Behind the Bastards - CZM Rewind: Part Two: King Leopold II: The First Modern Bastard
Episode Date: November 23, 2023Original Air Date: June 14th, 2018 Robert is joined again by Andrew Ti (Yo, Is This Racist?) and they continue discuss the evil actions of King Leopold II of Belgium. See omnystudio.com/listener for ...privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest murder mystery in American history.
That's Rob Breiner. Rob called me, so would Edo Brein, and asked me what I knew about this crime.
We'll ask who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president.
Then we'll pull the curtain back on the cover-up. The American people need to know the truth. Listen to Who Killed JFK on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts.
From the team that brought you betrayal.
When Tracy Rick Hill Burns was two years old, her baby brother died.
I was told that Matthew died in an accident.
Her parents told police she had killed him.
I'm Nancy Glass.
Join me for burden of guilt.
The new podcast that tells the true
an incredible story of a toddler who is framed for murder.
Listen to burden of guilt on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
My name is Matt Muroonovich and I've been obsessed by homes that are stigmatized forever
by the brittle crimes that happen inside four walls.
And in my new podcast, Murder Homes, we tell those stories of routine days that start like any
other and turn into wrenching nightmares. You can get 100% ad-free exclusive bonus content, including access to early episodes and
murder homes by subscribing to the IHR True Crime Plus channel today, available exclusively
on Apple Podcasts.
Hey everyone, Robert Evans here.
And you know, it's another holiday week.
This is not a holiday I tend to celebrate, but it is a holiday that our company gives
us off.
And I like my team not having to work.
It's also good to not have to work.
And when we drop episodes on weeks like this, it means you basically have to double up during
the week before or the week after, which causes a lot of stress that isn't necessary when you're
trying to have everyone be able to relax.
So this week we are doing another rewind our infamous and beloved episodes on King Leopold
the Second of Belgium.
So tuck in and enjoy yourselves and enjoy a real terrible story of a real terrible piece
of shit. I hope you all have a good week,
regardless of what you do during it.
Hello friends, I'm Robert Evans and this is Behind the Bastards, the show where we tell you
everything you don't know about the very worst people in history. And this is part two of our
episode on Leopold II, King of Belgium. In part one, we sort of went over how Leopold conned his way
into becoming king of the Congo, how he tricked the locals
into signing over their rights to their land,
and how he conscripted thousands of them
into a slave army.
So now we're going to get back into all that
and the rest of the terrible, terrible story
of the Belgian Congo.
So the first five or so years of the Congo project
are great for Leopold.
He's in total control, or richer than God,
and most of Europe still believes
he's improving a lot of the Congolese people.
But in around 1890, a black journalist named Colonel,
and he's not really a Colonel.
George Washington Williams saw the actual Congo.
So he didn't like take the tour
where you get led through the nice parts of the Congo,
like he went on foot and he got in there, and he saw the fucking nightmare of the Leopold had built. And he wrote
an article called an Open Letter to King Leopold. And it was the first exposé of Leopold's
bloodsoke rubber regime. Williams' document is remarkable because he's basically the only
person up to that point who actually sat down with African people and asked them what was
going on in the Congo.
He retraced a lot of Stan Lee's right along the Congo and actually talked to some of the
people who'd signed treaties giving their land to Leopold.
He learned that a great number of chiefs had been tricked into signing things with magic
tricks.
One of the tricks was that like Stan Lee had bought a bunch of electric batteries in London
and when quote, when attached to the arm under the coat, communicated with a band of ribbon,
which passed over the palm of the white brother's hand.
And when he gave the black brother a cordial grasp of the hand,
the black brother was greatly surprised to find
his white brother was so strong that he nearly knocked him off
his feet.
When the native inquired about the disparity of strength
between himself and his white brother,
he was told that the white man could pull up trees
and perform the most prodigious feats of strength.
So he did a hand buzzer?
He did a hand buzzer and he's like,
if you don't know what electricity is,
you're like, hey, just some sort of Superman.
Yeah, my whole body.
Yeah, let's sign the peace treaty.
Yeah.
Holy shit.
Yeah, another trick was to use a magnifying glass
to light a cigar and then claim
that white people had sun powers and he'll burn up your villa basically like I have power over the sun
and I'll write on fire. Yeah, yeah. God, what a fucking bluff. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
So Williams writes this open letter. He frames it as like presumingly a
pulled doesn't know how terrible things are. He writes about the taking of hands
and like all of the death and
The people who are being like starved death as porters carrying
Well, it's like sort of like modest proposal style like of course you know, but it's an indictment or I think
It is a little bit of a satirical bench. Yeah
And yeah, so Williams publishes this that but unfortunately he dies not long after writing the letter and he upholds able to clamp down on any kind of
Outrage after for a little while. But seven or eight years later, another guy who's an amateur journalist named
Morrell stumbles upon the conspiracy. So he was working as a mid-level employee for a shipping line
that had the contract to handle all shipping into the Congo free state. And so every so often Morrell
would get sent over to Belgium and he would report on what's going into and out of the port of Antwerp.
