Treasure hunter unearths hoard of Anglo-Saxon coins worth £10,000

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Red Deer AB
There is no thanks to be given. The English were polluting other cultures. Because their genes had begun to spread, in stepped Mother Nature. She realized the inferiority, and took corrective action.

As a result, Britain's interference with other cultures was stopped. Nations broke away. The EU rejected you and has now isolated you.

These are all steps in your genetic makeover.

As you disappear, you will call out for help, but it will be rejected. Yours is a toxic existence.

And remember, it's not hate that's shutting you down. It's our natural world.
Their tendency to whitewash the past is probably why they have been such pricks in their entire history. They are from EU Royals after all and all of them would be extinct if they had to wipe their own ass.
They can't even come clean on the opium wars where they did try to destabilize China through cheap heroin but the 6 tons that made it back to England was just for the royals and their closest (criminal) friends. (a pattern that still exists today)

Oh, I forgot. You're a world-renowned expert on those super-muderous Anglo-Saxons.



There is no thanks: Just endless begrudgery that the British founded Canada whilst continuing to live there as a Canadian. You don't have to stay Canadian. Become something else if it bothers you so much. If not I would like you to start showing more appreciation to those wonderful, brave Britons who tossed the Red Indians off their land and gave it to you so that you can enjoy it.
The fur trade was the first war against the Indians in Canada. Farming was the last phase of the same war.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Their tendency to whitewash the past is probably why they have been such pricks in their entire history.

Like ridding the world of Nazism, much Communism and Napoleonism; spreading democracy and freedom of speech; and founding Canada?

They are from EU Royals after all and all of them would be extinct if they had to wipe their own ass.
They can't even come clean on the opium wars where they did try to destabilize China through cheap heroin but the 6 tons that made it back to England was just for the royals and their closest (criminal) friends. (a pattern that still exists today)

The Chinese were the wrong'uns in the Opium Wars, not the British. You've been reading too much of the anti-British, propagandised, fictional version of the Opium Wars that dominates today.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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Like ridding the world of Nazism, much Communism and Napoleonism; spreading democracy and freedom of speech; and founding Canada?



The Chinese were the wrong'uns in the Opium Wars, not the British. You've been reading too much of the anti-British, propagandised, fictional version of the Opium Wars that dominates today.

Maybe the Fentanyl crisis is their answer to your opium.
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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Maybe the Fentanyl crisis is their answer to your opium.

China didn't want to buy British opium that would have ended being used by its people - it was busy buying hundreds of tons of Indian opium for its people to use.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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China didn't want to buy British opium that would have ended being used by its people - it was busy buying hundreds of tons of Indian opium for its people to use.

Don't try to convince me. Convince those 1.3 billion Chinese, poised to become the most powerful people on the planet, who hate your pommy asses.
 

Murphy

Executive Branch Member
Apr 12, 2013
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Ontario
Like ridding the world of Nazism, much Communism and Napoleonism; spreading democracy and freedom of speech; and founding Canada?

I wonder who's been writing your history? Obviously, no one with knowledge of it. Britain was almost consumed by all three. You were rescued. Like you always are. You are not capable of looking after yourselves and that is why your DNA blueprint is being overwritten. As a people, you're a wreck.

I know that you are in the denial phase of this. Lying will not change anyone's mind.

The Chinese were the wrong'uns in the Opium Wars, not the British. You've been reading too much of the anti-British, propagandised, fictional version of the Opium Wars that dominates today.

No, the British stuck their noses into something which was none of their concern. What were you doing so far from home? Stealing. Looting. Taking whatever you could lay your hands on. When things weren't going your way, you decided to throw a fit. How did that work out for you? :lol:

It's unbelievable what they taught you in your schools.

Your entire culture is built on lies.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
43
48
Red Deer AB
Like ridding the world of Nazism, much Communism and Napoleonism; spreading democracy and freedom of speech; and founding Canada?

The Chinese were the wrong'uns in the Opium Wars, not the British. You've been reading too much of the anti-British, propagandised, fictional version of the Opium Wars that dominates today.
You are not spreading freedom of speech for anybody but yourselves. That is what you do when carving out an empire that the sun never sets on. When you operate in the 20th century using 15th century methods the odds are very high it is now less than being the best method available.

When you say 'founding' that indicates where left the nest at some point. That isn't the case at all, when the UK says 'jump' we say 'how high?'. Making it appear like we have an an independent voice is a bit of a sham is it it not?? We have certain friends that we seem to be willing to defend not matter how immoral their behavior is.


I haven't been reading anything other than the way the UK publishes their headlines that are intended for public consumption and their is a high tendency to be less than fully honest with the public. That is not a trait that has recently been acquired so that means it has a history of being used to deceive the public as they would not support the 'King' going off on wars to help his friends get richer than they already are, material wealth is what the EU Royals are all about.
Let's be a bit clear about the past, the royals had access to all sorts of 'drugs' that were not available to the general public. The only version of the (original) opium wars is what the UK has published. How about some history of drug use in the 'elite' of not only the UK but the rest of Europe as well. I'm quite sure that is today's tactics were used back then there would be more 'False Flags' used as a scare tactic to get support from 'the surfs'. By stating there is no hidden history you are stating an opinion rather than a fact. The 2 page pdf points to the Royals using drugs, a bit more digging will show is was more common than not. About the same path that tobacco once it was introduced to the Royals back in the motherland.


