Slave Nations
under British
Monarchs
Until
this
day,
thirty
(30)
countries
of
the
world
are
still
under
the
servitude
of
the
British
monarchs,
currently
controlled
by
the
reigning
Queen
Elizabeth
II,
who
is
deemed
the
"Fount
of
Justice,
the
Fount
of
Honour
and
the
source
of
all
Dignities.
She
holds
Divine
Status
and
by
law
it
is
recognized
that
she
"can
do
no
wrong"
(probably
fallen
from
the
Heaven).
Queen
Elizabeth
II
is
Commander-in
Chief
of
the
British
Armed
Forces
and
the
Supreme
Governor
of
the
established
Church
of
England,
parallel
in
status
to
the
Pope
of
the
Roman
Catholic
Church.
The
descendants
of
William
the
Bastard
–
monarchs
of
the
United
Kingdom
have
a
vast
experience
of
over
thousand
years
in
warfare,
invasions
and
conquests;
they
defeated immense nations all over the globe.
The
British
monarchs
betrayed
the
nations
of
the
world
in
the
name
of
‘trade’,
established
the
joint
stock
companies
registered
in
London
for
conquest.
The
major
crime
of
conquest
began
during
the
days
of
Queen
Elizabeth
I
(1558
-
1603),
who
for
the
first
time
invited
the
business
community
of
England
to
invest
in
the
projects
“colonization,
loot
and
plunder”
of
the
entire
humanity.
Subsequently,
many
individuals
and
the
Joint
Stock
Companies
jumped
into
the field.
On
May
1,
1876
Queen
Victoria
was
proclaimed
as
Empress
of
India.
Her
reign
of
63
years
and
seven
months
is
known
as
the
Victorian
Era.
It
was
an
era
of
conquest,
expansion,
smuggling,
drug
trafficking,
massacres
and
murders.
To
control
the
defeated
populations,
‘famines’
were
created
to suppress easily the defeated peoples.
It
was
the
Victorian
Era,
when
the
British
authorities
in
India
adopted
policies
to
cripple
and
maim
the
Indian
population
through
series
of
famines.
Farmers
were
beaten
and
their
stocks
were
confiscated.
As
a
result,
one
after
another
crops
were
failed
and
the
economy
and
agriculture
of
India
collapsed.
In
Bihar,
Orissa
and
Ganjam
districts
of
Madras
over
one
million
Indians
died
of
starvation
during
1860-61.
Again
during
the
Victorian
Era,
in
1865,-five
million
more
Indians
died
of
starvation
in
Orissa,
Bihar,
Bareilly
and
Madras.
Again
during
the
reign
of
Queen
Victoria
in
between
1876-78,
a
Great
Famine
was
created
by
the
British
authorities,
causing
death
of
over
ten
million
people
with
a
portion
of
related
epidemics.
During
1896-97,
when
Queen
Victoria
was
celebrating
her
Diamond
Jubilee,
around
five
million
Indians
were
starved to death in Central India.
It
was
the
Victorian
Era,
when
the
Queen
Victoria
emerged
as
the
greatest
smuggler
and
drug
trafficker.
She
did
this
dirty
job
through
the
British
East
India
Company.
Opium
was
smuggled
to
China
on
a
large
scale,
creating
immense
health
problems
for
the
Chinese
people
and
its
army.
After
two
Opium
Wars,
fought
in
between
1839
to
1842
and
1856
to
1860,
the
British
forces
decisively
defeated
half
a
million
forces
of
China.
Finally
the
Qing
emperor
of
China
was
forced
to
legalize
the
sale
of
opium,
surrendered
15
major
ports
of
China
to
Britain
along
with
Hong
Kong
and
Kowloon
in
indemnity.
It
was
the
Victorian
era,
when
it
was
decided
for
the
genocide
of
the
Catholic
population
of
Ireland
by
way
of
‘famine’
in
a
similar
method
applied
in
India.
Subsequently,
in
between
1845
and
1852
one-third
Irish
population
died
of
Great
Famine
and
one
third
populations
emigrated
from
Ireland
to
other parts of the world to save their lives
Quis ut aliquip est proident lorem
est proident