The democrats want the US to be like South Africa
No offense but why are there any Whites in South Africa after 2000. I can say the same thing for Indians living in South Africa.
“Equity” = the slaughter of white people.
Whites need their own homeland, just like the other tribes of South Africa.
Never a good thing to incite a crowd.
Maxine Waters said to get in the faces of Republicans in restaurants and their own homes.
Al Sharpton shouted propaganda to a crowd in NYC in 1991 and claimed that a black young man hit by a runaway car on the sidewalk was intentionally murdered by the paid driver hired to drive the Jewish rabbi. “The Jews did this to us. What are you going to do about it?” One listener Lemrick Nelson went out “to look for a Jew” and stabbed the Australian yeshiva student Yankel Rosenberg. The victim died that night. The Crown Heights riots took off for several days. Sharpton was not indicted or convicted and later had his own TV talk show which is still on, I believe.
“...South Africa wrote some of the fundamental concepts of Critical Race Theory into its constitution in the 1990s”
The older I get the more I know. Avoid them.
“Kill the Boer…The Farmer!” – Radical South African Political Leader Calls for Executing White People While Massive Crowd Dances and Echoes His Cries (VIDEO)
The Gateway Pundit ^ | July 31, 2023 | Cullen Linebarger
Posted on 8/1/2023, 8:11:43 AM by Perseverando
https://tvpworld.com/71688200/south-africa-farleft-leader-calls-for-genocide-of-white-citizens-again
Any White still living in South Africa needs to get out real fast.
That stadium needed a tactical nuke.
Coming to a US city soon....they wish us dead or in concentration camps after they confiscate our wealth. Hyperbole? Just read the news and see what is going on.
stuff like this doesn’t really happen./s
White men and ferals cannot coexist. Never have and never will. Disassociate, avoid and forget them. That’s the best path.
I assume poor Theo was murdered although the article goes to great lengths not to say so. Talk about burying the lede!
Apartheid was in place for a reason.
More details >>>> https://www.sapeople.com/2023/07/31/mpumalanga-elderly-man-79-brutally-murdered-in-farm-attack/
Why any white folks stay there is a mystery to me.
ZIMBABWE 2.0
https://midlandsmusings.wordpress.com/2013/06/27/life-is-cheap-in-africa/
life is cheap in africa
On Sunday night, whilst nursing massive hangovers after Andrews’s birthday party, there was a knock at our front door. It was one of our farm workers, asking for a loan. He looked nervous and upset. He told us that he had borrowed money from someone and that the man was now on his way to collect his money and that if he didn’t get his money back, he was going to kill him. Andrew and I did not have a single cent between us (living on a farm, we rarely do) – and the nearest ATM was in town, a twenty minute drive away. We asked how much money this man had loaned him. The answer astounded me.
R250. Two hundred and fifty rand.
He was coming to kill him for R250. Now perhaps our labourer was exaggerating, perhaps he was telling the truth, perhaps he was not. He looked pretty anxious, that’s for sure. All we could do was call the police. I got nervous. What if this man, realising he could get no money out of our labourer, decided to come looking to us for his money. What would he do to us for this money? We live in the middle of nowhere. I’m pretty sure he would have taken our television in payment – but who knows what else would have been the cost? The worst things run through your mind. But nothing happened, no one came to our door again, and our labourer was perfectly fine the next day.
Maybe he was taking a chance and lying to get some money out of us? Maybe his debt collector never arrived. Either way, the figure of this R250 has been bothering me all week. It seems a very little amount in exchange for someone’s life. Living on a farm, we see things every day that remind us of how privileged and garrdam lucky we are to have what we have. In fact, living anywhere in South Africa does this. From street children and the homeless in cities, to farm labourers trying to get by on minimum wage in the country, there is sadness, heartbreak and poverty all over our land.
When we were in England on honeymoon and people asked how bad “it” (who knows what ‘it’ is?) was in South Africa, I’d get defensive and say how beautiful is is to live here – how the crime rate is not that bad and how, actually, and I’m embarrassed to say this now, living with a constant threat of something bad occurring around the corner gives life in South Africa a certain edge to it – an appreciation for every new day that comes along. I know what I was trying to get at – I suppose I was trying to liken life in South Africa to how soldiers at war have a deeper appreciation for life and their family… but looking back, I feel perhaps that my statement was a little stupid. A lot stupid, actually. I blame the tequila. I’m sorry English friends for calling your country “boring” and “predictable”. I really, truly am. I would love to live in a country where I could walk the streets without constantly clinging to my handbag, my defences up, wearily summing up every character who walks past me, just in case. I would love to live in a country where you are homeless only by choice. I would love to live in a country where rape is a serious, serious offence; where murder rarely happens, and when it does, it makes international news. I would love to live in a country where children don’t have to walk miles in the freezing cold to get to school every day. I would love to live in a country where people don’t believe that raping a virgin will cure AIDS. I would love to live in a country where criminals are actively sought out, caught and prosecuted.
I would love to live in a country where a man’s life would not be threatened for a measly fifteen quid.
But I don’t.
So I need to be aware, alert, and brave; strong and fierce without losing compassion or kindness. I need to be tolerant and understanding. Every day. I need to be grateful, thankful, appreciative. Living in Africa is a constant struggle between beauty and pain, anger and joy, love and hate. Perhaps that’s what I was meaning when I said it’s “exciting.” It’s exciting because every day we grow, we learn, we are surprised and we are humbled. Every day we are challenged to be better human beings, and we are given the opportunity to demonstrate that, whether it be by giving someone a lift, or giving them a second chance. We are lambs crawling up to sleep next to the lion every single night, with no other option than to trust that we will live to see another day. And perhaps that is what makes life in Africa so painfully, frighteningly beautiful.
Blame England/UK for ruining-killing South Africa. The UK lead all the boycotts, financial and banking sanctions that crippled South Africa. That forced the end of apartheid. The English settlers were jealous of what the Boers (Dutch) achieved there. English always thought they were superior.
If English had never settled in South Africa, there is a good chance the Boers would be in still be in power in South Africa. Or today, the Boers would have their own large enough homeland that they could defend. And do their farming, for which they have natural aptitude.