And so he realizes that the only thing coming out of the Congo into Europe is rubber, just
shitloads of rubber, impossible quantities of it, larger quantities than have been reported.
In fact, and the only thing that's going to be sent out to the Congo rather than trade
are just guns and money.
And a lot more guns than you'd need for any kind of philanthropic enterprise.
Oh man.
Yeah, so.
It's a wire.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Exactly.
So he never actually goes to the Congo, but he just starts digging and he starts talking
to other people who have worked there.
And basically, he starts a newspaper that is focused entirely on exposing King Leopold's
crimes to the world and starts publishing it all throughout Europe. He's active all over the world,
and basically becomes like the Congo equivalent of WikiLeaks.
So all these guys who had worked in Leopold's Congo
and felt bad were right to him and be like,
I saw this, this is what happened.
Here's some documents I managed to smuggle out.
Right, well, it's also like you're like,
yeah, this is what WikiLeaks was supposed to be.
Yeah, this is what it could be.
And this is also why people like that have legitimacy because...
And why conspiracies have legitimacy?
Because guess what?
Because there have been big, complex conspiracies.
Gigantic conspiracies.
So, Morrell starts this newspaper and he winds up creating what's probably the first
modern human rights organization, the Congo Reform Association, which is dedicated to stopping this fucking nightmare
in the Congo.
Um, King Leopold responded by inventing
the first modern international PR campaign.
He bought a shitload of journalists of his own
and he had them all right puff pieces
about how great the Congo actually was.
He would pay for journalists to go on lavish,
carefully controlled trips through the Congo.
He'd give them exclusive interviews when they got back, and he'd use his network of agents to help
them place their articles in newspapers. He got journalists in the New York Times to write,
quote, like, I have witnessed more atrocities in London streets than I have ever seen in
the Congo. He would pay for journalists to give public speeches, and he would lobby politicians.
Leopold's regime was heavily criticized for its widespread use of something called the
Jicote, which is a hippo-hide whip, which was used upon his laborers.
Couragers were often lashed to death by it, and it's possible that like literally several
million people were dealing with this whip.
So Leopold starts catching flack for this, and he decides to distract attention from his
whipping millions of people to death by sending journalists to British colonies and having
them write lurished exposés
of abuses in British colonies.
So his pet reporters would write stories about like
how the British were using whips on prisoners in South Africa
or something terrible they'd done to people in India.
Yeah.
And then, yeah, exactly.
Maybe what about Hillary's style?
That's exactly it.
Like I said, he invented the modern art of being shitty.
Like he's doing what about is him on a massive scale.
Did he have like an antecedent for like the media,
like playing the media, or did he just make all this shit up?
I think he invented this playbook.
Yeah.
Because other people had obviously,
every the media's existed for a while.
Other people have used the media to agree on another.
But he is the first person that I've ever run across
who's using it in the same way politicians use it today.
Yeah.
In the same way world leaders use it today.
Like this is a very modern PR campaign.
He buys, he uses his Congo earnings
to buy the editors of a bunch of newspapers,
including the London Times.
So he's spending like thousands of dollars
on just, yeah yeah owning editors.
So that number one, they'll kill stories that are negative for the Congo free state.
And so that he can place his positive stories once he gets like positive journalists to go, you know, have a tour of the Congo and then come and write about it.
And this is all basically a delaying action.
Leopold knows eventually the truth is going to get out.
But he's playing for time.
He's got 20 years before rubber stops being his profit.
He doesn't need to do this forever.
He just needs to do it for a little while longer.
He just wants to suck as much money
as he can out of the situation.
And eventually the sheer way to facts
did change public opinion against him,
but it took like 20 years.
At one point, Leopoldus said to have seen a cartoon
of himself in a German newspaper.
And in the cartoon, he's cutting the hands off of Africans.
And he reportedly laughed at that and said,
cut off hands, that's idiotic.
I'd cut off all the rest of them, but not the hands.
That's the thing I need in the Congo.
So he's a real piece of work.
Now in 1895, Leopold had started dating a 16-year-old
prostitute in Adrenaline.
This is when the Congo is at the height
of its rubber production.
So he'd been hooked up to her via a pimp named Duro
who was a former officer in the French Army.
We know now that Caroline's whole relationship with Leopold
was likely a con game, an incredibly successful scheme
to snatch his inheritance.
But at the time, King Leopold blood-drenched absolute
ruler of the Congo, was smitten with
this teenage prostitute. Adam Haustrao writes that, quote, to the extent that someone like
Leopold was capable of love, this teenage prostitute proved to be the love of his life.
So he's really got it for this girl hard. He names her the Baroness of Vaughn, and the
unsameliness of their relationship isn't really acknowledged
in the 1910 biography. It just calls her one of the king's, quote, favorites, and it dances
around the fact that they got together while the Queen was still alive. In general, it
refers to the king's constant parade of mistresses as distractions. So, yeah, Carolyn went on to
write a bit about their life together, and she gives this additional insight into the kind of manly a pulled was.
Quote, every evening, a steam launch took the king to appear leading to my villa through
a subterranean passage.
Speaking about this, I can't help remarking on the extraordinary taste of the king for
everything, which had a secret and mysterious character.
