For all these concerns of Kay’s (Cape) party for the native population of the Cape, they clearly border on outright intolerance towards the racial other. One of the party’s pamphlets distributed during the election campaign singled out “black migrants” for receiving resources that belong to the local population. During the interview, Kay elaborates on this, saying that his party is frustrated about the way migrants from the Eastern Cape are disturbing the Cape’s social order.”We want one Cape people so that there’s a sense of community. I can’t have a radically different view of the world to someone else and still get along… We can have differences of opinion, but not totally different cultures,” says Kay. The Cape Party has a disturbing expectation for people to change their cultural behaviours according to its own, and what it sees as the Cape’s, standards. When you consider this, you can’t shake the feeling that Kay and his party want to build the utopian Cape society on an unfathomable, pseudo-heterogeneous, disturbing foundation.