Mass exodus into SA

Politics, Derived from the Greek word Poly (meaning many) and ticks (blood sucking parasites)
 
Only our inaction to blame; we let it go on, we let it become what it is.

Who Necuno?

I swear I've given up.

Scared to wear my jewellery, have burglar bars, alarm, internal trellidor. Wear my panic button around my neck while working in the garden.
Almost run of the road today by a chap driving a decent looking car who was in the turning only lane but accelerated before the traffic light turned green so he could cut in front of me.
Sick of asking the delivery man at work to tell us before he goes to buy cigarettes EVERY MORNING so he can buy milk at the same time.
New neighbours have a teenage soon who parades up and down the street with his ghetto blaster on his shoulder. Dogs go crazy as he passes. Yesterday woke up to graffiti painted all over one of the brand new boundary walls on a house down the road.

Buses being stoned, schools being burned, hospitals overflowing with foreigners getting free medical treatment. Idiots who failed to deliver school books are awarded the tender to supply iPads to pupils ....... sorry "learners".

If you have anything left, all you're good for is to be bled dry. This ship has sunk.
 
They just coming to do affirmative Christmas shopping, nothing new, happens every year this time of year.

/awaits backlash about xenophobia and other nonsense
 
Personally I've got absolutely no problem whatsoever with Zimbabweans coming to South Africa. They work 100 times harder than our locals, they're better educated, don't have any chips on their shoulders and in general are just all-round nice guys. Most crime in South Africa is committed by South Africans, that's a fact.
 
Personally I've got absolutely no problem whatsoever with Zimbabweans coming to South Africa. They work 100 times harder than our locals, they're better educated, don't have any chips on their shoulders and in general are just all-round nice guys. Most crime in South Africa is committed by South Africans, that's a fact.

Have to say, the Zimbabweans I have come across are as you described them. But who knows about the type in this influx, they could be of the more militant type...
 
Personally I've got absolutely no problem whatsoever with Zimbabweans coming to South Africa. They work 100 times harder than our locals, they're better educated, don't have any chips on their shoulders and in general are just all-round nice guys. Most crime in South Africa is committed by South Africans, that's a fact.

Lies, prove it. I bet you don't even belong to a community watch, speak to local police or security companies etc. YOU would be surprised.

PS, when those coming looking for work don't find any, what do you believe happens next? Irrespective of national or foreigners.
 
Lies, prove it. I bet you don't even belong to a community watch, speak to local police or security companies etc. YOU would be surprised.

PS, when those coming looking for work don't find any, what do you believe happens next? Irrespective of national or foreigners.

I am very involved, many many lazy sa crims, thanks.
 
Split South Africa up into nation states, there are plenty of people from all backgrounds who want to see their own traditional ways promulgated, e.g. http://voices.news24.com/sandiso-ba...the-institutions-of-learning-in-south-africa/

It is amusing to remember this:

Four of the South African Bantustans—Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda, and Ciskei (the so-called "TBVC States")—were declared independent, though this was not officially recognised outside of South Africa. Other South African Bantustans (like KwaZulu, Lebowa, and QwaQwa) received partial autonomy but were never granted independence. In South West Africa, Ovamboland, Kavangoland, and East Caprivi were granted self-determination.

The Bantustans were abolished with the end of apartheid and re-joined South Africa proper.

....it is more amusing to note that some of the most under-developed areas in SA , are exactly these places...

So what exactly went wrong with this?
 
Last edited:
It's funny. The peanut gallery here on this forum - that ranging from ANC fanboys to the happy-clappy libtards and the like - yes, you know who you are (or were), suddenly are nowhere to be seen or have become deathly silent in recent times.

Welcome to reality.
 
He's a politician, not a journalist. And I asked a fairly simple question...

Sarcasm :o
Every time a story like this pops up I remember the whole debate about how fantastic it was going in Zim and it was just white propaganda that spread the lies.
 
It's funny. The peanut gallery here on this forum - that ranging from ANC fanboys to the happy-clappy libtards and the like - yes, you know who you are (or were), suddenly are nowhere to be seen or have become deathly silent in recent times.

Welcome to reality.

Real life is whacko enough without having to trawl for exciting anonymous mudslinging online. We don't feel quite comfortable in this country without a little bit of anarchy on the horizon.
 
It is amusing to remember this:



....it is more amusing to note that some of the most under-developed areas in SA , are exactly these places...

So what exactly went wrong with this?

The more independence they had, the less development help from 'S.A. proper'. This goes to show that they were reliant on 'S.A. proper' to develop them in the first place.
 
I'll bite. How?

1. Vote properly, with your head not with your ears
2. Speak up - In person, not via the keyboard, because these days keyboard warriors are a plenty, actual people showing that they want change are not
3. Actions speak louder than words
 
1. Vote properly, with your head not with your ears
2. Speak up - In person, not via the keyboard, because these days keyboard warriors are a plenty, actual people showing that they want change are not
3. Actions speak louder than words

1. I have never voted for the ANC yet they are still in power and their voter base will never vote for anyone else.

2. *How* do you show you want change when ANC voters don't care about corruption or the economy?

3. You haven't answered the question. What actions?
 
1. Vote properly, with your head not with your ears
2. Speak up - In person, not via the keyboard, because these days keyboard warriors are a plenty, actual people showing that they want change are not
3. Actions speak louder than words

LOL, let me sit behind this keyboard and tell you not to be a keyboard warrior.

How about you dwell on how you are going to convince 14.46 million illiterates about how their race based vote influences this country. If the ANC managed to get the other people that weren't interested in voting they would have 24 million votes. What could you possibly do to convince these people that can probably not even read and write, never mind begin to fathom the economic implications of the ANC ****ing everything up, that they must vote for a party (read by the ANC as: imperialist colonialist whities) that "enslaved their people for generations and caused their poverty and unending hardship"?

Half this country is borderline retarded and you want to "Speak up, in person" to tell them to "vote properly" - well enjoy the local past time of stab the idiot that you will be welcomed with.

The fact of the matter is that the black people in this country will be kept illiterate and encouraged to pop out kids at an alarming rate and supported by grants so the ANC can have idiots that will mindlessly vote for them. The ANC knows this works and by the time anyone figures it out the top brass will have fat bank accounts and live outside the country. The country is ****ed and the large majority support it. By the time there are enough people "voting properly" we'll all probably be living back on Pangea and the ANC will be ousted by people that don't think 2+2=potato.

Your ideas are really cute but unfortunately don't have much place in the real world.
 
Top
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter
X