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White Man, Think Again! PDF

354 Pages·1965·20.46 MB·English
by  JACOBAnthony
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• I • A.JACOB WHITE MAN, THINK AGAIN! THE NOONTIDE PRESS P.o. BOX 76062 LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90005 WHITE MAN, THINK AGAIN. Born in England, Anthony Jacob is a free-lance jour nalist. Prior to the Second World War, he studied the his torical, political and racial background of seven different countries of Europe. During the War he served with the Royal Artillery for two years in India and saw service in Burma for another two years. Since the war he has lived in Africa, spending two years in South West Africa, four in Rhodesia and eleven in South Africa. During that time he visited at intervals the following countries, Bechuanaland, Basutoland, Zambia, Tanzania, Malawi, Kenya, Uganda, Eritrea, Egypt, the Sudan and Portuguese East Africa. He has seen at first hand what is developing in many of those countries and is thus in a position to write with authority on the events which threaten the existence of the white man. Is the white race fated to be overwhelmed by the non white races, or is it destined to triumph over them? Are we going to retain our racial identity, or are we going to allow ourselves to become an admixture with a 'world people'? Is White submergence inevitable or are we being merely per suaded and manoeuvred into handing over our power? These are some of the questions this bookexamines. Itsur veysthe world political scene mainly from a South African point of view; it refutes the theory that all men are equal and insistson the importance of racial inequality andWhite superiority. This book maintains that the white race must either rule the world or sufferobliteration. Vigorously writ ten, challenging in its directness, this isa bookwhich many willwelcome, many will attack butwhich none willbe able to ignore. A. JACOB ""HITE MAN, THINK AGAINI CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE Introduction. ................................. 7 I The Egalitarian Fallacy. ....................... 15 II The United Nations Organisation. ............... 28 III The United Nations Organisation and South Africa 48 IV South Africa. ................................. 55 V South Africa's Withdrawal from the Commonwealth 82 VI South West Africa 91 VII Bechuanaland................................ 103 VIII The Rhodesias and Nyasaland III IX The Congo 167 X East Africa 180 XI Great Britain 212 XII The United States of America 236 XIII Black and White. ............................. 280 A farmerwhosesonswerealwaysat loggerheads tried to persuadethem to mend their ways, bitt found that no words made any impression on them. So he decided to give them an object lesson. He madethem bringa bundleofsticks, andstarted bygivingthem thebundleas it was andtellingthemtobreakthesticks. Try asthey would,theycouldnot. Thenheuntiedthebundle and handed them the sticks one at a time, so that theycouldbreakthemeasily."It willbethe same withyou, my children,"hesaid. "As long as you agree together no enemy can overcome you; ifyouquarrel,you willfall an easyprey." Divided, men are vulnerable; it is union that makes them strong. -Aesop. The divisionofEurope into a number ofinde pendent states, connected, however, with each other by the general resemblance of religion, language, andmanners,isproductiveofthemost beneficial consequences to the liberty of man kind. A modern tyrant, who should find no resistance, either in his own breast or in his people, wouldsoonexperienceagentle restraint from the example of his equals, the dread of presentcensure,theadviceofhisallies,andthe apprehension ofhis enemies. The object ofhis displeasure, escapingfrom the narrowlimits of hisdominions, wouldeasilyobtain,ina happier climate,asecurerefuge,anewfortune adequate to his merit, the freedom of complaint, and perhapsthemeansofrevenge. But theempireof the Romans filled the world, and when that empirefell intothehandsofasingleperson,the worldbecamea safe and dreary prisonfor his enemies. The slave of imperial despotism, whether he was condemned to drag his gilded chainsin Rome and the Senate, or to wearout alife ofexile onthebarrenrock ofSeriphus,or the frozen banks of the Danube, expected his fate insilentdespair. Toresist wasfatal, andit wasimpossibletofly. - EdwardGibbon. 'The History of the Decline and Fall of the RomanEmpire'.

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.