workers and socialists who had experienced workers’ struggles in Europe and were inspired by the first workers’ state, which was founded in 1917 in Russia, after the Bolshevik Revolution.

https://www.sahistory.org.za/article/south-african-communist-party-sacp


In Suid-Afrika gaan daar nie ‘n dag om sonder dat daar nie kommunistiese protesaksies plaasvind nie. Alles word onder ons neuse beplan en heelwat is onwettige protesaksies, wat ontaard in klein oorloggies of rewolusies, tussen die wat alles wil afbrand nadat dit geplunder word en die polisie as hulle wel daar is. Soms is daar publiek ook betrokke om hul privaat eiendomme te beskerm. Ons het almal bygedra tot ons eie lewensstandaarde en opgehef. Daar is nie wit bevoorregtiging soos wat daar beweer word nie – nie onder die burgers op grondvlak nie. Swart bemagtiging sorg net vir “elites” en hul kaders.

Inhoudsopgawe B-BBEE Index

B-BBEE – benefits


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What happened before 1994?
Vula gaan oor baie dinge, maar hierdie gaan oor al die geheime besendings wapens wat ingesmokkel is voor 1994.
Vula Secret Safari


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Manifesto of the Communist Party of South Africa by SACP, 30 July 1921, Cape Town
Dis waarmee ons vandag sit en dit het al dekades gelede begin.

https://www.sahistory.org.za/archive/manifesto-communist-party-south-africa-sacp-30-july-1921-cape-town


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Daar is ‘n hele paar rewolusies op ander kontinente gewees, waarvan heelwat van ons mense wel kennis dra.

Die Franse rewolusie het in hul eie tydgleuf plaasgevind en moontik met goeie redes, nie een van ons was daar toe dit plaasgevind het nie. Waarskynlik ook daaglikse aanvalle en burgers wat mekaar aangevat het, vermoor het. Verskille tussen liberale en konserwatiewes, tussen ryk en arm, sommige wat meer bevoordeel is as ander.

Opmerklik was die ongelukkigheid en afskaffing van die Franse monargie wat lank regeer het. Die burgers op grondvlak was nie gelukkig of gediend wat plaasgevind het in die hoër kringe nie. Die aksies wat geneem was, het die krag van die mense getoon en hul vermoë om werklik ‘n verskil te maak.

Die Haitiese rewolusie was volgens kenners, ‘n suksesvolle slawe-rebellie in die Westerse wêreld, en die impak daarvan het regoor die Amerikas plaasgevind.

Die rewolusie van 1911 was ‘n kritieke oomblik in die Chinese geskiedenis vanweë hoe dit die weg gebaan het vir die Chinese kommunistiese rewolusie in 1949, ‘n opstand wat die Volksrepubliek China tot stand gebring het. Hierdie rewolusie het ‘n groot impak gehad op baie ander lande nes die Russiese Rewolusie.

En daar is die Russiese rewolusie in 1917 wat baie ken as die “bolsjevistiese rewolusie”.

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Suid-Afrika se ANC rewolusie

Burevestnik  – Russia

Soros and revolution – Schwartz György

SA – Revolution – Protest actions ongoing 3 September 2019


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The American Revolution (1765 – 1783)

Tensions between the British and their 13 American colonies began to mount in 1765 with the introduction of the Stamp Act, a decree imposing unpopular taxes on the colonies as a means to pay off the expenses from the Seven Years’ War with France. Pockets of violence broke out as protestors, resenting the new taxes, voiced their unhappiness.

A notable act of rebellion happened in 1773, when a group of protestors known as the Sons of Liberty dumped 342 chests of tea into Boston Harbor to protest taxation on tea, an event that became known as the Boston Tea Party.

In 1774, there were 12 delegates from the thirteen colonies came together to discuss the situation, forming the Continental Congress which served as the governing body of the colonies in the transition to independence. At first, they did not openly demand independence, but they denounced taxation without representation within the British Parliament.

