Showing posts with label Idi Amin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Idi Amin. Show all posts

Sunday, September 06, 2020

Interview- Face To Face With King Leopold II, The Idi Amin Of Belgium

 

Journalist and author, Joel Savage interviews the caucasian Idi Amin of Belgium, King Leopold II

Journalist and author, Joel Savage, interviews the caucasian Idi Amin of Belgium, King Leopold II.

 

I believe everyone knows or has heard of King Leopold II. He was one of the greediest and bloodthirstiest kings in Belgium, who killed and maimed over ten million Africans, including women and children, during the colonial era in Congo. 


Despite that, there isn’t any statue of Adolf Hitler for killing six million Jews, Belgium built the statue and named streets after this lunatic. 


So I took a trip to the Neo-Gothic Church of Our Lady in Laeken, Brussels, where all the monarchs, including Leopold II, are buried, for this exclusive interview.

 

Joel: King Leopold, how do you feel about this interview?

 

Leopold: I need peace in my grave. How can you interview a dead man?

 

Joel: If the Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (The Mormons) could baptize the dead, then I could interview a dead man.

 

Related post: A Letter Of Admonition To Sophie Wilmes, the Belgian Prime Minister


Leopold: Please allow me to sleep peacefully in my grave. Why are you disturbing me?

 

Joel: You know what you did. You rendered thousands of villagers homeless by putting fire into their huts, amputated the hands and limbs of children, mutilated the genitals of fathers, and killed wives of husbands, for the greed of rubber and the desire to be the world’s richest king, yet your country praised and applauded your crimes and named streets after you. 


That’s not the end; you have a statue in addition. Are you happy in your grave for such horrendous crimes you committed?

 

Leopold: Even if I am not happy at all in my grave, I wasn’t the one responsible for my statue, because I didn’t ask anyone to build my statue, and I named streets after me.

 

Joel: Who are you trying to shift the blame to? For remembrance and honor, wreaths are laid at cemeteries for people, including soldiers who sacrificed their lives for your country, but the innocent blood of Africans you shed and the children you murdered are being mocked by your statue. Black Lives Matter. Do you think Belgium can mock the dead and be a happy country?

 

Leopold: I want to repeat it once again if you didn’t hear me. I didn’t tell my country to build a statue and name streets after me. They did it out of ignorance and foolish pride. They should be intelligent enough to know that I don’t deserve such a statue.

 

Joel: Many believe you are not human, because during that time span, greed and power propelled you to commit the most serious crimes, and you deserve to go down the gallows, but nobody gave a damn for what you were doing because everybody else did almost the same. The African soil was cut into pieces and confiscated by the foreigners, and the people were divided. 



The way of thinking at that time was that Black people could be used for everything as a resource and as disposable, and Africa is ours. So who is the ignorant one, or the one who lacks wisdom, when you wore a sheep’s clothing, deceiving the world as a good king, yet were on a killing spree?

 

Leopold: Don’t let me start scratching my head when there isn’t any itching. I have had enough in my grave, tell my people to break down my statue and denounce the name of the streets named after me, because I can feel that my country is doomed because of this evil thing they did.

 

Joel: Your country is stubborn like a he-goat. They are confused because it’s one of the most divided and difficult countries to rule in the world. Their confusion is so deep that they can’t even differentiate good from evil. They have thousands of journalists, but none have written about this because they are not Africans. They don’t care.


Leopold:
 You have said the right thing, but be careful, or else you will be an enemy. I know my people; they are pretenders and bad, just like me.

 

Joel: I want to be an enemy of Leopold because that makes me an important person. When you are not important, no one hates you in society.

 

Joel: I have two questions from my mentor, Professor Johan Dongen, for you. The first question is: You killed over ten million Africans, including children. Do you think there will be enough Africans left to kill by your grandchildren?


Related post: King Leopold II, The Caucasian Idi Amin of Belgium


Leopold: Don’t bring my family into this. I did all those evil things alone.

 

Joel: I need to bring your family into this, because wickedness and evil acts can be inherited by family, including grandchildren.

 

Joel: Professor Dongen’s second question is: You always carry a sword on your statues and portraits. He may like to see it. Will you give it to him if it’s in your grave?

 

Leopold: That sword is cursed because of the evil things I did with it. If I give it to anyone, it will bring more disaster upon Belgium.

 

Leopold: Before I leave, please ask God to forgive me and let the same God touch the heart of my people so that I don’t deserve those statues and streets named after me. If they are wise enough, then they should break down the statues or keep them because the chicken always comes back home to roost.

 

Joel: Are you sure you know God, King Leopold, and you did this? Anyway, thank you for granting me this interview.

Friday, September 04, 2020

King Leopold II, The Caucasian Idi Amin Of Belgium

The monsters, left, King Leopold II of Belgium and Idi Amin of Uganda

The monsters, left, King Leopold II of Belgium and Idi Amin of Uganda



Very often, psychologists and psychiatrists have traced the cause of much of people’s behavior, character, and ailments to their homes. Therefore, it’s only through DNA analysis or a psychologist that we can give ourselves the precise account of the mental state of the lunatic King Leopold II of Belgium.

 

But for someone from a royal family to have children with a prostitute tells you much about the distorted mental state of King Leopold II.

 

Among humans, there are many born monsters that take the form of humans to live among us with the aim of destroying other people without remorse or sympathy. 


Many such people, such as Idi Amin of Uganda, Pol Pot of Cambodia, Mao Zedong of China, Joseph Stalin of the Soviet Union, Adolf Hitler, etc, were born into the world.

 

One of such monstrous kings who rule Belgium from 1865 to 1909Emperor was King Leopold II, who had a dark heart similar to the one we had in an African country called Uganda. 


