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⁣ Head of the Serpent for Negroes FE(1)

24 Views· 21 Sep 2021
The Renaissance
The Renaissance
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Head of the Serpent for Negroes FE(1)
This is the Full Edition of our series on a Freedom Seeking group(I.P.O.B) in what was Negroland and Guinea looking for Freedom from the Colonial and slavery structures of the Slave master and his accomplices.
However, as you would expect in every Negro gathering, there must be saboteurs, disunity, snitching etc. In this case, the group called Indigenous People of Biafra(IPOB) is currently looking for freedom from the colonial and Slave masters and the Yoke of One Nigeria. As expected, the slave master connived with his slave hunting accomplices to abduct the leader of the Group and then infiltrated another group called Directorate of State(D.O.S).
In 2015 the same leader was arrested, and detained by the Slave master and his accomplices for two years without trial. Following his arrest in 2015, the leadership group called D.O.S was found to have compromised and the then Deputy Dissolved the DOS. The slave master and his accomplices then went back to the drawing board and this time got the deputy and afterwards the DOS. He then went ahead to kidnap the leader while having the D.O.S under him.
REMEMBER, IF THE PEOPLE HAD LISTENED TO THE COMPROMISED D.O.S TO STOP THE MONDAY SIT AT HOME, KANU WOULD HAVE BEEN FORGOTTEN IN THE D.S.S DUNGEON BY NOW WHICH WAS THE PLAN OF THE SLAVE MASTER AND HIS ACCOMPLICES AND THE COMPROMISED D.O.S
This video continues to show that the D.O.S in IPOB is compromised and that the head of the head of the serpent is the British Government, especially the English the same way they did as slave hunters.
Full video is available on Patreon.com, Odysee.com, and crystalviews.net among others.
Please note that we did not restrict the full video to Patreon out of a desire to make money but because we observed that the descendants of the slave hunters flag our videos when the full videos are posted openly.
Full Videos can be found on odyssey.com and Crystalviews.net
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
You are welcome to support us at https://www.paypal.me/OurRenaissance https://bit.ly/2OxCtF8 or at https://www.patreon.com/OurRenaissance
For those that have supported us, we say thank you
REFERENCES
Edwards, B. (1794). The history, civil and commercial, of the British colonies in the West Indies: In 2 vol.: Illustr. with maps (Vol. 2)
Webster, N., Webster, N., Goodrich, C. A., Porter, N., & Mahn, C. A. F. (1886). Webster's Complete Dictionary of the English Language. With Various Literary Appendices and Numerous Additional Illustrations Thoroughly Revised and Improved by Chauncey A. Goodrich DD, LL. D., Late Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, and Also Professor of the Pastoral Charge in Yale College; and Noah Porter, DD, Professor of Moral Philosophy and Metaphysics in Yale College. Assisted by Dr. CAF Mahn, of Berlin, and Others. George Bell & Sons.
Ratzel, F. (1898). The history of mankind (Vol. 3). Macmillan and Company, Limited.
Mockler-Ferryman, A. F. (1900). British West Africa: Its Rise and Progress. Swan Sonnenshein.
Garvey, M. (1967). Philosophy and Opinions of Marcus Garvey: Or, Africa for the Africans (Vol. 1). Psychology Press.
Harris, N. D., & Shotwell, J. T. (1914). World Diplomacy: Intervention and Colonization in Africa. Houghton Mifflin.
Falconbridge, A. (1788). An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa, by Alexander Falconbridge. James Phillips.
Sorsby, V. G. (1975). British Trade with Spanish America Under the Asiento 1713-1740 (Doctoral dissertation, University of London).

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