Monday, 13 March 2017

Malema makes news, if there's no news

The choice of the youth by far. Blacks, coloureds, whites and Indian youth adore this man. He is an example to many and indeed a role model. 



Those that fear him so much, can only wish he join the ANC. Do you ever think, someone leading a political group, will go back to be lead by others? Only the brain dead believe in this.

Julius Sello Malema (born 3 March 1981) is the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, a South African political party, which he founded in July 2013.  He previously served as President of the African National Congress Youth League from 2008 to 2012. Malema was a member of the ANC until his expulsion from the party in April 2012. He occupies a notably controversial position in South African public and political life, having risen to prominence with his support for African National Congress president, and later President of South Africa, Jacob Zuma. He has been described by both Zuma and the Premier of Limpopo Province as the "future leader" of South Africa Less favourable portraits paint him as a "reckless populist" with the potential to destabilise South Africa and to spark racial conflict.


Malema was convicted of hate speech in March 2010 and again in September 2011. In November 2011 he was found guilty of sowing divisions within the ANC and, in conjunction with his two-year suspended sentence in May 2010, was suspended from the party for five years. In 2011, he was also convicted of hate speech after singing "Dubula iBunu" ("Shoot the Boer"). On 4 February 2012 the appeal committee of the African National Congress announced that it found no reason to "vary" a decision of the disciplinary committee taken in 2011, but did find evidence in aggravation of circumstances, leading them to impose the harsher sentence of expulsion from the ANC.


On 25 April 2012 Malema lost an appeal to have his expulsion from the ANC overturned; as this exhausted his final appeal, his expulsion took immediate effect. In September 2012 he was charged with fraud and money-laundering.


He appeared before the Polokwane Magistrates Court in November 2012 to face these charges, plus an additional charge of racketeering. The case was postponed until 23 April 2013, and then again to 20 June. The State scheduled the trial for 18 to 29 November 2013.

Source:wiki and others.

Monday, 6 March 2017

Thought For Today

South Africa host millions of immigrants who pretend to be asylum-seekers. They are not at all seeking asylum but are essentially economic refugees. 


Why do they seek opportunities here and not in rich Lagos?


I condemned violence as a person.

 

There are legal ways to get rid of criminals that suck the blood out of our economy. Bring them before a court of law. Charge them and when find guilty, deport them immediately.

 "A few were hopeless imbeciles, unable to comprehend more than the rudimentary requirements of filling their bellies when food was placed before them … —Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Monster Men, 1929"

To those still dwelling on the apartheid era solidarity,  it is time to forget about it. That happened forty-seven ago. We can not be kept in servitude for the mistakes of people of whom some are no longer alive. 

 

The day we buried Nelson Mandela, we buried the past with him. Mandela in fact as I remember was in Pollsmore Medium Prison in the H section at that time. 

 

I hereby call on generation Y, to take the country back in other ways then this open violence. Be more secret and organize yourself, like we did in the past. In this way, you will win back the streets. Street by street, zone by zone. 

 

Not all aliens are bad, but they have outside support, from people that only know the country from the TV sets.

 

We are fully aware that every year 1.6 million African immigrants disturb our peace and try to put us in a bad light. I can promise you today, that we are in talks on how to change this annual fiasco for good


This is no hate speech, but love for my mother country. 

 

 

Sixty years ago in Rome, the foundations were laid for the European Union. Today, Europeans can look back with pride and forward with hope. Simply they have immigration laws, that do not allow this mayhem to happen in any European country.

 

We are today in a dilemma, where foreign black African nationals, with no respect for democracy, human dignity or liberty expect to get equality and solidarity. 

 

This bring me to the point of leaving the crippled African Union, that sucks us only dry.  This topic for another round of discussion or debate in close circles. Close circles will become loved as it was during the 1980's. Soon Facebook will be close in South Africa, like it is in China, Russia and Iran. Send me your email addresses through your Facebook messenger, if you want to be part of the reading and discussion list.