Attachment 25: War debts to South Africans
A true value on life and personal possessions is impossible to measure.
Death in a family creates immediate and extended losses to the family. Disfigurement and disablement suffered by a family member affects his entire family.
The depletion of the South African nation during Acts of War instigated by the Crown past and present has influenced the lives of all South Africans.
Tribes have been exterminated in whole or in part. The rights of these tribes reduced as their population and wealth was reduced.
Families have also been torn apart where their members have moved to far distant countries hoping to carve a safer life style. As happened soon after the end of the Second Anglo-Boer War in 1902, Whites have again been leaving South Africa in droves since 1992, in what is commonly called the White South Africa Diaspora.
In the past twenty years there has been a ‘brain drain’ in the South African economy as White South Africans are dehumanized through physical attacks on their lives and exclusion from the work force, as discussed in Attachment 15 - The silent genocide of the Boer Nation in South Africa. Most of these attacks on the White South Africans are by gangs who are following instructions from their political leaders in their quest to change the system of governance in South Africa to Communism, wherein all land is state owned, which is the ideal whereby the Crown level countries in their movement to create a One World Order.
The present government supports the Crown in their One World Order movement, 1 and aids this operation by having legal land owners removed from their land through influencing the thought processes and actions of Non-Whites in South Africa. These land owners are removed by being murdered or injured during farm attacks, or due to fear of farm attacks. The thought processes of Non-Whites in South Africa are being influenced by the present government, as it blames all the social ills of South Africa on the White population and holds out that most of the land and wealth in South Africa is owned by the White population, and the government state publically and repeatedly that the majority of land ownership is held by the Whites – even though they offer no facts nor statistics to verify their facts. Yet, the Whites have become a hated community inside South Africa.
There have been excessive murders and attacks on the lives of Whites inside South Africa which have been sanctioned by the Crown for the mere fact that the Crown desires to own what the White South Africans own through their heritage.
The attacks on the lives of South Africans are not limited to Whites only, but are proportionately far more violent than the attacks of the lives of other national groups in South Africa.
As John Foster Dulles said on behalf of the Crown after the First World War had ended, “there cannot be war without loss”.
In this document we set out to discuss the losses South Africans have suffered, through open warfare enforced on them by the Crown.
To note, this document by no means includes all the victims of the wars discussed.
We consider Acts of war to be:
· Incitement to war;
· Instruction to participate in war;
· Armed attacks by representatives of a government on the lives of people who are not representatives of the aggressive government;
· Actions by the representatives of a foreign government which directly leads to the wilful attack on the lives of citizens in a hosting country, which by the definition of “host” includes a colonized country.
In all wars, reparations are claimed by the injured parties. Yet in South Africa, there has only been one occasion in which reparations calculated for the benefit of South Africans who suffered losses through warfare imposed on them was calculated, and this was in 1993 by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission established by the African National Congress. This tribunal assigned reparations of about R30 000 ($3200) each to about 30 000 MK cadres who were said to have been in exile. However, if we look at the full picture, the war in South Africa imposed on South Africans by the Crown spans two centuries.
The losses suffered by South Africans through Acts of War imposed on them by the Crown far exceed the perimeters of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission established by Nelson Mandela in 1993. This Commission did not take into account that the South African government buildings, and all South African infrastructure, was paid for by wealth which belonged to the people of South Africa as a whole. Reparations of South African property should have been to the account of those who instigated the war against South Africans.
Although everyone was subjected to the effects of this war, not everyone was a partaker of the war. Yet everyone in South Africa has paid the penalties of this war imposed on them by the Crown.
We call for the reparations of all damages to the infrastructure of South Africa to be calculated by a Truth and Restitution Tribunal to be established in South Africa, and for losses to the South African nation to be claimed from the warring parties and their supporters. Costs experienced through damage to their property and personal injuries, including the losses of their loved ones, is to be calculated by the public and reparation sought therefore from the guilty parties.
Where insurance companies took the brunt of the expenses incurred in this people’s war, their losses culminated in increased premiums for insurance required by private citizens. Insurance companies should recover their losses from the guilty parties and recalculate insurance premiums to provide optimum value for the premiums paid by the public.
All investigation and court proceedings in the matter of reparations to the South African nation, is of national importance, and are to be made available for the public to follow. Incoming information should be broadcast live during live processions and monitored by suitably qualified personnel.
The demand for reparations is in alignment with international calls for reparations of war losses.
