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View Full Version : What are they teaching in South Africa ?



TheFutureOfThePublic
20th May 2010, 17:28
Long story short i know someone from South Africa and he genuinley believes that white dutchmen brought blacks to South africa as slaves and that its the white mans country.He also says they are taking over the country,even though hes the one who immigrated to over here in Scotland.He also slags Scotland all the time but he chose to come here so why should he have the right to criticize immigrants when hes critical of the country he moved to.Which makes me wonder is this something he was taught in a South African school or is he just an absolute moron

Foldered
20th May 2010, 20:21
Which makes me wonder is this something he was taught in a South African school or is he just an absolute moron
It's probably an unhealthy mixture of both.

Raúl Duke
20th May 2010, 20:34
You need more opinions than that.

What could have occurred is that in certain regions like Cape Town and certain Afrikaaner areas the Dutch settles displaced the blacks more or less completely. Later on, you see the usual urban movement into cities so blacks began to move into Cape Town and other places (although not as slaves, I doubt that) as discriminated cheap wage laborers. Although to be honest, the above is mere theory/speculation I only know close to nothing about South Africa.


He also says they are taking over the country,even though hes the one who immigrated to over here in Scotland.He also slags Scotland all the time but he chose to come here so why should he have the right to criticize immigrants when hes critical of the country he moved to.

It's not surprising. I once saw this interview of this BNP sympathizing woman who said she wanted to go live in Spain. She didn't seem to notice the irony.

Foldered
20th May 2010, 20:48
It's not surprising. I once saw this interview of this BNP sympathizing woman who said she wanted to go live in Spain. She didn't seem to notice the irony.
Oh, god. *facepalm*

jake williams
21st May 2010, 05:24
I honestly get the impression that white South Africans just live in a psychotic racist fantasy land, up until this day, and only a few of them ever get any sense otherwise.

Mike Rotchtickles
12th June 2010, 20:43
I honestly get the impression that white South Africans just live in a psychotic racist fantasy land, up until this day, and only a few of them ever get any sense otherwise.

This is the very truth about white South Africans. You know the thing about apartheid is that it divided people in such a way that it was as if they were living in parallel universes. There are many whites who believe that apartheid was not evil but just the best system for the inferior blacks.

Another funny thing about white South Africans living abroad is how the constantly badmouth South Afrika. Sure there is a lot of crime but it mostly affects the poor and black parts of society. Even a lot of the naysayers on the eligibility of hosting the World Cup

GreenCommunism
12th June 2010, 21:13
It's not surprising. I once saw this interview of this BNP sympathizing woman who said she wanted to go live in Spain. She didn't seem to notice the irony.
dont you get it, white immigration is good, non white immigration is wrong. why? no idea

Raúl Duke
12th June 2010, 21:18
dont you get it, white immigration is good, non white immigration is wrong. why? no idea

The irony was on the fact that BNP and such keep stating stuff like "Learn English hur hur hur" when they English themselves fail to learn Spanish when they immigrate to Spain. I'll laugh when the day comes some Spanish politician says something negative about those bourgie English people living at villas in sea-side areas of Spain.

lombas
12th June 2010, 23:37
It was official Apartheid doctrine that the Afrikaners arrived in South Africa at about the same time as Bantu tribes expanded into the northern part of the country. For obvious reasons, they treated the Khoi-San as "near white tribes" (which still haunts them today, Khoi-San are not accepted as "blacks" and lack certain benefits because of their "privileged" position during Apartheid).

We know, however, that the Bantu tribes expanded in northern South Africa well before the arrival of Europeans in the Cape region. However, it is true that during the Great Trek it wasn't always clear that the land being occupied by Boer settlers had any "rightful" previous owner at all - except, of course, in certain situations where land was "bought" from Zulu and other Bantu fiefs.

So while historically in some far sense there might be any truth behind the idea, it can never serve as a justification.