OROMIA DIGEST History The Reptilian Mind of Delusional Prosperity Party and the Demise of the Abyssinian Empire: 1

The Reptilian Mind of Delusional Prosperity Party and the Demise of the Abyssinian Empire: 1

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The Reptilian Mind of the assimilates of sadist Prosperity Party committing double crimes leads to the demise of the Predatory Settler Colonial Abyssinian Empire from within.

The Horn of Africa:The Home of Cushits

For the vast majority of the Horn of Africa’s indigenous people, Cushtic, Nilotic, and Omotic cultural families, the struggle for liberation from settler colonial Habsha’s (Amhara and Tigre mainly) cultural logic of elimination, assimilation, land-grabbing , Slavery, land-grabbing, Gafol Sytem, banditry, etc, have been spanning over millennia.

If we at least trust the chronicle scribes of Ezana that written century later as living Person independent of his identity the episode was on African soil we read that he

was converted to the Greek version of Christianity by Ferumentius, accidentally captured Byzantine monks of Tyre in the 4th century AD and became his chancellor. But it was the arrival of the Nine Byzantine monks circa 500 AD with . Greek version of the Christian Bible who translated it into the local Ge’ez language, and established monasteries. Soon the court had became Christian a cathedral was constructed.

Beginning in the third century BC, the Greek translation of the oldest collection of North West Asian folklore written in Hebrew Torah the word “Kush” was translated in the Septuagaint (70 translators), Greek version of the Christian Bible into the word “Ethiopia.

Thus if at all it is important it is KUSH=ETHIOPIA NOT SEM-OR HABESHAS- THE SELF DENIERS who claimed that the blood of the of TRIBE OF JUDHA running through their blood vessels without a slightest shame. The fact has been they can not even trace their grad father even their father in earnest let alone ca. 4000 km away to the North West Asia, Jerusalem.

https://oromiadigest.com/the-ethiopia-ascribed-by-debteras-has-been-the-license-of-habesha-shiftas-shums-trademark/

The Habesha immigrants settled in the Horn of Africa, thus understanding the binary narrative and mindset of settler colonial Habesha ‘s or Abyssinian the off springs of divers invaders analog to their European mentors weapon providers and politic gauds gards expansions in various indigenous communities in the Horn of Africa is very crucial.

By any means the prey of this article is not the downtrodden masses of the Habesha people settled in the horn of Africa but the tiny upper layers of semi illiterate local warlords and their cohesive circles. The beneficiaries by the name of the people from the binary narratives and the myth and legend that departs from Ezana in the 4th century AD to the present Abiy Ahmed.

The arrival of Neft (Gun) enabled village gangs to establish the predatory empire

It has be the arrival Neft ( Arabic loan word for gun) independent of time and types of guns and thier efficiency that fall at the hands of the cruelest of all Habesha gangs from Ezana to Abiy.

It was the provision of guns without conditions and limits by European ad Americans and Russians that enabled fanatic militia hordes, the worst beasts blessed with their debteras, by mimicking the Crusaders and relentless invasions and military conquest of the indigenous people of the Horn of Africa the entire south to “Habesha proper.” Ultimately that led to the establishment of the settler colonial empires (Neftegna) system impose cultural hegemonic assimilation policies.

It was promoted with creole Amharic languages ,and the third transnational of Hebrew Torah of translated into the Greek version of “Orthodox Christianity” and from Greek and later on from Arabic to the local language, similar to Mengistu’s version of Soviets socialism and maintain her status quo to the contemporary.

A significant number if not all among the Debtras m demonstrably lack a deep, scriptural understanding of the very Bible they claim to represent. This profound disconnect is maintained without the slightest shame, embodying a blend of palpable hypocrisy and entrenched chauvinism.

Such an attitude, deeply rooted in the historical and cultural fabric of the Abyssinia Debtras in the Horn of Africa. It becomes even more problematic when viewed through the lens of their historical ties to slave holders and traders, adding a deeply unsettling layer to their proclaimed spiritual authority.

