"I also never said Africa was all jungle. We all know in South Africa there is great farmland. The white farmers used to produce enough food for them not long ago. Now that the blacks decided they would take over there’s a shortage. Funny how that works. Real farmers vs racism and all."
Blacks farmed that land successfully for thousands of years before ****** got there. And I think you need to end the Africans can't farm lie. Because there are a lot of white countries that are failing right now. We don't see all that much COVID-19 in Africa right now.
Check out this info.
As the coronavirus arrives in Africa, fragile economies are bracing for the worst
Africa's fragile health systems rush to contain coronavirus
No, I don't need to do that. I know the virus is going to hit Africa, but it has not yet. But it has slaughtered all the great advanced white countries to this point. The reality here is that blacks in Africa were doing just fine before ****** interfered and ruined the continent. Removing whites off land they stole is what was needed to be done. The South Africans will eventually be fine as they continue restructuring the country after a century of white fascism.
It's not my fault you don't know South Africa was mostly uninhabited before the English and the Dutch established a place on the coast for ships to have a place to resupply and rest and recuperate on trips from Europe to India and the Orient. Natives mostly lived in nearby countries and only hunted in the south. No farms, no cities. Read some history. Michener's historical fiction novel, The Covenant, is a good read.
That's incorrect. South African History goes back 40,000 years.
The Great Trek
From 1836, groups of Boers dissatisfied with British rule in the Cape Colony trekked off into the interior in search of freedom. In a decade of migration known as the Great Trek, increasing numbers of Voortrekkers (Fore-trekkers – pioneers) abandoned their farms and crossed the Senqu (Orange) River. Reports from early missions told of vast, uninhabited – or at least poorly defended – grazing lands.
Tensions between the Boers and the government had been building for some time, but the reason given by many trekkers for leaving was the 1833 act banning slavery.
The Great Trek coincided with the difaqane (forced migration) and the Boers mistakenly believed that what they found – deserted pasture lands, disorganised bands of refugees and tales of brutality – was the normal state of affairs. This gave rise to the Afrikaner myths that the Voortrekkers moved into unoccupied territory or arrived at much the same time as black Africans.
History of South Africa - Lonely Planet Travel Information
What you believe is a myth.
Pre-colonial history of Southern Africa | South African History Online
Great Zimbabwe: The African Iron Age Capital
Great Zimbabwe is a massive
African Iron Age settlement and dry-stone
monument located near the town of Masvingo in central Zimbabwe. Great Zimbabwe is the largest of about 250 similarly dated mortarless stone structures in Africa, called collectively Zimbabwe Culture sites. During its heyday, Great Zimbabwe dominated an estimated area of between 60,000-90,000 square kilometers (23,000-35,000 square miles). In the Shona language "Zimbabwe" means "stone houses" or "venerated houses"; the residents of Great Zimbabwe are considered the ancestors of the Shona people. The country of Zimbabwe, which gained its independence from Great Britain as
Rhodesia in 1980, is named for this important site.
Archaeological research has identified five occupation periods at Great Zimbabwe, between the 6th and 19th centuries A.D. Each period has specific building techniques (designated P, Q, PQ, and R), as well as notable differences in artifact assemblages such as imported
glass beads and
pottery. Great Zimbabwe followed Mapungubwe as the capital of the region beginning about 1290 AD; Chirikure et al. 2014 have identified Mapela as the earliest Iron Age capital, predating Mapungubwe and beginning in the 11th century AD.
- Period V: 1700-1900: reoccupation of Great Zimbabwe by 19th century Karanga peoples, un-coursed Class R style construction; poorly known
- [hiatus] may have been the results of a water crisis beginning ca 1550
- Period IV: 1200-1700, Great Enclosure built, the first expansion of settlement into the valleys, lavish pottery burnished with graphite, neatly coursed Class Q architecture, abandonment in the 16th century; copper, iron, gold, bronze and brass metallurgy
The Great Stone House of Shona Ancestors: Great Zimbabwe