After you see "A Death of Nation" by D'Souza to undo the Communist brainwashing of American history, I suggest you rent "Tainted Heroes" to do same for South African history. Today marks the beginning of white reparations in South Africa - black Communists taking property and land from white people without compensation.
Did you know that Nelson Mandela's African National Congress (ANC) was Communist Soviet-backed and much of his party's violence was directed at black people who refused to fall in line? Nelson Mandela was the man behind the violent armed wing of the ANC called MK. A new documentary, Tainted Heroes, shows the unfathomable brutality employed by the ANC and the MK, its terrorist wing, and the South African Communist Party that controlled it behind the scenes in the effort to seize political and economic power over South Africa. Especially the ANC's brutal war against black organizations and individuals viewed as rivals.
As the UN-supported and Soviet-directed chaos and horror was unfolding — mass-murder of dissident blacks, savage torture of political enemies, the deliberate targeting of innocent women and children, and more — the fake news media in the United States and across the Western world LIED and concealed the truth. And so, much of the real history of the ANC and its bloody “struggle” has remained carefully hidden from the public to this day.
Myths about the ANC persist even today — many ignorant and uninformed people have little to no knowledge of the group's real history aside from bogus platitudes and mythology.
1) The ANC likes to pretend that they were merely involved in a “freedom struggle” against the apartheid system and the former white-led government. Mandela is often inaccurately characterized as a “political prisoner” who was jailed merely for his belief in “democracy” and his peaceful opposition to apartheid, a system of government-enforced segregation that was already being dismantled even before whites voted to surrender power in 1992. Even the flag of the ANC is self-explanatory - including three stripes - black, green and gold - meaning that South Africa's land and resources belong ONLY to black people. Not whites.
Some of the most shocking testimony in the documentary comes from black victims of the ANC, as well as from ANC operatives who participated in the atrocities against both white and black civilians. Others shown in the film describe the brutal and deliberate murder of their families — including young children — by the ANC's terrorist wing. Many scenes of the film are difficult to watch. Especially horrifying, for example, are the graphic descriptions and images of a terror tactic pioneered by the ANC for use against their black political enemies. It became known as “necklacing.” Basically, if a black person was suspected of being loyal to the government or hostile to the ANC, the ANC cadres would fill a tire with gasoline, put it around the victim's neck, and set it on fire. The death is perhaps among the most excruciatingly painful imaginable.
2) Mandela's wife at the time, Winnie Mandela, promoted the barbaric form of execution — no trial needed — as a means of “liberating” South Africa. “Together, hand-in-hand with our sticks of matches, with our necklaces we shall liberate this country,” she declared. Many children were murdered through “necklacing,” merely for being suspected by the ANC of sympathizing with opponents of the ANC. Others were beaten or stoned to death. The overwhelming majority of ANC victims were civilians.
3) So violent were the ANC and Mandela, the leader of its terrorist wing known as Umkhonto we Sizwe, that the party and Mandela himself were added to the U.S. State Department terror list, only being removed less than a decade ago. Both the ANC and the South African Communist Party revealed after his death that he had lied all along. Not only was Mandela a member of the Communist Party, which he always denied, he was on its decision-making Central Committee, often referred to as the Politburo. An unpublished draft of Mandela's autobiography released after his death also shows his full-blown support for violence, terrorism, and communism.
4) The former South African President Jacob Zuma, who pushed to steal land and wealth without compensation and openly sings genocidal songs advocating the slaughter of the embattled Afrikaner minority, joined the Communist Party in 1962. He then went to Moscow and was trained by the murderous Soviet KGB. Indeed, virtually every South African ANC leader since 1994 of any significance — from presidents to party bosses — has been a known member of the Communist Party with training and support from some of the world's most murderous regimes.