The irony is stark in the Abyssinian Debteras It is not only within their religious hierarchy but extending to their historical complicity in the darker chapters of the empire in the Horn of Africa. Their influence, like insidious tendrils, permeates every stratum of societal affairs, from political maneuvering to daily communal life.

Remarkably unproductive, they shun honest labor, existing instead as a parasitic class that, “like a cow,” grazes ceaselessly on the meager sustenance of the downtrodden masses, perpetuating their own comfort at the expense of widespread suffering masses the prey upon.

Hence the exodus from Habesha proper toward the south by the demographic displacement of populations indigenous through settlement throughout the empire’s history turned the policy of all gangs, warlords, military junta or rebels who catapulted up to the political power within the last one a half century.

Any Abyssinian Chieftain that triumphed can be “King or even King of Kings”

One of the biggest challenges for the foreigners and their mistakes, who believe to know the history of Abyssinian from books is indeed fictitious, legend and myth of North East Asia in the name of “Religion” the neither know, nor understand the oldest North west Asian folklore nevertheless translated on face value and effective solid their lies as “exceptional” to the world to the present.

As a result any Abyssinia local out law chieftain has been is a self denier. One who triumphed butchering his rival can claim what ever title he wish like Idi Amin Dada of Uganda for instance the outlaw the cruelest of all Chieftains Kasa of Gonder renamed to “King Tewodros” a son of Kosso vendor, Teferi “Mekonen” King of King Tribe Judah. a betray and self denier just to name one among all chieftains.

Thus one must not wonder when one comes across double or single prefix, “King of Kings, King, Atse etc .like Teferi Mekonnen in 20 century. That is the chronic paranoia of Habesha Upper tiny layer diseases that one must know in every branch. A Debtera who don’t know the dictionary definition of history ca be a history teacher. A 10th class drop out after 6 to one years fancy course training can be a teacher of any subject.

In fact the Abyssinia warlords have been super allergic to the education of the people by default . Most of them were illiterate or semi-illiterates. Thus, if one want to understated them one don’t need extra radar, just listen to them careful and you can easily find out the fact that stands on the opposite side of what they say. the chronic disease departed fro the chieftain Ezana, tahat the scribes attested the Prefix “King of Aksum” from vacuum from 4th century hence forth hold true throughout her history to the era, we know that itself was written a century later not an eye witness account.

Ezana “Lapdog” of Greco-Roman Byzantine Empire

Ezana adopted the Greco-Roman Byzantine and cultural norms military support and enhanced political legitimacy and collaboration against what they call common enemies and ambitions of Expansion. The powerful Greco-Roman Byzantine Empire treated the small and poor convert in Africa Ezana as its “lapdog.”

Ezana deployed Christianity as the best weapon to establish a Gafol system the Byzantine monks slaves converted brought an alien world view of North West Asian old collection of folklore written in Hebrew language translated to Greek.

The world view based on the rule of patriarchy, King, male chauvinism, the birth of tyranny and legitimization that was diametrically opposite to the indigenous inclusion egalitarian system of the Africa people.

Christianity a Mother of Gafol System

The Christianity of Habesha/ Abyssinian is that of the vulgar version of the the script . nevertheless they relentless boast as the owe “The only truth versions of the words of God” without slightest knowledge of the Book and shame of it. It was utilized to forced conversion, assimilation by commuting physical and cultural genocides and expansion toward the south. The tyrant of Aksum established the predatory-prey relation with the people he invaded called the Gafol (collection of booties, tributes) system of by the settler colonists.

The Habesha Debteras vulgar Christianity and Abyssinian chieftains or as they wish to called “Kings” empire-building are indeed two sides of the same coin for more than one and half millennium to the present with insignificant gap of 17 years during the rule of naked military dictator of Mengistu Haile Mariam.

The Abyssinian empire expanding their political influence and territorial control over diverse populations, Habesha culture and institutions spread, through forced assimilation, conquest, settlement, land grabbing, billeting, eviction, genocides and ethnocides.

