The Greatest Fumbling of the bag in history : The 1922 Rhodesian Referendum
In the grand theater of history, some nations grab opportunity by the throat. Others look it dead in the eye… and vote 59% against it. On 27 October 1922, the white settlers of Southern Rhodesia (modern-day Zimbabwe) did exactly that. In a referendum, they were offered the chance to join the newly formed Union of South Africa as its fifth province. The South African government, under Prime Minister Jan Smuts, rolled out the red carpet with generous terms: parliamentary seats, financial grants of up to £500,000 a year for a decade, railway nationalization, and protection of land and mineral rights. It was, by any measure, an incredibly favorable deal. They said no. 59.4% voted for “responsible self-government” instead. And in that single vote, they committed what I argue is the single greatest fumble of the bag in modern world history. The Bag They Dropped Imagine being handed the keys to one of the most resource-rich, strategically located, and economically vibrant unions on the plane...