Death in a family creates immediate and extended losses to the family. Disfigurement and disablement suffered by a family member affects his entire family.
The depletion of the South African nation during Acts of War instigated by the Crown past and present has influenced the lives of all South Africans.
Tribes have been exterminated in whole or in part. The rights of these tribes reduced as their population and wealth was reduced.
Families have also been torn apart where their members have moved to far distant countries hoping to carve a safer life style. As happened soon after the end of the Second Anglo-Boer War in 1902, Whites have again been leaving South Africa in droves since 1992, in what is commonly called the White South Africa Diaspora.
In the past twenty years there has been a ‘brain drain’ in the South African economy as White South Africans are dehumanized through physical attacks on their lives and exclusion from the work force, as discussed in Attachment 15 - The silent genocide of the Boer Nation in South Africa. Most of these attacks on the White South Africans are by gangs who are following instructions from their political leaders in their quest to change the system of governance in South Africa to Communism, wherein all land is state owned, which is the ideal whereby the Crown level countries in their movement to create a One World Order.
The present government supports the Crown in their One World Order movement, 1 and aids this operation by having legal land owners removed from their land through influencing the thought processes and actions of Non-Whites in South Africa. These land owners are removed by being murdered or injured during farm attacks, or due to fear of farm attacks. The thought processes of Non-Whites in South Africa are being influenced by the present government, as it blames all the social ills of South Africa on the White population and holds out that most of the land and wealth in South Africa is owned by the White population, and the government state publically and repeatedly that the majority of land ownership is held by the Whites – even though they offer no facts nor statistics to verify their facts. Yet, the Whites have become a hated community inside South Africa.
There have been excessive murders and attacks on the lives of Whites inside South Africa which have been sanctioned by the Crown for the mere fact that the Crown desires to own what the White South Africans own through their heritage.
The attacks on the lives of South Africans are not limited to Whites only, but are proportionately far more violent than the attacks of the lives of other national groups in South Africa.
As John Foster Dulles said on behalf of the Crown after the First World War had ended, “there cannot be war without loss”.
In this document we set out to discuss the losses South Africans have suffered, through open warfare enforced on them by the Crown.
To note, this document by no means includes all the victims of the wars discussed.
We consider Acts of war to be:
· Incitement to war;
· Instruction to participate in war;
· Armed attacks by representatives of a government on the lives of people who are not representatives of the aggressive government;
· Actions by the representatives of a foreign government which directly leads to the wilful attack on the lives of citizens in a hosting country, which by the definition of “host” includes a colonized country.
In all wars, reparations are claimed by the injured parties. Yet in South Africa, there has only been one occasion in which reparations calculated for the benefit of South Africans who suffered losses through warfare imposed on them was calculated, and this was in 1993 by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission established by the African National Congress. This tribunal assigned reparations of about R30 000 ($3200) each to about 30 000 MK cadres who were said to have been in exile. However, if we look at the full picture, the war in South Africa imposed on South Africans by the Crown spans two centuries.
The losses suffered by South Africans through Acts of War imposed on them by the Crown far exceed the perimeters of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission established by Nelson Mandela in 1993. This Commission did not take into account that the South African government buildings, and all South African infrastructure, was paid for by wealth which belonged to the people of South Africa as a whole. Reparations of South African property should have been to the account of those who instigated the war against South Africans.
Although everyone was subjected to the effects of this war, not everyone was a partaker of the war. Yet everyone in South Africa has paid the penalties of this war imposed on them by the Crown.
We call for the reparations of all damages to the infrastructure of South Africa to be calculated by a Truth and Restitution Tribunal to be established in South Africa, and for losses to the South African nation to be claimed from the warring parties and their supporters. Costs experienced through damage to their property and personal injuries, including the losses of their loved ones, is to be calculated by the public and reparation sought therefore from the guilty parties.
Where insurance companies took the brunt of the expenses incurred in this people’s war, their losses culminated in increased premiums for insurance required by private citizens. Insurance companies should recover their losses from the guilty parties and recalculate insurance premiums to provide optimum value for the premiums paid by the public.
All investigation and court proceedings in the matter of reparations to the South African nation, is of national importance, and are to be made available for the public to follow. Incoming information should be broadcast live during live processions and monitored by suitably qualified personnel.
The demand for reparations is in alignment with international calls for reparations of war losses.
Index to Attachment 25, extract from Bundle 8
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