Attachment 8: Final steps to complete the formation of the Union of South Africa for total annexation by the Crown
The ‘Union” of South Africa was the desire of the Crown and not the desire of the majority of the indigenous people of South Africa. There was no national vote taken on this decision on a ‘one man, one vote’ system.
The administration and legislation work to create a single unit of all the different kingdoms, states and republics in South Africa was not drawn up, not approved, by South Africans, but by representatives of the British Crown. The Crown used the international Free Mason network as its intelligence service and Britain to achieve its goals in southern Africa.
The work of union in South Africa was embarked on as part of the task for an imperial union with the Crown wherein South Africa would be one of its colonies. This was always the ultimate goal of Cecil Rhodes, of Milner, and of the Kindergarten.
Milner wrote in his diary on 25 January 1904: "My work has been constantly directed to a great and distant end - the establishment in South Africa of a great and civilized and progressive community, one from Cape Town to the Zambezi independent in the management of its own affairs, but still remaining, from its own firm desire, a member of the great community of free nations gathered together under the British flag. That has been the object of all my efforts. It is my object still."
In this Attachment we will discuss the build up to, and complete annexation of South Africa by the Crown by the creation of a Union.
The administration and legislation work to create a single unit of all the different kingdoms, states and republics in South Africa was not drawn up, not approved, by South Africans, but by representatives of the British Crown. The Crown used the international Free Mason network as its intelligence service and Britain to achieve its goals in southern Africa.
The work of union in South Africa was embarked on as part of the task for an imperial union with the Crown wherein South Africa would be one of its colonies. This was always the ultimate goal of Cecil Rhodes, of Milner, and of the Kindergarten.
Milner wrote in his diary on 25 January 1904: "My work has been constantly directed to a great and distant end - the establishment in South Africa of a great and civilized and progressive community, one from Cape Town to the Zambezi independent in the management of its own affairs, but still remaining, from its own firm desire, a member of the great community of free nations gathered together under the British flag. That has been the object of all my efforts. It is my object still."
In this Attachment we will discuss the build up to, and complete annexation of South Africa by the Crown by the creation of a Union.
Index to Attachment 8, extract from Bundle 2
Attachment 8, extract from Bundle 2
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