@fadalhotep@askghmedia I support enforcing the law. What I don't support is turning frustration into hostility toward all foreign nationals. When people are targeted simply for being foreign, regardless of their legal status, that's no longer about the law it's about xenophobia.
@fadalhotep@askghmedia I respect your view, but perception and reality both need fairness and evidence. Emotion doesnโt equal truth, just as disagreement doesnโt mean denial of reality. Iโll leave it there.
@fadalhotep@askghmedia The real challenge is system capacity and management, not people who are simply trying to work, study, and live. If services are under pressure, the solution should focus on better planning, funding, and enforcement of existing laws, rather than generalizing entire groups.
@fadalhotep@askghmedia I hear the concern about pressure on public services, but blaming all foreign nationals misses the point. The videos circulating donโt distinguish between legal and illegal migrants, and the people leading the protests often group everyone together under one label.
@fadalhotep@askghmedia I agree South Africans deserve decent jobs, fair wages, and opportunities. However, blaming foreign nationals for economic challenges oversimplifies the problem. Unemployment, inequality, and low wages are structural issues that require real solutions, not scapegoats.