Boer War event
also: boer war, Second Boer War, Boer Wars, the Boers, Boer War, first bore war, First Boer Wars, Boer wars, war wars
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Related entities (most co-mentioned)
United Kingdomcountry · 11Winston Churchillperson · 6Stay-behind unitsorganization · 6Operation Gladiooperation · 6South Africacountry · 5Fabian Societyorganization · 3World War IIevent · 3Reinhard Gehlenperson · 3Ukrainecountry · 2Egyptcountry · 1Africaplace · 1C. Wright Millsperson · 1East India Companyorganization · 1Robert Maxwellperson · 1Sudancountry · 1Shanghaiplace · 1Boxer Rebellionevent · 1Queen Liliʻuokalaniperson · 1Brian Mayperson · 1Daily Mirrororganization · 1Alfred Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffeperson · 1Mary Elizabeth Milnerperson · 1Alfred Milnerperson · 1George Bernard Shawperson · 1
Claims (3)
Milner Kindergarten carried_out_attack
Boer War host_asserted
“And that's the reason why just in a quick fashion, I want to go over Carol Quigley's book just to show you. I mean, that's the reason they fought the Boer Wars. They want control over everything. That's the reason why they fought the Boxer …”
▶ The Colonel's Corner Safe for Democracy Part 41 (43) @ 1:22:04
Boer War book_quoted
Operation Gladio host_asserted
“war wars a lot um because that was the origin of the stay behind operation gladio that is kind of the the gist of everything that we talk about here um yeah you're right they're very very important um to this whole conversation um…”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Transnational Communism&Cold War Part 12 @ 1:16:04
Operation Gladio founded
Boer War host_asserted
“And I always wanted to ask you, sir. Thank you. So Gladio goes back to, I mean, as the program that we talk about post-World War II, the actual concept of stay behind units goes back to at least the late 1800s as a tactic. Some would argue …”
▶ The Colonel’s Corner Drugs, Oil and War Part 7 @ 1:45:02
Mentions (38)
▶ 16:22
1899 to 1901, when the England wanted to steal more land in their imperialist empire endeavors, they decided that they were going to go just north of what is modern day South Africa in an area where there were Boer farmers, B-O-E-R farmers.…
▶ 16:49
So there's a mixture of people down there. They'd been down there for a long time, and they were just farmers. But because the British had found gold and diamonds and everything else over in Rhodesia, they estimated that they were going to …
▶ 17:18
But they get their butt kicked. And the way they get their butt kicked is because of the stay-behind units. The Boers were smart enough that they hid weaponry along the path that they knew the English had to take in order to get to the vill…
▶ 17:47
So not all of them, but a lot of them. And they retreated. They go back home and lick their wounds because they were defeated. But they're not done. They come back for round two. And when they come back for round two, they bring 10 or 20 ti…
▶ 18:16
And Winston Churchill watched with amazement at the efficiency of pre-planting weaponry in the path of these oncoming military people in order to have the logistic leg already done. So all you have to do is move the people into position. Th…
▶ 18:43
So when they came back the second time, they set up concentration camps, the first documented use of a concentration camp in history. And they put all of the women and children and elderly in these concentration camps and went about killing…
▶ 20:31
kill them all, and you could basically redo the Boer Wars. Unfortunately for the Germans, that didn't work out. However, all of these trained assassins and what I call terrorists at this point, because they didn't use normal wartime tactics…
▶ 4:45
Since we know symbols are very important, it basically ties the two together for me. Which, of course, they were both given birth at the same time, immediately after World War II, when the Stay Behind Network originally was created to be us…
▶ 42:02
So we're going to start part two of our history into Operation Gladio. And I'm going to go through a very brief historical origination. And we've traced it back to the late 1800s in the Boer Wars. And Boer is B-O-E-R. Those were wars that h…
▶ 2:13
life cycle, how they produce cash to keep their operations going. We talked about the history dating back to the Boer Wars that we've become familiar with and kind of the overarching philosophy that created it emanating from the Fabian Soci…
▶ 1:05:45
in all of the Axis territory that they conquered as they conquered it so that if at any time Russia, the Soviet Union, or the U.S. or Brits or whoever was to try to take that territory back from them, these people would rise up from behind …
▶ 25:09
That's where Operation Gladio comes in, because it was the mechanism to go in covertly and overthrow governments. And I can give you a slew of examples of that. But I got one more concept, and that's called stay behind units. When you're re…
▶ 25:40
I want to explain to you what that is because it's going to make a lot more sense. A stay-behind unit was first documented in a war called the Boer War, B-O-E-R, in South Africa. And it was fought, again, by the UK. Everything goes back to …
▶ 29:00
Reinhard Galen, who was a Nazi general that was in charge of setting up stay-behind units, as the Germans went into Russia through Ukraine, through Hungary, through Romania, they set up stay-behind units because in case Russia pushed them b…
▶ 2:16:44
Anyway, I got to get to the crux of it, though. But the Project Gladio that I was exposed to had to do with the history of my regiment. It was formed to go to the Boer War. And when they had done, I heard you talking about they got their as…