Referred to as the ‘Butcher of Uganda,’ Idi Amin violated the rights of Ugandans and ordered the killings of thousands of people under a reign of terror, making him one of the cruelest presidents in Africa, after Emperor Bokassa.

 

Unable to take part in the division of the world by the great powers, King Leopold II managed to organize several expeditions to Central Africa and gradually captured a fair amount of territory in the basin of the Congo River, after bribing the leaders of local tribes. 

 

With the consent of other powers that were in no hurry to delve into the sparsely populated jungle, the Free State of the Congo was created, and Congo became his personal property. 


Related post: A Letter of Admonition to Sophie Wilmes, the Belgian Prime Minister


Congo is one of the richest countries in Africa, with rich resources including rubber plantations, which turned King Leopold a monster, as rubber was in great demand for the automobile industry.

 

Shocked little boy standing by his mother whose right hand had been chopped off

A shocked little boy standing by his mother, whose right hand had been chopped off



King Leopold created the police, both white and black mercenaries, under the command of European officers and severely punished the Congolese for the slightest offense and simply for insufficient productivity in collecting rubber. 

 

Congo became famous not only for its rich natural resources, including cobalt, needed for electrical gadgets, including mobile telephones today, but a country where all kinds of atrocities and crimes were taking place.

 

People’s hands and feet were chopped, and the perpetrators often burned down the entire village. King Leopold’s greed propelled him to commit horrible crimes in Africa with impunity, as if the Congolese were animals in the slaughterhouse.

 

In fact, it’s difficult to give an account of how many lives perished at the hands of Leopold II, but some books claim it was close to ten million people, including women and children.

 

Unlike Idi Amin in Uganda, killing his own people, King Leopold II himself wasn’t in Congo. He was in Belgium when he gave the command for the killings, and as we know now that Belgium is a country that supported his crime by building statues and naming streets after the lunatic king.

 

Some of the victims of the madness of King Leopold II were children

Some of the victims of the madness of King Leopold II were children.


During Leopold’s reign of terror, he named Congo’s capital Leopoldville in his honor. Leopoldville is now changed to Kinshasa.  In 1908, under pressure from his own parliament and foreign states, the old king sold the Free State of the Congo to the Belgian government and died a year later.

 

Much of the wealth brought to the king by the colonial enterprise went to the former French prostitute Caroline Lacroix, who was 49 years younger than Leopold. Caroline gave him two sons, and a couple of days before the death of Leopold, she persuaded the monarch to marry her. 

 

Strange things happen sometimes; it seems those Leopolds had their hands chopped off, spirits were seeking revenge. It was reported that Carolina's youngest child was born with an undeveloped hand. 

 

Upon hearing of this, a British satirical magazine published a terrible cartoon: Leopold II holds a mutilated baby in his arms, and around the corpses of Congolese with severed limbs. The signature reads: "Retribution from above."

 

The statue of Leopold on a horse. Belgium government and the royal family honor to a killer for a job well done

The statue of Leopold on a horse. The Belgian government and the royal family honor a killer for a job well done


Indeed, King Leopold was one of the evilest kings ever to be on earth, with so many questions unanswered. What makes people so cruel? And why do such people’s families often support the crimes of their relatives? Is it because of the same DNA or blood? 


It’s a shame to the entire Belgian government and the royal family.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

ROBERT MUGABE, THE BLACK ADOLF HITLER?


Robert Mugabe's fist and mustache are identical to Hitler's


Robert Mugabe's fist and mustache are identical to Hitler's



Although Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe is a Blackman, he and the late Adolf Hitler of Germany have something in common. The small vertical patch of mustache right under the nose and the thirst for power. 


The power of greed and selfishness that almost destroyed the world and mankind. But with Mugabe, the impact is affecting the Zimbabweans and neighboring South Africa, Zambia, and Mozambique.

Previously known as Rhodesia, after gaining independence in 1980, the country became Zimbabwe under the new leader, Robert Mugabe. 

Then a country once with vast mineral resources and a successful economy gradually started declining to be one of the poorest economies and chaotic political conditions in the world.

From the history of Zimbabwe's politics, Robert Mugabe has been a man who has ruled and is ruling with an iron fist as a dictator. He regards any opposition as a threat and an enemy. 

His adamant heart wouldn't allow him to take any advice on how to save the country. He couldn't stand Joshua Nkomo, until finally sending him to his early grave.

No one actually knows the plan of Mugabe for hanging on to power since 1980. His rule has caused so much unrest among the Zimbabweans, using food as a political weapon against those who do not support his party. 

The country is afflicted by 70 percent unemployment and hard-biting inflation. Every advice from world leaders has fallen on deaf ears. Mugabe's wicked and greedy actions are destroying the country and causing violent clashes between clans.

Who can save Zimbabwe when such a man is in power? Already, the healthcare system has collapsed with the economy. 

The United Nations effectively became responsible for providing the necessary aid to save the emerging health crisis. It is like most of the African leaders are not capable of talking to Mugabe, instead of supporting his criminal regime.

What I have observed so far as an African is, it is nice for any African country to have a leader or head of state to represent his or her country, but the duties of a head of state, that they don't know. Corruption inspires many of them to be in politics, but not to help the poor people. 

Most African leaders are lazy, always expecting miracles from heaven or from the West or America. Instead of wasting taxpayers' money and state funds on attending poverty alleviation conferences, they must stay at home to use the money to alleviate their own poverty.

Libya is an African country, but Gaddafi's successful rule of the country has yielded the best results for the people. They are rich, and the economy is even better than so many European countries. The Libyans have confidence in him. 

The same way that should be in Zimbabwe and other African countries. One day, Mugabe should sit down alone and ask himself these questions: where are Idi Amin, Bokassa, Mobutu, etc? Then, to listen to the voice of the suffering masses of Zimbabweans to step down.