Anyone who could sell him any house, along as it was built on the side of an abandoned
quarry or if it had a secret staircase.
So basically, he's gone from being cheap
to like rinse his fucking, like a hanker chief.
He's like a cartoon villain.
Yeah, to like a cartoon villain with like layers,
built into mountain sides and hidden boat,
like grottoes and stuff.
Jesus.
Yeah, but Carolyn seems to have his number.
So she's both got him on Madeline Love with her
But she also like she takes advantage of his hype the Condryism
Or whatever you call that like whenever she wanted him to leave her alone. She'd pretend to have a cough
Right, and then he'd hide for days
Because he was scared of us. She's she's my favorite person in this story. Yeah, I locked down
So the king as sort of the 1900s come
around as in his late 60s. And he takes to visiting his teenage mistress in a large tricycle.
Because again, he's getting more and more weird. Just everyone.
He's got a moment of whimsy for the genocidal murderer. Yeah, he's riding a big tricycle to hang out with his teenage girlfriend.
Oh, he's just as bad everyone
who every white guy riding a tricycle
with a big old mustache.
You are all as bad as King Lee.
And the same shit.
Yeah, so he's riding a big tricycle,
he drinks nothing but hot water
and he starts referring to himself
in the third person at this point in time.
So yeah, he's a weirdo.
Yeah. He's not entirely passed his old ways at this point in time. So yeah, he's a weirdo. Yeah.
He's not entirely past his old ways at this point.
There's like a story of the time his mistress bought a new hat
for him and gives it to him and he flies into a rage
and he only calms down when she explains him
that she got it for a bargain,
that it was like a deal that she bought at a quarter
of its value.
So like he's still, he's just a weirdo.
Yeah. He's a weird guy. He's like a deal that she bought at a quarter of its value. So like, he's still, he's just a weirdo. Yeah.
He's a weird guy.
He's like a weird old rich letcher who's just like,
like, knows what's going on in the Congo, but doesn't like.
I mean, look, here's the other part,
the other way to look at that, I suppose,
is maybe not in such a direct degree,
but as Americans, we all have similar types of blood
in our hands that we're electing to not think about.
Yeah, but we're not driving it in the same way, but...
We absolutely, we all have these phones that we know are made by people who hate the
work that they're doing, and they're like include minerals that are mined from conflict
ridden nations and often use slave labor in one.
We know that the fabric in our clothes is often their slave labor at some point
in the production line.
Leah Pold knows that because he's signing the order
of his saying, no, cut off more hands.
Cut off more hands.
And he's just amazing to me that he's able to do that
all day every day and then write a tricycle
to his teenage girlfriend's house.
Yeah.
But that's, it's amazing.
It's amazing what you're saying.
But to me, I'm like, it's a little bit just degrees.
I mean, look, we're all able to, it is degrees.
We're all able to compartmentalize the misery
that's necessary for our comfort.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
But, yeah, fuck this guy.
Yeah, let's fuck this guy.
One of the things that was interesting to me
reading that pro leopold biography is that,
well, it does talk about-
So it was written in 1910, the year after he died.
Jesus.
Boiler.
So this biography of him, it's very positive.
It talks about how there's atrocities,
but it always kind, it doesn't talk about the detail.
It just said, he definitely committed atrocities.
But look at this cool thing.
Look at how this and everyone did.
Everyone did, and we'll move to that in a little bit.
What is interesting to me is that this biography does condemn his mistress
for capitalizing on the Congo.
Sure.
It notes that she was called the Queen of the Congo
by the people of Belgium, for she was to benefit largely by the atrocities
committed in the free state.
We're sweating and bleeding natives
labored so as to accumulate millions
for the royal favorite.
So like, again, he doesn't really attack Leopold ever.
Like, he's like, yeah, he did some bad stuff.
But this biographer goes off on her mistress
for like taking money from him.
That's blood money.
Which it is blood money, but like she's the least objectionable person in this situation.
So yeah.
She has a little Melania asked, I suppose.
She is and she maybe knew more what she was getting into at the top.
Yeah, she probably knew less about the Congo.
Just a rich guy. Yeah, she just knew less about the combo because like I doubt just a rich guy. Yeah,
she just wanted to marry a rich guy like I doubt he he doesn't seem like the kind of guy to have
talked to his mistress about the hands or the the the right murdering people with and it's at the
time especially probably easy to ignore. Yeah, forget about it. Yeah, you don't share a lot of that
stuff with you. Yeah, especially not your teenage child bride. No, no, and as the teenage child bride,
to just feel like, I don't read those books.
Yeah, I don't read that article, yeah.
Yeah.
So in the early 1900s, more and more stories of abuse
in the Congo hit the world press.
People actually started to take notice and care.
They read about things like an entire town's worth
of boys being giving 50 lashes each,
which is a fatal sentence for laughing
in the presence of a white man.
In 1904, one of the rubber companies in the Congo put one of its own men on trial,
mostly to show that they were trying to do something about all of the horrible crimes.
The guy Charles Codron was accused of murdering at least 122 Africans.
