20 May 1983

Hope all those "struggle" fighters are proud of the ****hole country they fought for. I wonder if they for a moment thought that the future SA would be worse than the apartheid one, if they'd have pulled of bombings like this?

Only white people, or black people who never lived in the townships during the apartheid days, can ever think apartheid government was any good. As bad as this ANC government is, it's 100 times better than the apartheid one.
 
So you wanted blacks' movement to be restricted in their own country? The fact that we can speak of "white areas" in an African country is where this whole absurdity started. Whites who don't want to live in a "hodgepodge of cultures" shouldn't be in Africa.

See, you speak about Africa as if it should be black/African, and about South Africa as if the blacks did not migrate there themselves. Does the fact that we came over the seas make any difference ? A hodgepodge of cultures only works, and to only some extent, in imperial or quasi imperial states as they absorb into a predominant culture. Why should South Africa be a hodgepodge of cultures rather than a series of non-racial nation states ? Does the same hold true for Europe, should it stay primarily white and take a very radical stance on the mass immigration from the third world that is currently happening ?

/Feels disenfranchised because I need a VISA to enter the U.S. or U.K., why have borders at all ???
 
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And let's face it, a lot of things were a lot better when the Nats were running things. Not because of apartheid, just because of a better ethos.

What things are those?
 
Both.

Do you think that we would be better off (whether white or the whole country) if the Nats were still running Eskom?

And don't worry - I'm not going to say that your answer would be used in anyway to justify the return of apartheid.

Eskom was run better under the Nats, however they also had the luxury of not supplying a large portion of the population. Do you think the Nats would have gone out of their way to supply power to people who previously didn't have it? Do you think the majority black populations would have better access to electricity under a Nat controlled Eskom?
 
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It amazes me to see how things deteriorate on a daily basis: roads, littering, service delivery, policing, safety, parastatals but people seem incapable to understand that if day 4 is worse than day 3 and day 3 is worse than day 2 that things were better day 1. I really do remember good service delivery, affordable and efficient healthcare, safe neighborhoods without fences around you yard, leaving the door open at night, leaving the keys in the car at times, efficient schooling (textbooks were provided and if you forgot to hand one back it was not the end of the world) etc. etc.

Where was this good service delivery? Some of us blacks grew up without water, electricity, roads, clinics, school buildings, etc.
 
Eskom was run better under the Nats, however they also had the luxury of not supplying a large portion of the population. Do you think the Nats would have gone out of their way to supply power to people who previously didn't have it?

The early Nats yes, especially Verwoerd.
 
Eskom was run better under the Nats, however they also had the luxury of not supplying a large portion of the population. Do you think the Nats would have gone out of their way to supply power to people who previously didn't have it? Do you think the majority black populations would have better access to electricity under a Nat controlled Eskom?

How could it have been run better when it was only supplying electricity to 10% of the population? This whole Eskom fallacy has to stop. Eskom has never been an efficient organisation.
 
The grand architect of Apartheid, really? Then why didn't they when they had the chance?

Due to the influence of the Broederbond and people who did not have the same vision. Remember, he was assassinated. Vorster started working with those who would later play a crucial role in dismantling Apartheid at the same time continuing with machinations already in place but without the view on cultural nation states (which could later demand sovereignty) for blacks but according to a gradual movement to a integrated South Africa. His earliest actions were to play a role in Rhodesia's black majority rule as a 'white Rhodesia' was seen as a 'liability to South Africa'.
 
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How could it have been run better when it was only supplying electricity to 10% of the population? This whole Eskom fallacy has to stop. Eskom has never been an efficient organisation.

Did you even read my post? I said it was well run because they had the luxury of not having to supply everyone. Despite the lack of efficiencies, if you where part of the privileged few, Eskom power supply was very stable under the Nats. This does not mean I said it was equitable or even fair, just that it's a lot easier to supply electricity to a small user base.
 