▶ 1:59:16
chung c-h-u-n-g um very very um brilliant writer um and she did all of the research um she even talks about the original design of stay behind units which is what this concept is called and how it was discovered in a bore the second bore we…
▶ 1:59:59
The Boers sprung up behind them with these cached weapons and basically annihilated them. Humiliating defeat. They went back, got tons more people, came back and basically assassinated all the Boers. But the Boers did win the First Boer War…
▶ 5:32
you completely lose any benefit of the doubt. And that also came across with his take. Everything he says, again, is 100% accurate with his take on Winston Churchill. But if you don't take Winston Churchill back and understand his benefacto…
▶ 1:01:35
makes sense that he'd be in PR after the war. And the best guy to have in charge of enemy propaganda, what's he do when the war's over? He writes children's books. Again, can't make that crap up. He also was writing all of the war propagand…
▶ 1:02:05
Um, you gotta have a lot of propaganda for that one. Um, cause they actually even did the first use that anyone knows about of, um, setting up concentration camps to kill the women and children and old people, um, in South Africa. Um, Alfre…
▶ 1:03:29
He and Churchill were fast friends. Churchill was having, well, Churchill started as a reporter. He was down in the Boer Wars and that's where the whole stay behind unit concept came from because he watched the Boers do it and was fascinate…
▶ 58:41
So there was a lot of intrigue around Shanghai and Shanghai basically had been roped off as an international city as part of one of the Boxer War Brits winning on flooding the mainland China with opium, as was Hong Kong. So lots of differen…
▶ 1:27:08
So, I take it you're kind of new here? Well, I've been in here a few times. Okay. So, basically, during World War II, Hitler and Reinhard Galen had come up with a concept called stay-behind units. This was a very well-known tactic dating ba…
▶ 1:27:37
And these capabilities was used not just by Reinhard Galen, but that they basically showed up in the Jedbergs of the British. And because the British is the one that discovered them down being used by the Boers in South Africa, you know, li…
▶ 1:45:02
And I always wanted to ask you, sir. Thank you. So Gladio goes back to, I mean, as the program that we talk about post-World War II, the actual concept of stay behind units goes back to at least the late 1800s as a tactic. Some would argue …
▶ 12:58
I can definitely say professionally that there was an operation codenamed Gladio. The operation existed well into the 90s. These were covert, say, behind NATO operations off the books that existed up until the 90s timeframe. It was started …
▶ 1:22:04
And that's the reason why just in a quick fashion, I want to go over Carol Quigley's book just to show you. I mean, that's the reason they fought the Boer Wars. They want control over everything. That's the reason why they fought the Boxer …
▶ 1:15:34
They literally traveled to meet with the secretary of state with a plan to overthrow the queen. The secretary of state approved the plan. They went back and this is like in 1899 in the first couple of years of the 1900s, they went back and …
▶ 1:16:04
war wars a lot um because that was the origin of the stay behind operation gladio that is kind of the the gist of everything that we talk about here um yeah you're right they're very very important um to this whole conversation um…
▶ 35:20
just kind of tie it into the stay-behind units. The Boers were basically the Afrikaners, Conners, however you want to pronounce that. The Boer wars between the Brits and the Boers that were located in the southern part of Africa, the Boers …
▶ 35:48
During the First Boer Wars, they used the stay-behind unit concept to defeat a much superior British force that was deployed down there. So that just kind of ties in all of the information between the two subjects. And the Boers were tough …
▶ 1:02:45
and then the Boer Wars began in 1899. Shaw wants the Fabians to take a neutral stance because, like Home Rule, he considers it a non-socialist issue. That's controversial because the Fabians used the Boer Wars as a bit of political leverage…
▶ 1:05:28
that there's going to be events and they are going to use those events to move quickly through a period based on that turmoil. And that becomes readily apparent in the Boer Wars, especially, but also World War I.…
▶ 7:27
Basically, the idea was to run the Republic of South Africa as a corporation. And Rhodes' vision was for corporations to run the world, not monarchies. They would keep the monarchies around just for political cover. And of course, that lead…
▶ 11:49
i guess i'm gonna call him steed not stead steed would be removed as the executor um a few years later because he was um in opposition to the boer war and that matters because someone else took over as the executor which we'll get to steve'…
▶ 17:12
with that showdown they basically left us to the western hemisphere they realized they were too big they were too too busy concentrated on the boer wars and um they couldn't fight on two fronts especially with you know the rising german nav…
▶ 26:05
Served in the conflict in Sudan in the late 1800s. He also served in Egypt in the late 1800s. So this is a guy that was fighting all of the British colonial wars at the time. To Warhamster's earlier point, he served in the Second Boer War.…
▶ 29:23
just a quick little blurb on him because i know you're gonna like this part he's also an anglo-irish um family and roberts joined the east indies company army um and served in it um he was part of the second anglo-african war um and he too …