Thus the struggle the people has been fundamentally intertwined with dismantling the deeply entrench historical power structures, particularly the Gafol system associated with settler colonial Habesha immigrants of southwest Asia who gradually add mixed with indigenous people of the Horn of Africa with whom they settled.

The system, which persisted for over millenniums concentrated land ownership and economic power in the hands of a select few, leaving the majority of the population in a state of dependency and vulnerability.

This multifaceted conflict involved not only challenging political dominance but also dismantling a feudal-serf system that perpetuated vast inequalities and limited opportunities for generations. That is the purpose of what the current war criminal power holders dream. Most importantly to wipe out Oromia and Oromoness from the mind and from there ancestral land that lead them sleepless and left no stone unturned.

These is an open secret that they dream to reverse history and to go back to thee darkest eras of warlords the the predators settler colonial gafol system systems to the burden of the down trodden masses of the population. Their main goal is “Land appropriation and Oromia and the Oromo people has been the primary Targeted Terra since the invention of the predatory settler colonial Abyssinia empire.

That is all about the fancy name of the party of sadists called prosperity, a collection of criminals from within and the residues of the offspring’s of settler colonials fled out of the empire since the 1970s and reproduced in a refuge land via seas and ocean who joined the party. Breaking free from this structure and the system requires total decolonization fundamental shift in social and economic relations and to defend land from those who benefited from the existing order, and want to continue.

The Birth of Settler Colonial Abyssinian Empire

The Scramble for Africa irrevocably altered the continent’s destiny, marking a brutal shift in power dynamics that reverberated across the globe. European colonizers, driven by insatiable desires for resources and strategic advantage, carved up Africa with callous disregard for existing borders, cultures, and societies.

This period witnessed a horrifying confluence of invasion, genocide, slavery, and relentless exploitation, fundamentally reshaping the African landscape and leaving deep scars that continue to influence the continent today.

The legacy of this era extends far beyond geographical boundaries, influencing global political and economic structures and serving as a stark reminder of the enduring consequences of unchecked imperial ambition.

The Scramble for Africa irrevocably altered the continent’s destiny, marking a brutal shift in power dynamics that reverberated across the globe. European colonizers, driven by insatiable desires for resources and strategic advantage, carved up Africa with callous disregard for existing borders, cultures, and societies.

This period witnessed a horrifying confluence of invasion, genocide, slavery, and relentless exploitation, fundamentally reshaping the African landscape and leaving deep scars that continue to impact the continent today.

The legacy of this era extends far beyond geographical boundaries, influencing global political and economic structures and serving as a stark reminder of the enduring consequences of unchecked imperial ambition

The rise of Abyssinia’s empire in the late 19th century was significantly influenced by European colonialism. Abyssinian warlords, empowered by access to European firearms and ammunition, effectively used this strength to expand their territory dramatically.

European powers, fighting for influence in the region, inadvertently fueled this expansion by supplying these warlords, treating Abyssinia as a pawn in their geopolitical games. This influx of weaponry allowed Abyssinia to conquer and incorporate territories far exceeding its original size and wealth.

https://bilisummaa.com/settler-colonial-neftenga-safaris-abyssinia-is-structural-not-an-event/

17-Year Reign of Naked dictator: Mengistu and the Derg

Mengistu Haile Mariam, a military colonel, rose to power in Ethiopia through a turbulent period of revolution. While not the son of Leonid Brezhnev, as the prompt incorrectly states, Mengistu seized control amidst a student uprising, hijacking the movement and turning it into a brutal dictatorship.

The seeds of Mengistu’s reign were sown in the waning days of Emperor Haile Selassie’s rule. Growing discontent with the feudal system, coupled with a devastating famine in the early 1970s, made fertile ground for revolution.

In 1974, a group of junior military officers, known as the Derg (Amharic for “committee”), seized consolidate power. He abruptly proclaimed a socialist state, in Stalin style , eliminating charismatic general of high-bar (the under dog up in political ladder), once he secured Kalashnikov that granted him unchecked authority. This ushered in a 17-year reign characterized by violence and oppression, a rule enforced by the barrel of a gun.

