Here’s some more good stuff from the “academy” to get
2016 really rolling. It concerns Cecil Rhodes, the empire builder who left an
Oxford University college more than 50 million big ones in today’s money with
the following stipulation: “No student should be qualified or disqualified for
election to a scholarship on account of his race or religious opinion.”
This was back in the late 19th century, so he didn’t
include women.
(*SMIRK*)
Rhodes began as a penniless lad seeking to make a living
in the diamond mines of southern Africa. He succeeded, to say the least, and
instead of purchasing a yacht and a big house on the Riviera, he established
the Rhodes Scholarship at Oriel College, Oxford, in order for others, as poor as
he was when he went down to the mines, to get a helping hand in life.
But here we are at present, with that great disease that
now plagues mankind, Political Correctness, upon us.
Oriel College, under which the Rhodes Trust hands out
millions to nearly 90 scholars yearly, has agreed to remove a plaque in honor
of the great man and empire builder, and has also agreed to begin consultations
over the removal of his statue.
* TAKE THE PRIZE MONEY AWAY; REMOVE THE TRUST AND ITS PROCEEDS FROM ORIEL COLLEGE'S CONTROL!
Nice...
* MEANING... NOT NICE!
Bidisha Mamata, a woman from I don’t know where but I can
venture a good guess, is the leading protester, seconded by one Ntokozo Qwabe,
a Rhodes Scholar himself, whose origins I also can only guess at. All I can say
is, again, nice.
If ever there was a case of having one’s cake and eating
it, this has to be it, and the only hypocrite missing for the moment is our old
buddy William Jefferson Clinton, a beneficiary of Rhodes if there ever was one,
who has as yet not demanded for the removal of the plaque and statue. Using the
cash while whitewashing Rhodes out of history is hardly new. Our black brothers
and sisters are doing just that as I write. Soon those who shaped our destiny,
dead white folk like Washington and Jefferson and Madison, will be part of the
history that does not dare speak its name. As one Oxford professor, a historian
by the name of Mary Beard, said: Students should “look up at Rhodes and friends
with a cheery and self-confident sense of unbatterability — much as I find myself
looking up at the statues of all those hundreds of men in history who would
vehemently have objected to women having the vote, let alone the job I have.”
Now, there’s a lady speaking truth if there ever was one!
Mind you, denying the past is le gout du jour nowadays,
especially in places of learning in the Western world. Cecil Rhodes imbibed the
message of John Ruskin at Oxford long before he became a rich and powerful man.
That message was one of duty, the duty for men to go out and transform the
world, especially the Third World, one of disease, extreme poverty, misery,
ignorance, and hunger. But as one Marc Anthony said, the good is oft interred
with the bones of good men, the evil lives after them.
The irony is that there were, from the start, lots of
black Rhodes Scholars, mainly from Jamaica, then a British colony.
Of course, Rhodes’ imperialism is now out of fashion,
except for with George W. Bush and his neocon friends, who thought the Iraq
invasion would be a cakewalk and that it would cost less than what Rhodes left
that ungrateful Oxford college. (It’s cost a trillion if it cost a dollar.)
Rhodes’ accomplishments in southern Africa transformed
the continent into a modern one, and he did that while squeezing in nine terms
as an undergraduate at Oxford.
The once great nation of Rhodesia was named after him,
and the poorest and most corrupt country today is called Zimbabwe, after
Rhodesia was renamed by that nice democrat Robert Mugabe.
Rewriting history is hardly new; after all, Italian
children I met when I was at school had no idea about Mussolini’s defeat
against the Greeks back in 1940. Only the Germans are taught daily about Nazi
Germany, a period that lasted only 12 years. Iranians I have met laugh out loud
when I mention Marathon or Thermopylae, and some even believe that Alexander
the Great was Persian.
* GOD HELP THE WORLD...
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