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The French Revolution (1789 – 1799)

By the late 18th century, the people of France were living mostly in squalor, all except the nobility who lived lavish and expensive lifestyles. Frustrated with a monarchy that collected heavy taxes but offered nothing in return, the citizenry turned their widespread discontent on King Louis XVI.

Historians mark July 14, 1789, as the start of the conflict when revolutionaries stormed Bastille, a medieval armory and prison, to arm themselves while simultaneously attacking a symbol of the monarchy’s absolute power. The following two months were known as the Great Fear as riots and mass hysteria consumed the country. While the National Constituent Assembly, a group of representatives from the Estates-General who were pushing for change, continued to debate France’s political future, influential figures like Maximilien de Robespierre were championing total governmental reform.

In January 1793, King Louis XVI was executed by guillotine, sparking ten months of unnecessary bloodshed as the Jacobins’ Reign of Terror swept through France. In the end, between over 17,000 so-called enemies of the revolution were executed, and at least another 10,000 died in prison awaiting their trial. The death of Robespierre marked a new period in which the French revolted against the excess use of violence.  

By August 1795, executive power lay with the Directory, a five-member collective appointed by parliament, but the state of the country did not improve. After four more years of hardships, corruption, and discontent, the conflict came to an end in 1799 when Napoleon Bonaparte seized power through a coup d’état. The French Revolution is notable for the abolishment of the French monarchy that had ruled for centuries; it demonstrated the power of the people and their ability to truly make a difference. 

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The Haitian Revolution (1791 – 1804)

Saint Domingue—modern-day Haiti—was a French colony on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola since 1659. Inspired by the French Revolution, groups of slaves rose up to fight their oppressors on August 22, 1791.

Over 100,000 former slaves joined the cause, killing plantation owners and destroying their property. The French colonizers had been prepared for fear of an uprising, but this did not matter much. Led by former slave Toussaint L’Ouverture, the revolutionaries had taken control of a third of the island by 1792. To stop the bloodshed, the National Assembly back in France granted rights to the men of color in Saint Domingue.  

After France officially abolished slavery in Saint Domingue in 1794, L’Ouverture went from fighting against them to fighting for them. The British eventually gave up their conquest after a series of defeats. By 1801, L’Ouverture had declared himself Governor-General for life over the island of Hispaniola.

However, the revolutionary leader was eventually captured by Napoleon’s troops who were sent to reclaim Saint Domingue. L’Ouverture died in a French prison, but one of his generals, Jean-Jacques Dessalines, led the man’s forces to victory at the Battle of Vertieres in 1803. On New Year’s Day 1804, Haiti became the first Black republic when Dessalines renamed the colony and declared its independence. Historians consider the Haitian Revolution to be the most successful slave rebellion in the Western world, its impact felt across the Americas.

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The Chinese Revolution (1911)

Because of a series of failed wars, the Qing dynasty was quickly losing prominence in Asia. Nationwide frustrations soon sparked rebellious thoughts among the common citizens. As a result, in the earliest years of the 20th century, the Revolutionary Alliance was formed in an attempt to abolish the imperial system. Dubbed the Father of the Nation, politician and physician Sun Yat-sen played an instrumental role in the movement. Several revolts were launched, all of which were quashed by the Qing army. But in the fall of 1911, an uprising in Wuchang turned the tide.  

In 1912, the emperor abdicated the throne, bringing an end to the imperial system and the centuries-long rule of the Qing dynasty. After negotiating, Yuan Shikai agreed to the formation of the Republic as long as he was named the first official president. The revolution of 1911 was a critical moment in Chinese history because of how it paved the way for the Chinese Communist Revolution in 1949, an uprising that established the People’s Republic of China under the rule of Mao Zedong.

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The Russian Revolution (1917)

Russia was one of the most underdeveloped and impoverished countries in Europe. Struggling because of the state of their country, workers protested against the monarchy in 1905, which led to the Bloody Sunday massacre and a failed uprising. Nonetheless, revolutionary fervor was not easily forgotten.