The Red Terror: A Nation Drenched in Blood

Mengistu, a ruthless and ambitious officer, quickly rose through the ranks of the Derg, solidifying his control through a campaign of brutal purges. He orchestrated the execution of his rivals and ordered the systematic elimination of anyone regarded as a threat to his rule.

The “Red Terror,” a period of intense political repression, saw the mass arrest, torture, and execution of thousands of Ethiopians. Opposition groups, including students, intellectuals, and even ordinary citizens, were targeted, their bodies often left in the streets as a chilling reminder of the regime’s power.

The Famine of the 1980s: A Tragedy of Epic Proportions

Perhaps the most devastating result of Mengistu’s rule was the famine of the mid-1980s. While drought played a major role, the regime’s policies, including forced collectivization, prioritization of military spending over food security, and the deliberate obstruction of aid delivery to rebel-held regions, exacerbated the crisis. Millions perished from starvation and disease, and the Derg was widely criticized for its callous indifference to the suffering of its people.

War and Rebellion: A Nation in Constant Conflict

Mengistu’s regime was constantly embroiled in armed conflict. Separatist movements in Eritrea and Tigray, fueled by ethnic tensions and resentment of the central government, waged a protracted struggle for independence.

The Derg responded with brutal military campaigns, resulting in countless casualties and further destabilizing the nation. The costly and ultimately untenable wars drained the country’s resources and contributed to the economic collapse that would ultimately lead to the regime’s downfall.

The Fall of the Derg and the Legacy of Mengistu

By the late 1980s, the Derg was crumbling. The Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF) and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) made significant gains, pushing the regime closer to collapse. In 1991, as rebel forces closed in on the capital, Mengistu fled Ethiopia, seeking refuge in Zimbabwe where he is still to this day.

The legacy of Mengistu Haile Mariam and the Derg is part of profound tragedy. The regime left behind a nation scarred by violence, famine, and economic devastation. The wounds of the Red Terror, the forced collectivization, and the devastating famines continue to haunt the people and is still grappling with the consequences of Mengistu’s brutal rule, working to heal the wounds of the past and build a more just and prosperous future.

While the Derg is gone, the lessons learned from this dark chapter in Ethiopian history serve as a stark reminder of the dangers of unchecked power, ideological extremism, and the devastating impact of human suffering is yet continuing with current paranoia, war criminal by the cave of TPLF-Abiy Ahmed.

28 Years of TPLF- EPRDF Tyrannic Rule (Derge Chapter Two)

The EPRDF, led by the TPLF, came to power in 1991 after overthrowing the Derg regime, which had ruled Ethiopia with an iron fist. The new government promised a break from the authoritarian past, opening up in an era of ethnic federalism and economic liberalization theory.

Once stabled gradual turned into Derg chapter 2 for 28 years solid, a rule of one-man tyranny prone to human right abuses, indiscriminate killing, eviction, Land grabbing, incarcerations, war crimes, corruption, the lists go on ..

  • Suppression of Dissent:
  • The government employed various tactics to silence opposition, including restrictions on freedom of speech, assembly, and the press. Political opponents, journalists, and activists faced harassment, imprisonment, and even extrajudicial killings.

  • The chillingly effective blueprint of total information control, perfected by regimes like Stalin’s Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, has found its enduring echo in the historical landscape of the Abyssinian Empire. Across centuries, from the rise of nascent kingdoms to the consolidation of the modern Ethiopian state, the calculated manipulation of narratives and the suppression of dissenting voices stood as indispensable tools, often wielded with the same strategic imperative as the very guns that secured territorial dominance.

  • For warlords in Abyssinia, establishing legitimacy and fostering loyalty was never solely achievable through military might; it required controlling the popular imagination, shaping perceptions of their right to rule, and demonizing rivals. This meant commanding the flow of information—whether through imperial decrees read in village squares, the pronouncements of religious leaders, or the carefully curated praise sung by court poets.