The case wound up revealing a bunch of fucked up details about like how all the hostage taking and the hand taking and stuff actually worked.
But Codron was released due to, quote, extinuating circumstances.
The court said that he'd had to contend with, quote, great difficulties under which Codron
found himself accomplishing his mission in the midst of a population absolutely resistant
to any idea of work, in which respects no other law than force and no other means of persuasion
than terror. So, yeah.
Yeah.
They were asking for it, defense.
They were asking for it, defense.
That also still works today, kind of.
It does, but it was stopping.
This is at the point where it was working less and less in the Congo.
And in the early 1900s, Leopold starts dealing with more and more resistance to his ideas.
Both in the Congo and at home. So this is also kind of the point of which socialism is starting to rise and Socialists obviously aren't big fans of kings.
Leopold declared himself a mortal enemy of socialism. He fought against the universal right to vote for all Belgians.
Still on the playbook. Yeah. Both of those things. Yeah. In 1902, the Belgian Labour Party called a general strike and Leopold called for it to
be brutally stopped.
The strikers were fired upon by city guards and eight people were killed.
The massacre was a calculated message to the socialists, don't fuck with the money train.
Leopold was willing to kill a hell of a lot more than eight people to keep the money coming
in.
Haaschild's book relates one six-week campaign in the Congo that killed, quote, over 900
natives, men, women, and children in order to add 20 tons of rubber
a month to one region's productivity.
So that gives you an idea of the kind of calculations making.
Yeah. Yeah. Um, that's how I mean, right, it's just lives for rubber.
Yeah, it's just lives for rubber has a commodity price. Yeah. Um,
I have to point out that none of the revelations brutality, uh,
did much to hurt Leopold's popularity at home in Belgium
He was growing less popular and even hated in a lot of Europe
But even today there are Belgian museums that proudly talk about his anti-slavery campaigns that ignore the whole genocide thing
The crimes against humanity didn't hurt Leopold's legacy the only thing Belgium couldn't forgive him for was being a shitty dad and having a mistress
In 1904 Leopold's daughter, Stephanie,
sued her father the king for keeping her chunk of her mother's inheritance.
Leopold fought in court for the right to deny his children their inheritance,
and in fact denied them any wealth or property even after his death.
Around this time, a Belgian cabinet minister noted that, quote,
the king has but two dreams to die a billionaire and to disinherit his daughters.
I mean, what father doesn't want that. the king has but two dreams to die a billionaire and to disinherit his daughters.
I mean,
what father doesn't want that. Yeah, a lot of ways kind of cool.
I always got to cool.
Wow.
So in 1906, King Leopold finally marries the Baroness.
They have two sons.
His second son was born with a malformed arm that just sort of ended in a stump with no hand.
Obviously, some people suggested this might be a judgment from God for all the millions of
hands that Leopold ordered severed, which is almost more fucked up if you think about
the morality behind like, okay, this guy cut off millions of people's hands, let's
fuck off his innocent baby's hands.
Yeah, that's not how you do that.
I mean, that's...
First of all, that is definitely how God do that.
You know?
God is a little punchy on the messages.
Yeah, God ain't great with making sure
these people get their just desserts.
Yeah, yeah, cause right, cause it's so funny.
It's like all these, like just so kind of stories
where God is just a little like tricky metaphor man.
Oh, oh, oh, you didn't expect this didn't you?
Didn't think God would do that.
Yeah.
Oh, just God, get it right, man.
Yeah.
Hey, speaking of hands, why don't you use both of them
to order the products that we are about to advertise?
Here they go.
This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
So the end of the year is coming up.
The holidays are coming and that time can be a lot of fun, but there's also a lot of baggage
and difficulty that comes with the holidays.
Maybe you've got trouble with your family, maybe you've got difficulty with a romantic
partner or a friend.
Maybe you need someone to talk to about it.
That's perfectly normal, especially if you're dealing with some seasonal blues,
you know, the sunlight levels change this time of the year.
This time of year can be a lot, and it's natural to feel some sadness or anxiety.
So adding something new and positive to your life can counteract some of those feelings.
Therapy can be a bright spot amid all of the stress and change, something to look forward
to that helps you feel grounded and gives you the tools to manage all the stuff that's going on.
So, if you're thinking of starting therapy, give BetterHelp a try.
It's all online, it's designed to be convenient, flexible, and suited to your schedule.
Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist.
You can switch therapists at any time for no additional charge.
Find your bright spot this season with better help. Visit betterhelp.com-slash-behind-today to get 10% off your free month. That's better-help-h-e-l-p.com-slash-behind.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest murder mystery in American history. That's Rob Breiner, Rob called me, so let Ado Bryan and ask me what I knew about this crime.
I know 60 years later, new leads are still emerging.
To me, an award-winning journalist, that's the making of an incredible story.
And on this podcast, you're going to hear it told by one of America's greatest storytellers.
Well, last, who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president. My dad, the father of JFK, screwed us at the Bay of Pigs, and then he screwed us after
the Cuban Missile Crisis.
We'll reveal why Lee Harvey Oswald isn't who they said he was.
