I’ve remarked in previous posts about History Debunked’s Simon Webb that when he cites his sources, he’s usually correct. But that’s when he cites he sources. In one his videos a few years ago, he stressed the importance of reading as a indicator of educational attainment and social and economic success. The most successful children, he claimed, came from homes with a lot of books. I’ve heard that before, and I can see the truth in it. A child is most likely to be successful, if they come from homes where literacy is valued and there are books to read. Although obviously there are exceptions. He then said that it wasn’t expensive to build a good library for yourself – you could get many books cheap from secondhand bookshops. This is true, and I’ve done it myself, but the problem is finding a good secondhand bookshop. There are several in Bristol, and one very good one in Cheltenham. But many towns don’t have them. And the problem is that some of the books available there, while good in there time, are now dated. One of the books Webb waved around, which he supposedly got secondhand, and which he recommended to his viewers, was Africa’s Slaves Today. We had a copy donated to us at the Empire and Commonwealth Museum in Bristol. It’s a very good book, but was published in the 1970s. Some of the information contained in it is pertinent to one of the horrible murder cases of the 1990s. This was the tragic death of Victoria Climbie, a little African girl who had been sent by her parents to be brought up in London by an aunt and her partner. The book notes that it was a common practice in Africa to send children to be brought up by wealthier relatives so that they could enjoy their advantages. However, some of these children were treated as slaves by their foster parents. Something similar happened to Climbie, who was hideously physically abused by the aunt and her partner until she eventually died. I believe she was actually on a social services watch list, but was let down by a heavy caseload and an incompetent supervisor. The Mail reported that the social worker didn’t know what to do about the case, and brought it to her supervisor’s attention. The supervisor, a Black woman, didn’t give her any positive advice, just a speech quoting from Maya Angelou while lighting candles. And thanks to these failings, a girl died.
I can’t remember very much about the book, except that now it seems perhaps too optimistic. The book notes that slavery still persists in parts of Africa, but notes that one candidate for Nigerian presidency had facial marking denoting slave origin. They concluded that it showed that prejudices against such people may be weakening. Unfortunately, this has not happened. The book Disposable People, published in the ’90s, noted that the number of slaves around the world had grown. There were now something like 20 million of them. This included enslaved labourers and prostitutes in countries like Brazil and the Golden Triangle area of southeast Asia. Their servitude was often disguised as long-term contracts. The subject has been covered in various TV programmes. One programme on Brazil showed the country’s task force against slavery liberating a group of them. You probably won’t be amazed by the fact that they mostly seemed to be Black. Disposable People also claimed that it was often the traditional slaves, like those in Mauretania, who were the best treated. Africa’s Slaves Today makes the same claim, arguing it was disproportionate and counterproductive to move against these traditional slaves, who were seen more as old family retainers and treated as such, in societies where slavery was slowly dying out. But this has not happened. There are anti-slavery groups in Mauretania still fighting to end slavery there. Mauretania has officially banned it, but this is not always enforced and the Islamic clergy are still very much in favour of it. And, partly thanks to Blair, Obama’s and Sarkozy’s bombing of Libya, slave markets have reopened in the part of that country controlled by the Islamists to sell the Black African migrants, who have travelled there in the hope of passage to Europe. Slave markets have also opened Uganda. None of this, of course, could have been foreseen by the book’s authors, which is why you also need to read more modern works like Sean Stilwell’s Slavery and Slaving in African History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014), which also covers modern slavery and the efforts by former slaves and human rights groups to end it.
Back to History Debunked, you need to check some of what he says carefully, as really you should everything on YouTube. And be especially carefully when he doesn’t tell you where some fact he cites come from.
Tags: 'Disposable People: New Slavery in the Global Economy', Africa's Slave Today, Barack Obama, Blacks, Bombings, Bristol, Cheltenham, Child Abuse, Empire and Commonwealth Museum, History Debunked, Human Rights, Islamism, London, Maya Angelou, Migration, Murder, Nicholas Sarkozy, Police, Sean Stilwell, Simon Webb, Slave Markets, Slavery and Slaving in African History, Slaves, tony blair, Victoria Climbie
December 31, 2022 at 9:54 pm |
You’re right about the decline of second hand book shops. At various times there were a couple of very good ones here in Braintree, though neither of them flourished. There was also an excellent full price shop, family owned, which went under when outlets like Smiths started undercutting them. You sometimes find bargains in charity shops, though more and more they seem to be creaming off the best to dispose of, presumably, through specialist outlets elsewhere. The problem with books is that they occupy space. I have accumulated altogether too many but am loth to part with them. Orwell gives a jaundiced account of keeping a book shop-cum-library in Keep The Aspidistra Flying.
January 1, 2023 at 6:10 pm |
Simon Webb is unfortunately a grifter. He would be right about Blair, Cameron et al.’s bombing of Libya opening up slave markets in that country- in the same way that I largely blame Blair’s Iraq “campaign” for the rise of ISIS.
January 1, 2023 at 7:04 pm |
That was actually me stating that Blair was responsible for mass immigration and the enslavement of Africans. I think Webb just swallowed the old lie that it was Blair who started it all as a deliberate police to change Britain’s ethnic demographics to spite the Tories.
January 2, 2023 at 10:36 am
If what SW said was true about Blair, then why did he prioritise Polish and Lithuanian immigration over Somalis, Nigerians and Pakistanis? If anything it is Boris Johnson who has led to record immigration into this country! To his credit, SW has been very critical of BJ’s policies (probably b/c he himself is something like English Democrat, IE much further right than any Tory MP except perhaps Desmond Swain).
January 2, 2023 at 11:13 am
Quite. And the switch from Black African to eastern European immigration by Blair was attacked as racist by the Groaniad.