Africa, under communalism, had no classes and had equality in distribution. Carthage flourished from 1200 to 200 B.C. By 732 A.D, Europe stopped the Muslim advance, when African forces were already deep into France. Imagine white teachers telling their students that while non-whites were happily enjoying baths in Maghreb (later Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia), white people in Oxford, England considered that washing oneself was “a dangerous act”. Few whites understand that trans-Saharan trade “was as great an achievement as crossing the ocean.” It brought in trade and literate Islamic culture, however iron tools came to Africa later than they came to Europe, so, technology and skills were more limited. When Cecil Rhodes went in Zimbabwe and saw its ruins, they assumed they had to have been built by white people. Slavery was not a “mode of production” until the whites came. Europeans arriving in Africa were often impressed by what they saw: clean straight streets some 120 feet wide, pillars encased in copper, palaces, and galleries. Communalist Africa meets the fledgling capitalist nations of Europe. Africa gets tapped for slaves when the indigenous of the Americas prove either unwilling to slave for the white invaders, or too susceptible to smallpox. The English currency, the guinea, was once made from gold taken from Guinea. Queen Elizabeth I enjoyed the slave trade and gave a ship strangely named Jesus to go to Africa to steal more slaves. When Elizabeth gave John Hawkins a knighthood for stealing blacks from Africa at gunpoint, John made his own coat of arms from an image of blacks in chains. Barclays Bank was set up by two slavers needing a place to put their tainted profits. James Watt got his steam engine financing from slavers. In the 18th century, France was getting 20% of its income from theft and slavery. “In the 1830’s slave-grown cotton accounted for about half the value of all the exports from the United States.” Slavery does not allow for industrial development which is why the U.S. North developed industry while the South did not.
When France prattled on about “Liberty, Equality, Fraternity” you can be sure they were not discussing their enslaved blacks around the world. Rational Americans were upset to learn about My Lai in Vietnam, but few connected the violent dots to past U.S. slavery and brutal settler-colonialism against the Native Americans. Trade at the time was in the interest of European Capitalism and nothing else. Funny how Europeans had no religious problem seeing the theft of human beings “through warfare, trickery, banditry and kidnapping” as “trade”. Did anyone of us get taught in school that 15 to 20% of all slaves died on the journey across the Atlantic? Or of the countless slave deaths after capture before they arrived bound at the African coast? Do whites think about how many blacks also died in those pointless African wars for yet more captives? How many were killed or injured in those wars to produce the captives? Such an outflow of society could only claw at the remaining African social fabric. During this time, raiding other people’s captives had become more lucrative than gold mining. How do you develop your country through harnessing or working with nature under such circumstances? How do you even grow your food, let alone develop industry?
Did you know the British forced Africans to sing: Rule Britannia, Britannia rule the waves, Britons never never shall be slaves”? How developed would Britons be now, if they were forced instead to be some else’s slaves for centuries? Then there were all the shitty consumer goods Europe dumped on Africa, intentionally undercutting African industry and products. As a result, “people forgot even the simple techniques of the forefathers”. Basic technological regression. No one mentions that Italians should be grateful to China for spaghetti after Marco Polo introduced them to the noodle. But many mention that Africans should be grateful to Europe for the corn and the cassava. Japan was the only non-white country to be spared. Look how England destroyed India’s vibrant cloth industry but not that of Japan. Walter tells us “it would not have been in the interest of capitalism to develop Africa” which is why state-capitalist countries of the 60’s and 70’s instead stepped in to work with Africa like China, Czechoslovakia, and the Soviet Union. During the slave trade, one horse brought to Africa was worth 15 captives. The Portuguese basically were restricted to along the coast where their cannons were effective. Slave trading for Africans had an extra cost because whites didn’t always show up each year to buy them, due to their own wars and revolutions. African leaders were reduced to being “middlemen for European trade” during the colonial period. For Walter, “modern imperialism is inseparable from capitalism.” Arabs only exploited African labor in a “feudal context”. Liberia became a de facto colony for the U.S. because of the rubber. Firestone’s profits through buying one million acres of land at six cents an acre there, made Firestone. In fact, Firestone took 160 million dollars of rubber out of Liberia, while the Liberian government received only 8 million dollars in return.
Colonel Grogan says of the Kikuyu, “We have stolen his land. Now we must steal his limbs. Compulsory labor is the corollary of our occupation of the country.” The French banned the Mandja people from hunting because it interfered with cotton cultivation for export. Europeans bought African resources like palm oil and ground nuts at crazy prices far below market value. Cadbury’s job was exploiting African cocoa workers. Lobbyists like Cadbury controlled their own government as well – a nice trick. Think Africa has always been poor? In 1952, Guinea “earned France about 5.6 million dollars (bauxite, coffee, bananas) in foreign exchange.” The U.S. got its uranium for its first atomic bomb from the Belgian Congo. Africa had plenty of Manganese, Chrome, Columbite and Copper taken also to keep western capitalism going. Soap companies like Lever began making margarine because they required the same materials: oils and fats. Donald Trump probably has enough oils and fats in him to create a whole vat of I Can’t Believe it’s not Butter.
All roads and railways created by colonists, not surprisingly, led down to the sea. These were built at great human cost – no payment, just lashes. No cranes, no earth movers, just black humans forced at gunpoint by whites. How civilized. Europe’s capital accumulation comes from overseas – now we can see better how moral that was. As Walter says, Africans came into colonization with a hoe, and left with a hoe. See Africa forced to become have destructive monocultures instead of food security – Sudan & Uganda = cotton, Tanzania = sisal, Senegal & Gambia = groundnuts, Liberia = rubber, Dahomey and Nigeria = palm oil, and “two African colonies were told to grow nothing but peanuts.” When Oxfam says, save the starving children of Africa, they won’t tell you those kids are starving because of the effects of colonialism and capitalism. Kenyans didn’t have tooth decay until they were forced to adopt a western diet. Throughout Africa, the church taught the colonized the “value” of docility, humility and acceptance – the church preserved “the social relations of colonialism”. When the Mau Mau Rebellion broke out in Kenya, Britain leapt into action – they closed all the schools, because they could no longer control Kenyan minds. Think of Africa as three centuries of slavery with a chaser of one century of colonialism. “Foreign investment is the cause, not a solution to our economic backwardness. What is colonialism if it is not a system of ‘foreign investment’?” In terms of lack of development, think of Africans as needing more protein, doctors, engineers, agriculturalists, lawyers, administrators and even welders. For Africa importing experts is very expensive. Also, note that socialist countries had no part in the theft of Africa. In 1980, this book’s author Walter is assassinated by a car bomb; some clearly did not like what he had to say on behalf of the people of Africa. An amazing important book I’m super glad I finally read.