I have no idea if there are documents to support my opinion or not.This too me about 3 seconds to find and to try and promote the EU weren't as party hungry as any Viking is bullshit. What they did do is put on a false front for the surfs and the Vikings never bothered with any deception.
http://www.larouchepub.com/eiw/publ...0910_047-yes_the_british_royals_did_use_d.pdf



10 seconds The last bit seem to be describing the Royals as acting like the same drug dealers from the UK that have an interest in the heroin in Afghanistan. If it was suppressed earlier and the RCC would have been punishing the flock rather than the leaders of the countries. This is a better history of opium use by the Royals in Europe. Long before China was getting boatloads of the stuff thanks to the UK. The same tactics are in use today when dealing with other nations based current trends. Perhaps your history books need a rewrite.



Drugs through time: Drugs and the laws that control them through history | TalkingDrugs
Drugs Through Time: 1500-1799


1500s
In the 16th century, the Mughal empire in India plays host to the world’s first recorded culture of recreational opium use- taking drugs for leisure and pleasure. Opium is exported to other Asian states, with production organised under a government monopoly.
1527
The renaissance physician and alchemist Paracelsus reintroduces opium into Europe in the form of Laudanum, a tincture of opium in an alcohol solution. During the high Middle Ages, the Inquisition had apparently succeeded in suppressing the use of this drug, for it largely disappears from the cultural record. As a substance signified as 'oriental', opium was viewed by the Inquisition as bearing the taint of heresy. Perhaps its use was driven underground. In any event, with the advent of the renaissance it is reinstated into European medical literature, and is referred to in the works of Shakespeare and Spenser.
1606
English trading ships chartered by Queen Elizabeth commence the importation of Indian Opium into the UK.
1625-1680
Thomas Sydenham, amongst the most celebrated of early English medical practitioners, receives the epithet 'opiophilos' or 'lover of opium' owing to his enthusiastic therapeutic deployment of the drug. 'Among the remedies which it has pleased the Almighty God to give to man to relieve his sufferings,' wrote Sydenham, 'none is so universal and efficacious as opium.' The use of his recipe for laudanum would persist into the 19th century.
1715
The British East India Company (‘EIC’) is granted trading rights and opens its first ‘factory’ (an agency or trading station) at Canton on the south coast of China. It must be kept in mind that this was a company chartered by the British crown, and could (and did) command armies and warships to enforce its will.




https://www.opioids.com/timeline/

  • [SIZE=-1]
    [*]c.1300 B.C.
    In the capital city of Thebes, Egyptians begin cultivation of opium thebaicum, grown in their famous poppy fields. The opium trade flourishes during the reign of Thutmose IV, Akhenaton and King Tutankhamen. The trade route included the Phoenicians and Minoans who move the profitable item across the Mediterranean Sea into Greece, Carthage, and Europe.
    [*]c.1100 B.C.
    On the island of Cyprus, the "Peoples of the Sea" craft surgical-quality culling knives to harvest opium, which they would cultivate, trade and smoke before the fall of Troy.
    [*]c. 460 B.C.
    Hippocrates, "the father of medicine", dismisses the magical attributes of opium but acknowledges its usefulness as a narcotic and styptic in treating internal diseases, diseases of women and epidemics.
    [*]330 B.C.
    Alexander the Great introduces opium to the people of Persia and India.
    [*]A.D. 400
    Opium thebaicum, from the Egyptian fields at Thebes, is first introduced to China by Arab traders.
    [*]1020
    Avicenna of Persia teaches that opium is "the most powerful of stupefacients."
    [*]A.D. 1200
    Ancient Indian medical treatises The Shodal Gadanigrah and Sharangdhar Samahita describe the use of opium for diarrhoea and sexual debility. The Dhanvantri Nighantu also describes the medical properties of opium.
    [*]1300s
    Opium disappears for two hundred years from European historical record. Opium had become a taboo subject for those in circles of learning during the Holy Inquisition. In the eyes of the Inquisition, anything from the East was linked to the Devil.[/SIZE]
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Don't try to convince me. Convince those 1.3 billion Chinese, poised to become the most powerful people on the planet, who hate your pommy asses.

I don't need to try and convince anyone. I, and proper historians, know what the true history is - that the Chinese were to blame for the Opium Wars - and that's all that matters.

Long before China was getting boatloads of the stuff thanks to the UK.

The Chinese were getting boatloads of opium - of their own accord - from India. Contrary to popular belief, the Chinese weren't interested in stopping their people from getting hold of, and taking, opium. They were quite happy for their people to get high on the stuff - but they preferred to get their opium from India.



The 1840-42 Anglo-Chinese war (the so-called “Opium War”) is almost universally believed to have been triggered by British imperial rapacity and determination to sell more and more opium into China. That belief is mistaken. The British went to war because of Chinese military threats to defenseless British civilians, including women and children; because China refused to negotiate on terms of diplomatic equality and because China refused to open more ports than Canton to trade, not just with Britain but with everybody. The belief about British “guilt” came later, as part of China’s long catalogue of alleged Western “exploitation and aggression.”

Center for European Studies - Harvard University