Timeless Rythmnz

Timeless Rythmnz That Liberty and Equality Might Yet Reign 🇺🇬—Looking Back, Facing Forward

29/04/2026

SOUTH AFRICANS TARGETING KIDS OF IMMIGRANTS

This is what happens when your “development” isn’t rooted in your own culture and traditions. You call it progress, but it’s nothing more than a copy-and-paste system loaded with baggage that eventually blows up in your face.

Now look — a society confused about its own identity, not knowing where it comes from or what it actually stands for. Stuck in limbo, disconnected, lost.

There’s anger, there’s frustration, there’s a desire to fight — but no clarity, no direction, no real target. So instead of confronting the real issues, some turn on their own African brothers and sisters. Not because they’re the problem, but because they’re easier targets.

That’s not strength. That’s misdirected anger.

"There will be a ton of teens looking at ways to get unregulated ci******es filled with all kinds of crap from the black...
25/04/2026

"There will be a ton of teens looking at ways to get unregulated ci******es filled with all kinds of crap from the black market. Prohibition didn't work well in the US in the 1920s." 🤦‍♀️

25/04/2026
20/04/2026

When European colonizers realized that revolutions were getting stronger in Africa, they engineered Black liberation heroes to be their new colonial puppets.

The ones that didn't behave were killed. With no repercussions.

Same thing happened in South Africa. Nelson Mandela became a tool, Chris Hani & Steve Biko were killed. Robert Sobukwe was neutralized.

Colonialism didn't end. It just got dark-skinned managers to distract the masses. They use aide and social welfare to pacify & neutralize those who are angry.

The continent is still being looted like crazy. Africa is poorer than ever. Black puppet leaders are given big money to shut them up & get them to behave.

In places like Sudan & the DRC, puppet leaders are regularly summoned to the USA or Europe to negotiate fake peacetalks, while the looting continues unabated.

Where policies become too problematic, a rise of "illegal mining" occurs, with those artisanal miners still supplying the resources to the same big colonial mining bosses, via midpoints like the UAE.

It's a reminder that African kings sold most of the slaves, & gifted colonizers with lots of land. Europeans didn't kidnap most ppl into slavery. And most land wasn't fought for in the normal sense of conquest.

Africans do not have any real leaders. And when some do emerge, the nations get sanctioned, the leaders are erroneously labelled as tyrant dictators, or the leaders get assassinated.

Most Africans are mentally asleep. They are zombies. They just want booze, free houses, free healthcare, useless schooling, music, dance, football & to stay away from difficult conversations & hard work. They get very aggressive when you try to wake them up.

End.

This was Bunyoro Kitara Kingdom in Western Uganda. The effect of slavery is that when they colonised Africa, the people ...
20/04/2026

This was Bunyoro Kitara Kingdom in Western Uganda. The effect of slavery is that when they colonised Africa, the people they took as slaves were the talented ones, the strong, the skilled ones, the leaders, and the fighters. Most of these died in the ocean.

In Bunyoro and Western Uganda, those that weren't enslaved had their hands amputated.

My grandfather narrated to me explaining in detail how the Hoes that were brought by colonialists looked like and how the hoes that were produced by African smiths looked like. And for the Colonial products to become relevant, blacksmiths were amputated.

Truth be told, you fear an organized Africa, that's why you constantly empower dictators and the worst leaders while you stage assassinations of the capable leaders.

The biggest problem we have in Africa is the presence of collaborators. Weak selfish elements who like to be gifted.

PETER KRIEL: Dominator culture has tried to keep us all afraid, to make us choose safety instead of risk, sameness inste...
15/04/2026

PETER KRIEL: Dominator culture has tried to keep us all afraid, to make us choose safety instead of risk, sameness instead of diversity.

South Korean senior minister Park Hong-keun responded sharply to Israel, telling them to stop portraying themselves as v...
13/04/2026

South Korean senior minister Park Hong-keun responded sharply to Israel, telling them to stop portraying themselves as victims.

The comments follow remarks by South Korean President Lee Jae-myung, who compared events in the Middle East to the Holocaust, a statement that prompted a strong reaction from Israel, which demanded an apology.

Israel’s victim‑centered framing has evolved since 1948 from a narrative of existential survival to a broader justification for repeated military campaigns across the Middle East. In the state’s early years, leaders like David Ben‑Gurion described the nation as “fighting for our very lives,” establishing a foundation of perpetual vulnerability. By 1967 and 1973, this framing deepened as officials such as Levi Eshkol warned that Israel’s “existence hung by a thread,” reinforcing the idea that preemptive or large‑scale responses were necessary acts of defense. As conflicts shifted to Lebanon and Gaza, the rhetoric adapted: Menachem Begin insisted that “no nation can tolerate attacks on its citizens,” and Benjamin Netanyahu repeatedly argued that “no country would tolerate rockets on its cities.” Across decades, this narrative has consistently positioned Israel as reacting to danger rather than initiating conflict, using historical trauma and the language of self‑defense to legitimize military action.