I was under the impression that Lee was being trained for a specific operation, then we'll
pull the curtain back on the cover-up.
The American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed JFK on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
In every town, at the end of a quiet tree-lined street, there's one house that looks the same,
but everyone knows is different.
And in my new podcast, Murder Homes, we tell those stories of routine days that start like
any other and turn into wrenching nightmares.
My name is Matt Maroonovich and I've been obsessed by homes that are stigmatized forever
by the brittle crimes that happen inside four walls.
All across the country, there are addresses I'll introduce you to that you'll never forget
and the experts that know them best.
Take a walk with me down the street to the house everyone whispers about, and step inside,
to hear the shocking story of a day that is still frozen in time.
Because a murder home is almost always two things.
The place a family felt safest, and the last place on earth they expected to be hunted
down.
You can get 100% at free exclusive bonus content,
including access to early episodes and murder homes by subscribing to the IHR True Crime
Plus channel today, available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.
And we're back. So, the general insineliness of the King's Young bride and the disinheritance of
his daughters meant the public sort of deserted Leopold once the human rights campaign against his atrocities
really took off.
In 1908, King Leopold was forced to bequeath his control of the Congo to the Belgian government.
In exchange, they paid for the colonies 110 million francs worth of debt, most of which
had been accrued because Leopold used the free state as a bank to buy gifts for his
mistresses.
Before he hands over control of the colony, he'd ruled with an iron fist for more than
20 years.
Leopold has all of the Congo state records burned.
I will give them my Congo, he said, but they have no right to know what I did there.
Oh, what the fuck?
Such a piece of shit.
So I think that I say all the time and think about it's like, yes, of course, there
have been massive conspiracies in history and I'm sure today. But like oftentimes, like,
there isn't like the basic human competency to pull off some of the more far fetched, you
know, like a pizza gate style thing. You're like, how could everyone cover this up? And then it's like just hearing a story of 19th century
to 20th century, like attention to detail.
He's a genius.
Like he really is like a genius in the sense that like,
if you saw a character execute a plan like this in a movie,
you'd be like, that's a little far-fetched
that he'd get away with it.
But he did.
And he is an evil genius.
Yeah.
And I guess, you know what?
And I guess it was from a time
when little people were less empowered to speak up.
Yes.
Because that's the real thing.
It would be hard to pull off a pizegate
because it's not like the top conspirators would go to jail.
But it's like, there's gonna be a janitor who's like,
what the fuck is this?
What the fuck's going on?
These kids in this basement, yeah.
And that's like less likely to happen.
That was more controllable back in the day, clearly.
Yeah, and even when that started coming out,
there's a lot less of a media landscape.
You only get the news from your newspapers.
You don't need every newspaper.
Most people don't read much of one newspaper.
So if you're a guy like Leopold,
you've got the money to make the press do what you want
to a big extent.
And if I understand my history correctly,
which I probably don't,
that was the time when the public had a more of an expectation
that media was biased.
It was just that, right?
Well, yeah, a lot of this is right around the time
when America gets involved in a war with Spain
that's essentially pushed by two different newspaper
magnets wanting to sell more papers.
So like, yeah, the press, I mean, it doesn't have a
great reputation now.
Yeah, but it even, it still didn't have a great reputation.
Then, so yeah, it's like a perfect storm, but it also is, it was a legitimately brilliant scheme,
and he did his best to cover his tracks, and he died in December of 1909 at the age of 84.
Super rich, and did he make that billion?
Well, we'll get to that in a minute.
What?
The biography published the next year said that, quote,
were it not for his private life, his domestic affairs and his
averse he would have retained his popularity to the very last.
Belgium as a nation with the exception of the socialists would have
forgiven him the Congo atrocities.
Indeed, she has forgiven him for, after all,
she is destined to benefit by them.
And she will not grudge her king,
the royal commission he pocketed on the enterprise. And this is where again, I want to point out
that in some total, there's no 100% agreed upon death toll for Leopold's regime in the
Congo. But the likely numbers are between 10 and 13 million, possibly as high as 15 million
people. Right. Right. And the Congo was definitely the bloodiest of any of the colonies in Africa by a substantial
margin, but they all killed a lot of people and a lot of them killed a lot of people making
rubber.
And one of the things that was found out after Leopold's death is that in the bloody French
and German colonies that were producing rubber, Leopold owned a majority of several of the large rubber
making corporations in those colonies too.
Right.
So he was also the first like pan multinational, right?
The corporations can be the conduits for the scumbags
because the corporations are the scumbags of course,
but Jesus Christ.
Yeah, so he's a real monster.
The late king achieved his ambition
of disinheriting his daughters.
He left them only 15 million francs.
The exact amount he'd inherited from his father.
His entire fortune went to Baronus Devon,
the prostitute Corteson,
that he fell in love with and married.
After his death, she immediately married De Roe,
her pimp, and spent the rest of her life
living lavishly off the gold,
made by the blood of Congolese labor. Which, she doesn't come out as good as that.
I don't know.
I kind of like that his inheritance got stolen by a scheming prostitute and her pimp friend.
Yeah.
That's better than not.