5) The communist atrocities and mass-murder have been largely swept under the rug by the lamestream media, while the South African communists murdered more than 100 million of their own people in the last century, not including those slaughtered in wars. While not defending the government-enforced system of segregation known as apartheid, the idea behind separate development, for example, was an effort to mimic Europe, with sovereign, independent, self-governing homelands being created for the multitude of nations and peoples that call Southern Africa home. Malcolm X called for the segregation of whites and blacks in the 1960's in America, each ruling their own. So segregation is not a WHITE only thing. The film also explains how the policy came about, how it came to be discredited, and how the whole issue was weaponized and exploited by blood-thirsty and murderous communist revolutionaries to seize power using terror.
6) Mass-murdering communist regimes ruled the Soviet Union, Vietnam, China, and other nations and supported and guided the ANC and its totalitarian agenda. The film features numerous experts, participants, and others describing how South African terrorists were sent all over the world — from Southern Russia and Indochina to other communist-ruled nations across Africa — to indoctrinate them with Marxist “ideology” and train them to wage a campaign of mass murder and terror.
7) A small core of communist revolutionaries in the South African Communist Party directed a vast army of people Lenin used to refer to as “useful idiots,” in this case the ANC masses secretly led by the Communist Party who were duped into helping to forge new chains for themselves under the Soviet-inspired guise of “liberation.”
Of course, the ANC, which is right now in the process of driving South Africa into the ground, is not happy with Tainted Heroes. South Africa is now on the verge of a multifaceted catastrophe of immense proportions. If you want to understand why, see the documentary Tainted Heroes.
Who really was Nelson Mandela? What happened to the Communist Party of South Africa and the ANC after Mandela died? Let's explore.
Nelson Mandela was born on July 18, 1918, into a royal family of the Xhosa-speaking Thembu tribe in the South African village of Mvezo, where his father, Gadla Henry Mphakanyiswa (c. 1880-1928), served as chief. His mother, Nosekeni Fanny, was the third of Mphakanyiswa’s four wives, who together bore him nine daughters and four sons. After the death of his father in 1927, 9-year-old Mandela—then known by his birth name, Rolihlahla—was adopted by Jongintaba Dalindyebo, a high-ranking Thembu regent who began grooming his young ward for a role within the tribal leadership.
The first in his family to receive a formal education, Mandela completed his primary studies at a local missionary school. There, a teacher dubbed him Nelson as part of a common practice of giving African students English names. He went on to attend the Clarkebury Boarding Institute and Healdtown, a Methodist secondary school, where he excelled in boxing and track as well as academics. In 1939 Mandela entered the elite University of Fort Hare, the only Western-style higher learning institute for South African blacks at the time. The following year, he and several other students, including his friend and future business partner Oliver Tambo (1917-1993), were sent home for participating in a boycott against university policies.
After learning that his guardian had arranged a marriage for him, Mandela fled to Johannesburg and worked first as a night watchman and then as a law clerk while completing his bachelor’s degree by correspondence. He studied law at the University of Witwatersrand, where he became involved in the movement against racial discrimination and forged key relationships with black and white activists. In 1944, Mandela joined the African National Congress (ANC.) That same year, he met and married his first wife, Evelyn Ntoko Mase (1922-2004), with whom he had four children before their divorce in 1957.
Nelson Mandela’s commitment to politics and the ANC grew stronger after the 1948 election victory of the Afrikaner-dominated National Party, which introduced a formal system of racial classification and segregation—apartheid.
The following year, the ANC strived to achieve full citizenship for all South Africans through boycotts, strikes, civil disobedience and other nonviolent methods. Mandela helped lead the ANC’s 1952 Campaign for the Defiance of Unjust Laws, traveling across the country to organize protests against discriminatory policies, and promoted the manifesto known as the Freedom Charter, ratified by the Congress of the People in 1955. Also in 1952, Mandela opened South Africa’s first black law firm, which offered free or low-cost legal counsel to those affected by apartheid legislation. On December 5, 1956, Mandela and 155 other activists were arrested and went on trial for treason but he was acquitted in 1961.
