Teenaged African Robotics Engineering Geniuses Escape to Canada!

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
July 20, 2017

Racists want to act like Africans are somehow “stupid” or “dumb guys.”

If that is the case, then why is Africa the leader in robotics technology, with over 85% of robotics innovation coming from sub-Saharan Africa?

The Canadian people are so lucky to have these robotics engineers.

Washington Post:

Two of the six teenage members of the Burundi robotics team who went missing from Washington this week have crossed into Canada and are safe, D.C. police said on Thursday.

No, that is not the tiny Islamic nation on the island of Borneo.

You’re thinking of Brunei.

Burundi a central African state.

The four others also are believed to be in safe hands, but authorities declined to provide further details. It is the first indication that the teenagers may have left on their own accord.

The first assumption was that they must have been kidnapped by a technology corporation who wanted to force them to design high-tech robots and cyborgs for them.

A D.C. police spokeswoman identified the teens in Canada as Don Charu Ingabire, 16, and Audrey Mwamikazi, 17. Authorities would not describe how the teenagers planned to leave Washington or how the two made it to Canada.

The teens had come to the District to compete in an international FIRST Global Challenge robotics competition, which drew young people from 157 nations to Constitution Hall in Northwest Washington.

Police said the teens from the small East African country were reported missing Wednesday. They were last seen about 5 p.m. Tuesday, shortly before the event closed around 6:30 p.m. In addition to Ingabire and Mwamikazi, Richard Irakoze, 18, Kevin Sabumukiza, 17, Nice Munezero, 17 and Aristide Irambona, 18, also were reported missing.

Police posted fliers of the missing teens on the department’s Twitter account. FIRST Global issued a statement on Wednesday saying an adult mentor could not find the team members.

A spokesman for the group, Jose P. Escotto, said on Thursday that he could not confirm that authorities had located the teens. “We haven’t been informed of anything,” he said at 10:30 a.m.

You might think it is selfish and sneaky for central Africans to use a robotics competition to invade Canada.

If you think that, then you simply have no idea what brutal dictator Bashir al-Assad is doing to these poor and oppressed victims.

Just Google “barrel bombs.” That’ll give you an idea.