I guess if she had murdered him, it would have been a little bit better.
If she'd strangled him with his own beard, job-a-life.
Yeah, or poisoned him.
Maybe she did poison him.
Maybe she did poison him.
I can't.
I certainly don't know.
Oh, what a grim-ass tale.
Yeah, his biography, the 1910 biography,
summed up Leopold's life this way.
Leopold the second new Belgium,
new Europe and new humanity. And like a strong
man, he had a deep contempt for everything and everybody. He loved his country and his
own interests for all lovives after all selfish.
Jesus. It's a Victorian age. It's a bleak-ass period.
There's also, you know, speaking of, although it's not exactly the same players, but it's
the same types of institutions. Everyone of y'all, who, whenever this comes out, you know, speaking of, although it's not exactly the same players, but it's the same types of institutions.
Everyone of y'all, who, whenever this comes out, you all have just enjoyed the royal wedding.
Yeah, that shit is built off the back of shit like this. Exactly like this.
Well, less artful than this. A lot cooler. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Not even this good.
Because this is, if you can, like, the, it like, it's up there with the Holocaust
in terms of the greatest crimes in human history,
but as a scheme, his plan is,
it's like almost artwork.
Like it's like watching the Joker
and the good, Cristino and Batman pull out.
It's amazing.
But also, that one too,
where you're like, it has similar moments of like,
I feel like some of these lies are just to do the lie.
Yeah, there's not even about achieving the aims.
You even need to do this.
Yeah, yeah, there's a lot of like,
the fuck you do that for.
Well, crazy.
And so one of the more, I mean,
there's so many fucked up things about this.
Yeah, I really recommend reading King Leopold's Ghost
by Adam Haaschild.
It's
a great book and it really delves into the human misery caused by this regime. But, you
know, you're talking 10 to 15 million people killed. Millions more left without hands,
left maimed, starved, like whose villages were destroyed. The Congo today is still probably
at least stable state in Africa or at least one of them. Because all social order was destroyed.
He swats the pot like that.
It continues to this day.
Leopold's profits.
Yeah.
Roughly a billion dollars in modern currency.
That's bonkers.
That's I feel like that's fucking nothing for what he did.
Oh, in terms of right.
Like, not a billion dollars in 1909 money.
Right, right.
The billion dollars in today's money
is what he got for killing 10 to 15 million people
and destroying Central Africa.
That's Jesus.
Yeah, it's not even extracting enough wealth.
Like you could do that just by closing up bookshops.
Yeah, and I think a lot of that is because he had to spend so much money on an army,
on policing the city of fighting it, because there were a bunch of rebellions, people
who fought back, he had to suppress those rebellions, and he had to pay all these journalists
and like, yeah, there you go, fucking capitalist, and just even profitable to be a slave.
To be the worst person in his life. Although I guess that was the second lesson
that everyone turned is like,
oh, the real profits in PR
and making people think they wanna do this.
Now, I wanna ask you a question
that occurred to me when I finished researching this.
And I wonder about this,
like, is Leopold a worst person than Hitler?
Because I cannot think about that line in the Big Lebowski
where what's his name
Walters like say what you will about national socialism at least it's an ethos.
Hitler committed crimes on a similar if not much greater scale if you include all of
the war dead.
But he had like an ideology behind it as opposed to Leopold who this was never anything but
money.
There was no hatred, there was no goal,
there was no view of the world.
It was purely if I can make money
and killing these people is the fastest way to get it.
Like, I don't care what happens to them
because I want money.
And it was also like separate.
I mean, obviously, I guess it's just different things.
They are very different things.
Although when you look at the Holocaust, and this is something that's often glossed
over when people talk about the Holocaust, is how much of it was a money making endeavor
from the German state, because they were literally mining people to death, both in terms
of taking their hair, taking the gold fillings out of them, taking their businesses before
hand, taking their property.
You have with really with most of like,
and with really with every great genocide,
because like if you look at the Rwandan genocide,
there was a lot of financial motivation there,
people wanting each other's farms and one thing.
Yeah.
I have to imagine like those are the things that allow.
I mean like all look, but like all conflict too,
it's like, especially anything,
sectarian or religiously.
The Crusades, you know, you can make an economic case
for the Crusades or colonialism writ large.
Like, all that is sort of possible.
I think the thing with Leopold's evil is as we've discussed
already, it's like, though not in the same degree,
anyone listening to this on a podcast thing.
And on an
complicit in something a long leopold's vector. Yeah, whereas it's fewer of us
listening to this podcast are complicit in some type of thing that Hitler is involved in. So I think it be hoves us to say Hitler is more evil because we don't want to be part, you know, like yeah, the
Benality, I mean, look, not banality, but the, you know, the
It's in the direction of banality. Well, I think you're on a something that's great there
And I think that's why the idea of the banality of evil is so important is because Hitler is it's so easy to see
Yeah, the evil and Hitler because he was, he was showy,
like he's the most showy villain in all of history. Yeah. Leopold was a weird old man who had a
stupid beard and sat in his office and never shot anybody and wrote a tricycle to his mistress
and was just this weird old dude who was happy to orchestrate one of like the great crimes in
human history just for some cash in this pocket.