How could it have been run better when it was only supplying electricity to 10% of the population? This whole Eskom fallacy has to stop. Eskom has never been an efficient organisation.

http://www.statssa.gov.za/publications/Report-03-02-16/Report-03-02-16.pdf

The 1996 Census stats showed that 58,6% used electricity for lighting, 47,4% for cooking, and 46,5% for heating. As this was only two years after the Nats handed over to the ANC, where do you get the 10% from?

Eskom was always an efficient organisation: when the country needed more power, it built more power stations. It didn't steal the money meant for maintenance and construction, or ignore the requests of its engineers when demand exceeded supply. And it definitely didn't have to run the country on diesel. Let's add to that list SAA, the Post Office, and Transnet, while we're at it.
 
The ANC were warned some 20 years ago, to build more power stations.

But no, lets rather fill our pockets and to hell with the rest of the country.
 
Eskom was run better under the Nats, however they also had the luxury of not supplying a large portion of the population. Do you think the Nats would have gone out of their way to supply power to people who previously didn't have it? Do you think the majority black populations would have better access to electricity under a Nat controlled Eskom?

See - you agree. Something was better.

And then you tried to support your view by adding a bunch of other stuff.

We can engage on that. In our make believe world the ANC are the government but Eskom is run by the Nats. Do you not think that the ANC would be able to drive a household electrification process that didn't leave us where we are today? Connected but nothing is coming out?

The real tragedy is that the ANC has squandered the jewels of South Africa.
 
http://www.statssa.gov.za/publications/Report-03-02-16/Report-03-02-16.pdf

The 1996 Census stats showed that 58,6% used electricity for lighting, 47,4% for cooking, and 46,5% for heating. As this was only two years after the Nats handed over to the ANC, where do you get the 10% from?

Eskom was always an efficient organisation: when the country needed more power, it built more power stations. It didn't steal the money meant for maintenance and construction, or ignore the requests of its engineers when demand exceeded supply. And it definitely didn't have to run the country on diesel. Let's add to that list SAA, the Post Office, and Transnet, while we're at it.

rza is probably pulling those numbers. The first phase (at least the planning) of the mass electrification program by Eskom began shortly after the end of apartheid (~1990). 35% of the country had access at the access time. The townships obviously had access to electricity way before then but it was limited (you could tell by the evening smog around townships when people began cooking).
 
How could it have been run better when it was only supplying electricity to 10% of the population? This whole Eskom fallacy has to stop. Eskom has never been an efficient organisation.

Eskom was plenty good at energy generation but pretty poor at last mile energy distribution. They are a bulk supplier. 10% is nonsense unless you're are trying to say that only 10% of residences were electrified. Eskom provided energy for the entire country and then some. Not quite the same as every household having an electric socket.

But take a look at the electrification of South Africa. It didn't happen in every white household over night. It wasn't in every city or town either. It was rolled out on the back of an economic model. Sure, the economic model of the time favoured a certain population group. But then the argument (as circular as it may be) was that that group could afford the services. Nobody was given free electricity.
 
Did you even read my post? I said it was well run because they had the luxury of not having to supply everyone. Despite the lack of efficiencies, if you where part of the privileged few, Eskom power supply was very stable under the Nats. This does not mean I said it was equitable or even fair, just that it's a lot easier to supply electricity to a small user base.

granted.
 
http://www.statssa.gov.za/publications/Report-03-02-16/Report-03-02-16.pdf

The 1996 Census stats showed that 58,6% used electricity for lighting, 47,4% for cooking, and 46,5% for heating. As this was only two years after the Nats handed over to the ANC, where do you get the 10% from?

Eskom was always an efficient organisation: when the country needed more power, it built more power stations. It didn't steal the money meant for maintenance and construction, or ignore the requests of its engineers when demand exceeded supply. And it definitely didn't have to run the country on diesel. Let's add to that list SAA, the Post Office, and Transnet, while we're at it.

The townships only got electricity when the ANC took power.
 
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