As I have closely documented elsewhere, historical relations between Islam and the West have been utterly distorted in order to present the aggressors as victims and the victims as aggressors.
In this article, we look at a similar but even more urgent topic: how history in general has been intentionally distorted in a way that makes segments of the nonwhite population hate, despise, and even want to murder whites.
This is no exaggeration. In a speech late last year, Brittney Cooper, a black associate professor at Rutgers University, spewed so much hate against “white people,” to the point of concluding “we got to take these motherf**ers out!” (Needless to say, she still teaches at Rutgers.)
At one point during her racist rant, Cooper said:
I think white people are committed to being villains, in the aggregate. … What I think that white people viscerally fear, it’s not that white people don’t know what they’ve done—they know. They fear that there is no other way to be human but the way in which they are human. So you know, you talk to white people, and whenever you want to have a reckoning by them they say stuff like, you know “It’s just human nature. If y’all had all of this power y’all would have done the same thing,” right?
Right, indeed. Some 15 years ago, I wrote an article which made this very same point:
[I]f whites have been historically aggressive or exploitative of non-whites, that is not because the former are intrinsically violent (a racist point, incidentally) but simply because they were able to. And that’s the bottom line of all history: Capability. Did whites defeat and uproot Native Americans, enslave Africans, and colonize the rest because they lived according to some sort of unprecedented bellicose creed alien to non-whites? Quite the contrary; they did so because they — as opposed to natives, blacks, et al. — were able to do so.
Had pre-Colombian Native Americans developed galleys for transoceanic travel, or advanced fire arms, or compasses, or organized military structures and stratagems; and had they arrived on the shores of Europe at its weakest point in history—what would they have done? Would they have pillaged and plundered, conquered and subjugated, or would they have looked at the inferior pale savages and “respected” them in the name of “diversity,” leaving them wholly unmolested?
What if sub-Saharan blacks were technologically or militarily more advanced than their northern neighbors in Europe during the premodern era, and therefore could easily have subjugated and enslaved them? Would they have done so, or would they have left them in peace in the name of “multiculturalism”?
In her rant, Cooper acknowledges—but rejects—these rhetorical questions:
And it’s like, no, that’s what white humans did, white human beings thought there’s a world here and we [whites] own it. Prior to them, black and brown people have been sailing across oceans, interacting with each other for centuries without total subjugation, domination and colonialism, right?
Not only is this “professor’s” ignorance profoundly startling; it is the source of her desire to see whites liquidated. After all, in her estimation, white people are intrinsically evil. It’s in their blood.
Back in the real world, all peoples—white, black, brown, yellow, red—warred on the “other,” and, when capable —keyword—went on the offensive in search of conquest and plunder. Depending exclusively on their capabilities—bows and arrows (e.g., Africans) or guns and cannons (e.g., Europeans)—their efforts resulted in tribal or international hegemony. As Michael Graham writes,
When thinking of pre-Columbian America, forget what you’ve seen in the Disney movies [reference to the 1995 animation, Pocahontas]. Think “slavery, cannibalism and mass human sacrifice.” From the Aztecs to the Iroquois, that was life among the indigenous peoples before Columbus arrived. For all the talk from the angry and indigenous about European slavery, it turns out that pre-Columbian America was virtually one huge slave camp.
It’s the same with Africans: they continuously warred on, slaughtered and enslaved each other for eons before whites ever came to sub-Saharan Africa. Moreover, as Michael Omolewa, a Nigerian diplomat, once explained:
[T]he bulk of the supply [of African slaves sold to Europeans] came from the Nigerians. These Nigerian middlemen moved to the interior where they captured other Nigerians who belonged to other communities. The middlemen also purchased many of the slaves from the people in the interior . . . . Many Nigerian middlemen began to depend totally on the slave trade and neglected every other business and occupation. The result was that when the trade was abolished [by England in 1807] these Nigerians began to protest. As years went by and the trade collapsed such Nigerians lost their sources of income and became impoverished.
These are not just historical observations. Despite Western efforts to abolish slavery, there are currently more than 50 million slaves—all of them in the non-Western world. To quote from one report,
As the world marks 400 years since the first recorded African slaves arrived in North America, slavery remains a modern-day scourge…. Africa has the highest prevalence of slavery, with more than seven victims for every 1,000 people.
None of this seems to matter to Ms. Cooper. For this “professor,” the scourge of slavery—indeed, any and every social ill—begins and ends with white, and therefore inherently evil, people. Hence the need to “take these motherf**ers out!”
Nor is she alone. Many people in the West, above and beyond the woke crowd, subscribe to this version of history that juxtaposes evil, oppressive, conquering whites, with noble, peaceful, and egalitarian nonwhites—a carefully manufactured lie that feeds a deep and abiding hatred for whites, including, and as a testament to its pervasive influence, among whites themselves.
shoshi was says
This is history grossly lacking in our educational system and with the advent of CRT and ‘Liberated Ethnic Studies’ will never see the light of day in many, many schools across the country. Mr. Ibrahim you also made mention of the research by an academic whose name I can’t recall, that the total number of people (European and pre- and post-Colonial US) kidnapped or acquired by sale by the combined Muslim entities was around forty million people. Doesn’t fit the narrative.
Of course, no one like the Rutgers professor will be asking for ‘reparations’ from African or Muslim countries. Doesn’t fit the narrative and of course, they wouldn’t dare!
Lady Jaye says
On the subject of reparations in the US, I don’t think it’s realistic but one could argue that since payments were made to slaveholders for their losses due to emancipation that freed persons should have also been compensated after centuries of free labor provided to the US. That would not be the debt of African or Muslim countries.
Also, I don’t believe that the roles of the players involved in the transatlantic slave trade are lost among Black Americans. Some West African nations have acknowledged and apologized publicly for their part in aiding in the capture and trading of their countrymen. Arab conquests and enslavement is also quite evident by the presence of Muslim influence on the continent of Africa and abroad.
AlgorithmicAnalyst says
Thanks Raymond! That’s the way a lot of them think, or believe.
DangerousDanMcGrew says
How can a supposed professor be so ignorant about history? How does she believe blacks were sold into slavery? Who delivered them to the white slave traders? Black slave traders? How does she explain the black North Africans who captured and enslaved sailors for centuries?
Paul Gilbert says
Looks like Reuters has taken down the article you referenced. I wonder why. It shows up on a Google search with this text “West African slavery lives on, 400 years after transatlantic …
Africa has the highest prevalence of slavery, with more than seven victims for every 1,000 people, according to a 2017 report by human …” but clicking on it goes to an article about Gaza. A search on their website for “West African slavery lives on” yields 4 articles but doesn’t include the one you referenced.
Paul Gilbert says
The link to what seems to be the article referenced by the Reuters article is still up: https://humanrightsfirst.org/library/human-trafficking-by-the-numbers/