And that's scarier.
Yeah, and you can imagine, like,
he doesn't come up with the hands for bullet scheme.
No, he doesn't need to.
We can't let them have bullets.
We have to make sure that, like,
we're accounting for all the bullets
that they're not saving them for a rebellion.
What can we do?
Oh, well, we just make sure they prove to us
they're using the bullets for good reason
when they fire them.
How about we have them bring in a hand?
Great.
And that's probably the end of the conversation.
I just bring proof.
And then the first person breaks in a million people
lose hands.
Like then a crime on an unspeakable scale happens
and he's just like sitting at home
being like, boy, I wonder why production's down this week.
But he can also be like, I'm not the one that came up
with the hands thing, it's a shame.
He can even be like, all the hand things are real shame.
Yeah, that's a real shame.
One of my new guys, you know, the Walloons.
Yeah, you put them in charge or something
and they mess it up.
I hate that we have to do this,
but of course we do need that rubber.
That's the thing that, you know, and look,
that's a version of this.
Everyone of us tells ourselves every fucking day.
Yeah.
So that's why I think most people would say Hitler is a worse, more evil person because
we don't want to be complicit in our own evil.
Hey everybody, this is Robert Evans from the future.
I realized that this podcast was a teeny bit incomplete.
There was some more information I wanted to give out.
So I gained access to a time machine and went back in time to record it.
It was either fixed the podcast or stop 911.
Hopefully I made the right decision.
But I wanted to say a little bit more about the Chico Te,
which we talked about a little bit in this podcast.
That's the Hippo Hyde Whip
that was the primary disciplinary tool
in the Congo Free State.
The book, King Leopold's Ghost,
makes a big deal out of the Chico Te. And it's probably true that the Belg, King Leopold's Ghost, makes a big deal out of the Jakote.
And it's probably true that the Belgians under Leopold
whipped more people to death than in the other regime in history.
But that book also points out that whipping people to death
or nearly to death was basically the bedrock
that colonialism was founded upon.
It relates the story of a guy named Roger Cacement,
who we didn't get to talk to in this podcast.
He's a very interesting dude.
He's one of the men who investigated atrocities in the Congo.
He also wound up investigating a lot of atrocities
in the Amazon at a place called Pudamayo,
where the Peruvian Amazon rubber company
had been caught basically enslavement
and murdering people to produce even more rubber.
And this was for, I think, the British.
It was mostly a British owned company,
although it was like a corporation
with a lot of different sort of stockholders behind it.
And the Proving and Amazon rubber company dealt out punishments with a whip of their own
that was actually a to-peer-hide whip, but it was similar to the Jakote and its effect,
roughly 30,000 indigenous people in the Amazon died mining rubber for that company.
Whips, it turns out, were basically the glue that made colonialism possible.
I found one book on slavery in the British West Indies, published in 1824, that admits
that whips were, quote, the main spring of the agricultural system in that region of
the empire.
Whips were also critical to the French colonies as far back as the 1700s.
When a visitor to the French Antilles noticed that the use of whips was, quote, always excessive
and barbarous with the potential of maming the victim by assaulting his private parts or even killing him, if not instantly, as has
already been the case in due course, as is often the case.
So whipping and slavery go hand in hand, obviously.
I don't think most people are surprised by that.
But I think a lot of people would be surprised to know that Europeans didn't stop whipping subject
people once slavery was over.
The Congo and the Amazon are proof of that, but the atomic bomb is actually even more proof.
After Leopold died, the Belgians continued to control the Congo region, and they moved on from rubber farming to mining.
In the first six months of 1920, a single gold mine is recorded as issuing over 26,000 lashes to his workers,
more than eight lashes for every single African quote employed there. I say, you know, employed in quotation marks because the Belgians kept right on using
forced labor as did the British and Kenya up and into the modern era.
By World War II, Belgium required 120 days per year of labor for each adult male inhabitant
of the Congo region, and it turns out that 80% of the uranium mine to make the bombs dropped
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki came from Congolese mines that used forced labor, which means we can thank
the Chicoetay for the first atom bombs.
The British are also famous for flogging their colonial subjects well into the middle
of the 20th century.
By the 1920s, Kenya was the colony where the British used the most corporal punishment,
or as they called it, rough justice.
Flogging was seen to be necessary in order to deal with the, quote,
raw native Africans who were perhaps so raw because the British regularly whipped
them bloody. There were attempts in the 1930s to alter British penal laws in the
colony to be less brutal, but they didn't exactly stop the problem of white
colonists treating black natives like shit. Ritality in the Kenyan colony
eventually led to the Mao Mao uprising, which started in 1952
when a bunch of rebels calling themselves the Mao Mao killed 32 white people. This made England
go bad, shit crazy. The English forces rounded up 150,000 Kenyans and threw them into concentration
camps where they were starved and beaten regularly. One survivor recalled,
we were forced to do work carrying bricks to build a school. We were beaten if we moved too slowly.