The approach has helped secure international sympathy and Western support, especially from the U.S., by emphasizing existential danger over political ambition.

In the comments is an outline how this framing evolved across major conflicts—from the Six‑Day War to the current Gaza War

He helped build hip-hop, shape its values, and expand its sound globally.Afrika Bambaataa is known for:Helping found hip...
11/04/2026

He helped build hip-hop, shape its values, and expand its sound globally.

Afrika Bambaataa is known for:
Helping found hip-hop culture – He’s one of the key pioneers (alongside DJ Kool Herc and Grandmaster Flash) who shaped hip-hop into more than music — including DJing, MCing, breakdancing, and graffiti.
Creating a global movement – Through the Universal Zulu Nation, he promoted peace, unity, and knowledge, helping turn street/gang culture into a creative and positive force.
Revolutionizing sound – His track Planet Rock helped pioneer the electro-funk style by blending hip-hop with electronic music, influencing genres like techno and dance music.
Spreading hip-hop worldwide – He was among the first to take hip-hop beyond the Bronx, helping it grow into a global culture.
Promoting conscious thinking – He pushed messages of knowledge, Afrocentric identity, and social awareness within hip-hop.

The Narrative guiding Israel-Iran WarFrom Cyrus the Great to the displacement of Palestinians, each generation interpret...
10/04/2026

The Narrative guiding Israel-Iran War

From Cyrus the Great to the displacement of Palestinians, each generation interprets history differently. Iran emphasizes support for Palestinians and opposition to Israel’s expanion. Israel emphasizes historical claims and security needs over their territory with expansion as a means to an end.
These narratives aren’t just stories — they justify policies, military actions, and alliances on both sides. What started as land disputes has become a narrative making the conflict more resistant to resolution.

Can two nations reconcile when their identities are intertwined with centuries of perceived injustice and historical narratives?

WHAT STARTED AS LOCAL CONFLICTS IN GAZA AND LEBANON BECAME REGIONAL POWER GAMES.Palestinian and Lebanese resistance move...
09/04/2026

WHAT STARTED AS LOCAL CONFLICTS IN GAZA AND LEBANON BECAME REGIONAL POWER GAMES.

Palestinian and Lebanese resistance movements initially emerged from displacement and survival. But after 1979, Iran’s support transformed these local struggles into regional instruments. Training, funding, and ideology turned small groups into formidable opponents of Israel, capable of striking far beyond their homes.

Israel’s response — military campaigns, blockades, and intelligence operations — intensified the cycle. What began as disputes over land and homes evolved into decades-long proxy conflicts, with civilians repeatedly caught in the crossfire.

When local suffering becomes a tool for regional agendas, can peace ever be negotiated, or is history destined to repeat its tragedies?

TODAY: Lebanon began a period of national mourning on Thursday, a day after Israeli forces unleashed airstrikes across the country in the deadliest day of the war with the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah. At least 203 people were killed and 1,000 others wounded. [New York Times Report]

The War That Changed Everything (1948) As We Enjoy the Cease Fire, Let's look back at what started all this chaos.In May...
09/04/2026

The War That Changed Everything (1948)

As We Enjoy the Cease Fire, Let's look back at what started all this chaos.

In May 1948, a new state was declared — Israel. For Jews around the world, it was the realization of a long-awaited homeland after centuries of exile and persecution.
But for the people already living on that land (Palestinians), it was the beginning of something else entirely.

Almost immediately, neighboring Arab states — Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon — moved in. Not just out of ambition, but out of fear: fear of losing Palestine, fear of a shifting regional balance, fear that displacement would spread beyond borders.

Inside the land itself, the situation was already unfolding. Villages had emptied. Some fled the fighting. Others were forced out as control shifted from one side to another.

Families left thinking they would return in days… but days became years, and years became generations.

But with time, Israel had not only survived — it had expanded beyond the original UN partition lines. And over 700,000 Palestinians were now refugees, scattered across Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, and beyond.

For Israelis, 1948 became a story of independence and survival against overwhelming odds.
For Palestinians, it became “the catastrophe” — the moment everything was lost.
Same war.
Two completely different memories.

if an event is remembered as both independence and catastrophe, how do you ever build a shared future from it?

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