World War I crippled the Russian economy and resulted in high death tolls. Tsar Nicholas II left the country to command the army and inspire his troops, but he turned out to be an ineffective leader. Moreover, he left the country in the hands of his wife, a woman of German descent, unpopular among the population, who was under the influence of Grigori Rasputin, a Russian mystic and self-proclaimed prophet.

During the February Revolution of 1917, protestors once again took to the streets of Petrograd—modern-day Saint Petersburg. Unlike the revolution in 1905, however, this time they were joined by a significant number of soldiers who had lost faith in their ruler. A few days after the new provisional government was formed, Tsar Nicolas II abdicated the throne, bringing an end to the Romanov dynasty and the imperial system. But this did not mark the end of Russia’s revolutionary history. Made up of members from the bourgeoisie, the new government continued to support the war effort in the still ongoing World War I, which only worsened the country’s economy.

During the October Revolution of 1917, revolutionaries led by the leftist Bolshevik Party and their leader Vladimir Lenin stormed the Winter Palace, taking power from the provisional government in a clean coup d’état. Lenin championed a new Soviet government ruled not by capitalists, but by a collective of peasants, laborers, and soldiers. Despite his efforts, the revolution was not widely embraced outside Petrograd by the remaining imperial loyalists. For five years, civil war consumed Russia, ultimately resulting in a victory for Lenin and the establishment of the Soviet Union.

https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/the-10-most-important-revolutions-of-all-time.html

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Dit loop al ‘n baie lang pad om ons volksgenote te vernietig. Swart bemagtiging, rassisme, diskriminasie, onteienings is alles deel van die planne wat al vir jare hieragter sit, veral met anneksasies was dit deel van die plan.

Daar is nie afstand gedoen van afsonderlike gebiede vir swart / khoi san nie. Alles is behoue en het slegs naamsveranderinge, witskrifte, hansards met heelwat bates en finansiële steun.

Nie een van hulle sit sonder grond nie en miljoene bly steeds in ou Tuislande, Reservate of Kroongebiede wat na Trust en CPA gebiede verander is. Klink Ingonyama Trust bekend (sedert 1993 het slegs die naam en wetgewing verander) of Richtersveld CPA wat eens ‘n Britse kroongebied was – (onder die Shepstone beleid 1854).



Swart en ander immigrante of onwettiges kom oral oor ons grense en plak onwettig op grondgebiede, meestal op plase wat eens plase was of munisipale gebiede.

Ook hulle dring aan op gratis dienste, soos skole, water, elektrisiteit, HOP huise, ander dienste.

Toevallig was dit ook immigrante wat op stemreg aangedring het met die ou ZAR (Transvaal) en dis waar die groot probleem ontstaan het, met onwettiges (of wettiges) wat in die Britse myne kom werk het, maar dan as burgers hanteer wil word. So word die hele proses herhaal om die burgers van SA te verminder / vernietig – daar word op volke met kultuur en taal gefokus.

Minerale was die hoofprioriteit. Vandag is daar ‘n enorme plan van aksie vanaf kommunistiese veld en regering om onteiening sonder vergoeding te implementeer.


Shepstone – Natal, roots of segregation

Gold and diamonds -1886 – Griqualand West

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South Africa – Suid-Afrika

Communism – Bolshevism – Revolution

Robert Kiyosaki and Nick Nanton

Unemployment – SA – communism – bolshevism

Communism:   Bolshevisme – Kalergi

“Development of One Plans” – Ramaphosa

2 gedagtes oor “Revolutions – Rewolusies”

  1. […] The Glorious Revolution, also called “The Revolution of 1688” and “The Bloodless Revolution,” took place from 1688 to 1689 in England. It involved the overthrow of the Catholic king James II, who was replaced by his Protestant daughter Mary and her Dutch husband, William of Orange.read moreRevolutions – Rewolusies […]

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