It was very hard work
They would just flog every one at times four or five guards with whips would come into the cell
So at least 12,000 people were killed during the Mammow uprising
Although it's hard to say how many of them died from being whipped the brutalizing effect of whipping people
Certainly had an impact on the British men who did it a Kenyan judge who investigated whipping torture and murder at one
British interrogation center compared it to a Nazi labor camp and said, quote, from the brutalizing of flogging, it is
only a step to taking a life without qualm. So, I just thought this is a good information to know.
People talk about colonialism a lot and it gets, you know, a lot of well-deserved harsh criticism
these days, but I think that the people who rightly view it as a horrible historical crime
also tend to kind of push it further back in history and sort of assume that most of the worst stuff was done
and you know the 17 and 1800s. The reality is that colonialism was still exporting wealth from
African nations, you know, into Europe well into the 20th century, and that the European nations were using brutal
and in a lot of ways medieval justice measures in order to keep the colonies compliant.
So there's your happy little reminder that not only was colonialism and nightmare, but
it is a nightmare that happened recently enough that a lot of people are still alive to
remember it today.
So just keep that in mind, I guess.
And now I'm going to use my magical time powers
to go back to, you know, when Andrew and I were sitting in the room.
Yeah, and we don't want to,
we also don't want to acknowledge like,
when you go to Belgium, which I love Belgium.
Yeah, I'm there a couple of times.
I get a lot of bottles and shops.
Beautiful country, the best beer I've ever had in the world.
Gorgeous giant buildings. Yeah. Many in like the cities and Chops. Beautiful country, best beer I've ever had in the world. Gorgeous giant buildings.
Yeah.
Many in like the cities and stuff,
like really old beautiful museums and stuff,
many of which are built on Congo money.
Yeah, of course.
And so you don't, and like,
we're shitting on Belgium here.
Yeah, but that's like all of Europe.
You go to, you go to,
the American South, and the American North. Yeah, but that's like all of Europe you go to you go to You go to American South. Yeah, and then American North. Yeah, yeah, like that's everything was built on the backs of that shit. Yeah, so
and
You know there's there were good people at all times being like oh it sucks
This is really messed up
But yeah, but that's the same every you pick up an iPhone and like oh sucks that someone had to suffer for this
I do need it though.
Well, and this is again the thing that Leopold's ghost
is a good job of going into.
There are the heroes in this story.
There's the guy, Colonel Washington,
who goes there and there's guys like Morrell,
who don't even see it firsthand,
but put it together.
Like this can't stand, I have to do something.
And I hope that like, that's the,
we gotta focus on Leopold and this both
because his story is the blueprint
of every terrible person who came after him.
He really is the first modern monster world,
like head of state, the first one to use PR
in a really modern way.
Right.
But it's important,
it's just as important to think about the guys like Morel
who are probably more relevant to our own lives
because they pointed like, well, you can do something.
Yeah, and you don't have to just say,
oh, it's a shame.
Yeah, exactly.
And it might take 15 years, but you can,
it's a, right.
Yeah, like, these guys will still win to some extent,
but you can, you know,
where the margins by which they win,
you can go into their profits.
Well, right, it's just a battle.
All you can do is make it less profitable.
Yep.
Wow.
Well, the capitalist revolution.
Great.
That is our podcast for the week.
Andrew, you want to plug your pluggables?
Oh, yeah.
Well, just just a place list of new yo is this racist.
I used to think it was the most depressing podcast on the internet, but not anymore.
And I'm Robert Evans.
You can find me on Twitter at at I Write OK.
You can find this podcast on the internet at behindthebastards.com.
You can find us on social media at atbastardspod.
I've got a book you can find on Amazon, a brief history of vice.
So yeah, check my stuff out, check us out.
We will be back every single Tuesday from now until the heat death of the universe with a new bastard. So check that out next year, though, right?
Yes. Can't wait. Yep. Okay.
Behind the bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media. For more from Cool Zone
Media, visit our website, CoolZoneMedia.com or check us out on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
The assassination of President John F. Kennedy is the greatest murder mystery in American
history.
That's Rob Breiner.
Rob called me, so would Ed O'Brien, and asked me what I knew about this crime.
Well, ask who had the motive to assassinate a sitting president?
Then we'll pull the curtain back on the cover-up.
The American people need to know the truth.
Listen to Who Killed JFK on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
From the team that brought you betrayal.
When Tracy Rekel Burns was two years old,
her baby brother died.
I was told that Matthew died in an accident.
Her parents told police she had killed him.
I'm Nancy Glass.
Join me for Birdon of Guilt,
the new podcast that tells the true
an incredible story of a toddler who was framed for murder.
Listen to Birdon of Guilt on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts.
My name is Matt Murrinivich and I've been obsessed by homes that are stigmatized forever
by the brittle crimes that happen inside four walls.
And in my new podcast, Murder Homes, we tell those stories of routine days that start
like any other and turn into wrenching nightmares.
You can get 100% at-free exclusive bonus content including access to early episodes in Murder
Homes by subscribing to the IHR True Crime Plus channel today, available exclusively on Apple
podcasts.
by subscribing to the IHR True Crime Plus channel today,
available exclusively on Apple Podcasts.