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How Did Racism Start?

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    If we think of the start of Scientific Racism as The Bing Bang of Racism, we are not in the position to easily see the beginnings, but we can deduce some ideas of its origins from its effects. Racism to me is very acrimonious suggesting some big confrontation between whites and blacks. For one group to hate another group they should have been in each others presence, first. When and where did this happen? Racism sounds very overwrought, like comparing blacks to apes, suggesting that blacks could mate with apes or that black are less intelligent the whites etc. Why did people ever wrote these ideas down, what was their purpose? Why did we ever need Scientific Racism? I was already looking for Blacks in Europe and found them to be the highest nobility and kings, named blue blood. Blue blood was derived from the blue men as how black Europeans were named during the Middle Ages (500-1500). Those blacks were descendants of the blacks described by F. Sodden ‘Blacks in Antiquity’ (1971) during 800BC to 300 AD. Julius Caesar brought Africans to Europe in 50 BC, who remained and founded their own geographical isolated communities. But the first blacks came already 40.000 years ago to Europe, The Grimaldi Human, and I believe they have existed till far into the nineteen century. The oldest noble families go back to 1100-1200. During this period Saint Maurice was for the first time depicted as a Moor, a Classical African (Kaplan 1996). From 1200-1300, in South Germany and Bohemia, a Black king started to dominate the Adoration scenes, offering gold to Jesus. But really showing that a black king could be a good Christian too, even though he might resemble a Muslim or heathen. By 1500 the black king in Nativity scenes was adopted in the whole of Europe coinciding with the start of the renaissance. So the descendants of blue men became a European noble and royal elite, named blue blood. The many Moors in European art and heraldry are, if you take their development to account, nothing but symbols of blue blood. If they look like ‘servants’ then is the blue blood which ‘serves’ a noble person. The Saint Moritz-burg Treasure (1602) has a golden Moors head, which is a cup to be used at high noble marriages. Next to Moors we find many descriptions of nobles and kings like: Very dark, The Black Boy, black as chimney, chimney sweeper, black, not the white hands, basané. But most of the time we find only white portraits. But there are also black portraits which show more or less dark and black skin. So the missing blacks we are looking for were members of the European nobility, royals and intellectuals: Painters, writers, philosophers like Voltaire and Rousseau. Only in 1770 nations were divided on the base of colour. Racism is then an overwrought liberation ideology to free Europe from black oppression symbolised by a Moor. Racism turned itself against this symbol, the Classical African. These blacks I have defined as ‘a fixed mulatto race of some looking more African, Asian or white, but sharing a black identity; blue blood.’ The confrontation we are looking for is the French Revolution (1789-1795) when the French nobles were murdered, the king beheaded and the nobility abolished. They were killed because of their despotic and cruel oppression of the Europeans who were white and black. My theory is named Blue blood is black blood (1500-1789) and thus explains why we have racism, why we have so many Moors in European art, and were blue blood is derived from. The black European elite made Europe to what it is, but their rule became a obstacle to the learned and prosperous citizens, white and black. The reason we don’t know about these fact is because of state racism today and the showing of fake portraits in museums. Museums were founded to revise history and turn black kings and nobles white. White supremacy is thus based on revisionist, whitened portraits of black Europeans. And this is the beginning of racism. As I have deconstructed racism, we are free to end the practice of racism, because it all happened so long ago.
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