On Monday, March 5, 2018 at 12:03:57 PM UTC-8, Mossingen wrote:
He didn't in that video urge anyone to kill and injure white people. That's a pure fabrication on your part. It seems you have some kind of issue in how you deal with factual information.
> You can argue that the guy has a good reason to feel the way that he does,
> but that's not really an excuse to mischaracterize his message as being
> non-racist. If you can justify that, then on what basis do you condemn the
> white government for instituting apartheid?
First of all, Julius Malema is not the South African government. Just to clarify what we're talking about here. The current South African government includes whites. Did the apartheid South African government include blacks? In
Additionally, South African authorities have charged and convicted him for violating 'hate speech' laws. So, maybe he is a racist. And the Wikipedia description of him sounds a lot like Donald Trump right down to the stinky financial dealings.
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'Less favourable portraits paint him as a "reckless populist" with the potential to destabilise South Africa and to spark racial conflict.[5]
Malema was convicted of hate speech in March 2010[6][7][8] and again in September 2011.[9] 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.[10] 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,[11] 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.[12]'
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_Malema
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Here's some input about land expropriation in South Africa:
Codrington advised his âwhite South African friendsâ that that this would not be âthe first time the South African government has taken land without paying for itâ.
âIn fact, itâs at least the fifteenth time the government of South Africa has passed laws to take land.
âPlease do us a favour: if your ancestors did not comment about the previous fifteen times the government took land (and I am guessing that, like mine, they did not), then right now would be a good time to be quiet for a bit and listen.
âNot forever. Just for a bit. And then calmly contribute to the conversation over the next few weeks and months in an attempt to find a solution that helps everyone.â
Here is the list of laws he details as having taken land from non-white people in recent history:
The Glen Grey act of 1894 (Under Cecil John Rhodes)
The Native Land Act of 1913 (Act 27)
The Transvaal Asiatic Land Tenure of 1930
The Riotous Assemblies Act 19 â 1930
The Asiatic Immigration Amendment Act of 1931
The Native Service Contracts Act of 1932
The Native Trust and Land Act of 1936 (Act 18)
The Slums Act of 1934
The Development Trust and Land Act of 1936 (Act 18)
The Rural Dealers Licensing Act of 1935.
The Representation of Blacks Act 12 of 1936.
The Black (Native) Laws Amendment Act 46 of 1937
The Pegging Act of 1946
The Group Areas Act of 1950 (Act. 41)
He concluded by writing that none of these laws went âback too farâ as âthe first of these Acts were passed in my grandmotherâs lifetimeâ, so it would not be valid to âmoan about âhow far back do we have to go'â.
https://citizen.co.za/news/south-africa/1843617/graeme-codrington-goes-viral-for-comments-on-land-expropriation/