Mandela went underground and wore disguises to evade detection, and in 1961 Nelson Mandela co-founded and became the first leader of Umkhonto we Sizwe (“Spear of the Nation”), also known as MK, a new armed wing of the ANC. He was later arrested and sentenced to life in prison. He served 27 years. Despite his forced retreat from the spotlight, Mandela remained the symbolic leader of the antiapartheid movement.
After attaining his freedom, Nelson Mandela led the ANC in its negotiations with the governing National Party and various other South African political organizations for an end to apartheid. Mandela won the Nobel Peace Prize in December 1993. On April 26, 1994, more than 22 million South Africans turned out to cast ballots in the country’s first multiracial parliamentary elections in history. An overwhelming majority chose the Communist ANC to lead the country, and Mandela was sworn in as the first black president of South Africa.
In 1996, the ANC entered into an alliance with its previous rival, the Inkatha Freedom Party, led by Mangosuthu Buthelezi. Mandela stepped down as ANC president in 1997, and in June 1999 his successor, Thabo Mbeki, became the second black president of South Africa. On his 80th birthday in 1998, Mandela wed the politician and humanitarian Graça Machel, the widow of the former president of Mozambique. His marriage to Winnie had ended in divorce in 1992. The following year, he retired from politics at the end of his first term as president and was succeeded by his deputy, Thabo Mbeki of the ANC. The party celebrated its 90th anniversary in 2002 and continued its domination of South African politics.
In 2002, Mandela became a vocal advocate of AIDS awareness and treatment programs which killed his son Makgatho (1950-2005) and is believed to affect more people in South Africa than in any other country.
Treated for prostate cancer in 2001 and weakened by other health issues, Mandela grew increasingly frail in his later years and scaled back his schedule of public appearances. He died in 2013.
In 2007, Mbeki's bid for leadership of the party was challenged by Jacob Zuma, the former deputy president whom he had dismissed in 2005 amid charges of corruption; the next year Zuma also stood trial for an unrelated charge of rape. He was acquitted of rape in May 2006, and the corruption charges were dropped later that year. Despite repeated allegations of wrongdoing—which his supporters claimed were politically motivated—Zuma remained a popular figure within the ANC and, in what was one of the most contentious leadership battles in the party’s history, was selected over Mbeki in December 2007 to be party president.
The new President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma, had close ties to the South African Communist Party and to the Congress of South African Trade Unions. Although both organizations had long been allies of the ANC, there was growing concern among many ANC members that those groups were exerting too much influence on the ANC under Zuma’s leadership.
In the 2014 elections the ANC’s status as the governing party was secured for another five years when the party won about 62 percent of the national vote. The ANC saw its worst performance yet in the 2016 municipal elections. It lost control of key urban areas and, for the first time since the ANC took power in 1994, won less than 60 percent of the total vote. The party’s loss of support was widely attributed to the electorate’s dissatisfaction with how the ANC-led governments at the municipal and national levels were handling the economy and delivery of services, as well as frustration with the persistent corruption and scandals associated with Zuma and the ANC.
The ANC pressured Zuma to step down and, somewhat defiantly, offered his resignation. He was succeeded as president of the country by Cyril Ramaphosa in 2018.
President Cyril Ramaphosa has said that the interpretation of section 25 of the Constitution which relates to land expropriation must be sped up. In other words, "We need to quickly steal white people's farmland and give it to black people, so that black people will vote to keep me in office longer, in spite of our party's failure and the horrific economic decline in South Africa, so that's why I'm really doing this." Good luck with that:
"Through accelerated land redistribution, and with the necessary support from the state, more and more black farmers will emerge, unlocking the economic potential both of land and of people."
What do I think of Mandela? I think he was a spoiled rich kid with good intentions. Frustrated that he failed, he launched a violent arm and lost control. He unleashed hell on South Africa and then he died. He destroyed a nation rather than saved it. This is what happens when activists and community organizers, with no common sense or economic savvy, are put in charge. People starve. Millions die.
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