Oh shoot the boer again.

I think we are pretty much getting the blame for anything that they are unhappy with.
 
Meh I just read Koos Kitchen everything is going to be just fine. Pass me some weed....

How do you smoke weed with your head in the sand?
 
Listen to the victim, abused by the system
The basis is racist, you know that we must face this.
"It can't happen here". Oh yeah?
"Take a look around at the cities and the towns."

See them hunting, creeping, sneaking
Breeding fear and loathing with the lies they're speaking
The knife, the gun, broken bottle, petrol bomb
There is no future when the past soon come.

And when they come to ethnically cleanse me
Will you speak out? Will you defend me?
Or laugh through a glass eye as they rape our lives
Trampled underfoot by the right on the rise

[CHORUS]
"You owe us..."....Ich Bin Ein Auslander (x4)
("You owe us everything")... Ich Bin Ein Auslander
Welcome to a state where the politics of hate
Shout loud in the crowd "Watch them beat us all down"
There's a rising tide in the rivers of blood
But if the answer isn't violence, neither is your silence

If they come to ethnically cleanse me
Will you speak out? Will you defend me?
Freedom of expression doesn't make it alright
Trampled underfoot by the rise of the right

[CHORUS]

Ich Bin Ein Auslander. (x12)
 
Listen to the victim, abused by the system
The basis is racist, you know that we must face this.
"It can't happen here". Oh yeah?
"Take a look around at the cities and the towns."

See them hunting, creeping, sneaking
Breeding fear and loathing with the lies they're speaking
The knife, the gun, broken bottle, petrol bomb
There is no future when the past soon come.

And when they come to ethnically cleanse me
Will you speak out? Will you defend me?
Or laugh through a glass eye as they rape our lives
Trampled underfoot by the right on the rise

[CHORUS]
"You owe us..."....Ich Bin Ein Auslander (x4)
("You owe us everything")... Ich Bin Ein Auslander
Welcome to a state where the politics of hate
Shout loud in the crowd "Watch them beat us all down"
There's a rising tide in the rivers of blood
But if the answer isn't violence, neither is your silence

If they come to ethnically cleanse me
Will you speak out? Will you defend me?
Freedom of expression doesn't make it alright
Trampled underfoot by the rise of the right

[CHORUS]

Ich Bin Ein Auslander. (x12)

Cool song! Forgot about that one... Classic... Reminds me of the good old mindless, self indulgent times at Doors Nightclub in Marshall street! Now all we have left is this Kill the Boer k@k!
 
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History repeating itself

This is exactly what happened in ZIM

Soon as it became obvious that the Gov ( ruling party ) was failing ( and for EXACTLY the same reasons as in SA ) then the witch-hunt was started.

To find the bad exploiters of the "people".

Good ploy to divert attention from the REAL issues and put the heat onto someone else.

Someone who it appears is very easily placed in the position of "exploiter".

The more the ruling party fails ( but not to enrich itself ) the more these sorts of disturbances / riots are going to happen.


MW
 
I will quote a black friend of mine's ex girlfriend from facebook's status update:

"I fear less the oppression of a white man than that of my black brother,voted into power, calling me his comrade while stealing my money in a bag reading 'the freedom charter'."

Black people are getting fed up, but face it, our government has made it their mission to keep uneducated people uneducated, and the result will be masses of stupid zombies.
 
About 100 of them emptied bins, leaving streets covered in refuse, and destroyed stalls belonging to hawkers.

First, the boer, then the poor hawkers who barely have anything. No respect for ANYTHING or ANYONE!
 
Dlamini said workers should unite to fight against corruption in municipalities as it caused unemployment and lack of decent jobs.

Corruption?! Could it be the boer? Or perhaps YOUR party, the ANC?! I wonder....
 
Zimbabwe’s first 30 years - A generation of failure
15 April 2010

30th anniversary of independence is Sunday, April 18

They call them the "born-frees," the generation of Zimbabweans born after the day 30 years ago when the former British colony of Zimbabwe (formerly Southern Rhodesia) was declared an independent nation after ninety years of white minority rule.

The dream had arrived where they were free to vote and choose their own leaders, to determine their own future. With that came the right to receive a good education, health care, and housing, and to work and earn a decent living, instead of being consigned to life as second-class citizens because of their skin colour.

Thirty years down the line, the reality is rather different. The generation born in hope still finds itself oppressed and driven into poverty and deprivation.

"We are not free," said Billy Makamwe, who was born a month after independence. "If you talk politics on a bus there will be someone listening, and when you want to get off, they will arrest you. We live in fear."

In the same time, President Robert Mugabe has turned from a middle-aged Marxist, who invested heavily in education and healthcare, to an 86-year-old despot showing no sign of being ready to retire gracefully, despite having been forced into a coalition government with his sworn enemy, pro-democracy leader Morgan Tsvangirai.

What was Africa’s second-most developed economy, after South Africa, is struggling to recover from spectacular economic collapse in 2008 that saw inflation hit 500 billion percent and the currency - at independence on par with British sterling - plunge to a rate of 4 trillion Zimbabwean dollars to 1 US dollar.

Makamwe grew up in the shantytown of Epworth south of the capital of Harare. "When I was at primary school, things were normal," he said. "My father was able to give us money, we ate good food, three meals a day."

But by the time he left school after four years of high school, life was tough. Money was short and two meals a day had become a luxury.

His ambitions were modest enough. He wanted to become a driver.

But by the mid-90s, the economy under Mugabe’s control was contracting sharply. The best he could find was a succession of manual labour jobs and finally a job as a security guard.

At the same time, the first glimmerings of political opposition to Mugabe’s rule were beginning to show - and were met with fierce resistance by his ruling Zanu-PF party.

"Now there were Zanu-PF youths on the streets, forcing people to come to meetings, threatening us."

"We don’t want this," he said. "When we were born, the war was over. Mugabe had been fighting the whites, and then we got a black government.

"But the war is going on," he continued. "These youths are singing "hondo, hondo" (Shona for ’war, war’) all the time.

"Mugabe is making war against the people. We don’t understand what war is for. That is old politics."

By 2008, Zanu-PF had unleashed an offensive to destroy Tsvangirai’s Movement for Democratic Change.

In Epworth, it took the form of dragging MDC supporters out of their homes for public "punishment" beatings.

When they came for Makamwe at 1 a.m. one night, he managed to slip out through a back window and hid in a large avocado tree. The next day he moved his family out of the area.

Many thousands had the same fate, but Makamwe was lucky - he escaped and found a job as a gardener.

Independence Day in Zimbabwe is usually celebrated by a rally of Zanu-PF faithful in a stadium, a military display and a speech by Mugabe, in which he usually tilts at the West.

Makamwe says he won’t be participating.

His main concern, he says, is for the next generation, and a good education for his daughter, Annie.

"I want her to be able to grow up to be a teacher, a doctor, even a pilot," he said.

"But that can never be while Mugabe is there. We are not independent, we are dependent on all those Western countries that Mugabe hates. He made it like that. We have to have change."

http://www.sowetan.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=1132483

malema trying the same thing, with police support, with violent intimidation and lockout of opponents, from meetings to choose new leaders, these last few days...

malema will die at the hand of an African...
 
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the best thing about this strike is that they will have to clean everything up once it's finished
 
Meh I just read Koos Kitchen everything is going to be just fine. Pass me some weed....

How do you smoke weed with your head in the sand?

You evidently missed the bit where Koos said, "You know that Alan guy on MyADSL? Don't be like him..."

You're, like, famous, buddy!
 
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