  • As technology advanced, so too did the methods, transitioning from ancient oral traditions and royal proclamations to the powerful reach of radio broadcasts and, eventually, contemporary digital platforms. Yet, the underlying objective remained constant: to monopolize truth, dictate public opinion, and ensure unwavering obedience.

  • Indeed, the legacy of this “information warfare” persists to the very days, with contemporary power-holders still recognizing that control over media—and by extension, the minds of the populace—is as vital to their survival and sway as the strength of their armed forces. The recipe for enduring power in Abyssinia, next to the gun, has always included the masterful manipulation of the message

  • Control of the Media:
  • The historical trajectory of Abyssinia’s warlords reveals a striking parallel with the totalitarian regimes of Stalinist Russia and Nazi Germany: the strategic mastery of information control, a practice as vital as the force of the gun itself.
  • In an empire where literacy was limited and communication often relied on word-of-mouth, royal decrees, church pronouncements, and the narratives propagated by bards and messengers served as the rudimentary yet potent “media” of their time.
  • These formidable figures meticulously crafted their public image, legitimizing their rule through divine right or ancient lineage, while simultaneously demonizing rivals and suppressing any dissenting whispers. Much like their 20th-century counterparts who wielded state-controlled newspapers, radio, and film, Abyssinian strongmen understood that dominating the intellectual landscape was paramount to maintaining their grip on power.
  • They manufactured consent, instilled fear, and cultivated loyalty not just through military might, but through a carefully constructed narrative that shaped public perception and left no room for alternative truths. The gun secured the territory, but the controlled narrative secured the minds, making any rebellion not only physically dangerous but also morally and ideologically untenable.
  • This enduring “recipe” for power, fusing terror with propaganda, has persisted through Abyssinia’s successive eras, and its echoes can be observed in various forms of information manipulation even to the very days, proving that the control of thought remains a cornerstone for those seeking absolute authority.They all exerted tight control over the media landscape, limiting access to independent information and promoting a narrative that favored the ruling party.
  • Ethnic Tensions and Marginalization:
  • While ethnic federalism was introduced with the laudable aim of promoting equality and recognizing diverse identities within the empire, a significant body of criticism maintains that it paradoxically exacerbated ethnic tensions, creating new fault lines even as it sought to resolve old ones.
  • Nowhere is this more evident than in the long-standing plight of the Oromo people. As the largest and historically most populous ethnic group, they have consistently faced accusations of marginalization and discrimination dating back to the very inception of the empire. Indeed, their status as a prime target for political and economic subjugation has been a recurrent theme in the region’s history.
  • Accompanying this systemic marginalization, the control of information and media has historically served as a crucial tool for the ruling elites.
  • Echoing the propagandistic tactics seen in totalitarian regimes like Stalinist Russia or Nazi Germany, the manipulation of public narrative and the suppression of dissenting voices became a standard recipe for Abyssinian warlords. This authoritarian grip on communication, considered next only to military might, has remained a pervasive and deeply entrenched strategy right up to the present day, perpetuating cycles of distrust and reinforcing existing power imbalances.
  • Lack of Accountability:
  • Within the long annals of the Abyssinian Empire, the very concept of holding power to account was conspicuously absent. Rooted in absolute monarchy and regional lordships, the prevailing political culture fostered an environment where rulers, often believed to wield divine right, operated with unchecked impunity.
  • The vocabulary of accountability – terms like redress, legal recourse against the powerful, or judicial punishment for state-sanctioned crimes – simply did not exist in any meaningful, enforceable way. Consequently, no tyrant, no brutal emperor or local strongman, was ever known to be brought before a tribunal, much less an international body akin to the ICC, which was, of course, inconceivable in their era but highlights the enduring lack of a higher court of appeal.
  • This left countless victims and their families utterly alone, forced to bear the weight of atrocities, arbitrary violence, and systemic injustices without any hope of justice, recognition, or closure, their suffering an unacknowledged and unpunished part of history.. The article continues in part 2…

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