Just retweet this to irritate them all
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NO DNA, JUST RSA
BREAKING NEWS:
South Africa become the first country to hold the Rugby World Cup and the ICC World Test Championship whilst qualifying for the Round of 32 of the FIFA World Cup at the same time
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"An African cannot be illegal in Africa." That is the slogan of the deluded. That is the anthem of the entitled. That is the cry of those who refuse to accept that a continent of 54 sovereign nations has borders and those borders mean something.
A neighbour is not family. A neighbour is a neighbour. You can be kind to a neighbour. You can help a neighbour. But a neighbour does not have the right to walk into your home, eat your food, sleep in your bed, and tell you how to live simply because they share a street with you. That is not love. That is invasion.
Being African does not give you the right to cross any border you choose. It does not give you the right to bypass immigration laws. It does not give you the right to ignore the sovereignty of other nations. Every country has the right to decide who enters, who stays, and who contributes. That is not xenophobia. That is statehood.
If you believe that being African grants you automatic access to any African country, then you are not a Pan-Africanist you are a colonialist in reverse. You are demanding the same open borders that colonisers demanded when they carved up our continent. You are treating Africa as one big village with no rules, no boundaries, no accountability.
But Africa is not a village. It is a continent of nations each with its own laws, its own people, its own struggles. And we will not be shamed into abandoning our sovereignty just because someone shares our skin colour or our continent.
A neighbour is a neighbour. A citizen is a citizen. And no amount of rhetoric will change that. If you want to be family, act like family. Respect our home. Respect our rules. Respect our laws. Until then, you are just a guest and guests can be asked to leave. That is not hate. That is reality. And we will not apologise for it.
ANC, your time to serve yourselves has come to an end. You have failed the people of this country. We are voting you out.
For 31 years, you have held power. For 31 years, you have made promises. For 31 years, we have waited. And what do we have to show for it? An outdated infrastructure, a healthcare system that is overstretched by people who don’t pay taxes, failing education system which still underserves the poor black child, and a border that remains wide open because you have failed to do your job in managing it, your officials at Home Affairs have been selling our country for years. You have too many ministers. Too many deputies. Too many portfolios that serve no one but the politicians who hold them. You are wasting taxpayer money while our people go to bed hungry.
What is your job as government officials if you cannot protect and serve your own people? How different are you from these useless African politicians who do absolutely nothing for their citizens? You have forgotten the Freedom Charter. You have forgotten that "the people shall govern." You have forgotten that you work for us not the other way around.
We are going to show the rest of Africa what it means to hold leaders accountable when they are not up to the job. We are not going to run. We are not going to flee. We are going to vote. We are going to protest until you hear us, we are going to take you to the constitutional court. We are not going anywhere to look for opportunities, we will find them here, this is our home! We are going to demand better. And when the time comes, we will remove you from power peacefully, democratically, decisively.
This is not about hatred. This is about accountability. This is about dignity. This is about taking back our country from those who have treated it as their personal ATM. You have failed. You have stolen. You have betrayed us. kwanele And now, you will face the consequences.
The people shall govern. Not the politicians. Not the elites. Not the corrupt. The people. And we are ready to take our power back. The ANC's time is up. The people's time has come.
You sit wherever you are in Zambia, tweeting about our history as if you lived it. You lecture us about apartheid what we endured, how we fought, who helped us. You reduce our struggle to a "cartoon version" of history. But you were not there. You did not bleed. You did not bury. You did not fight.
Let me educate you🤔Yes, we acknowledge the support of frontline states. Yes, sanctions and international pressure mattered. Yes, the global anti-apartheid movement played a role. But do not diminish the sacrifices of our people. Do not erase the children of Soweto, the martyrs of Sharpeville, the soldiers of Umkhonto we Sizwe, the mothers who marched, the fathers who disappeared. Apartheid was not defeated by speeches in London or resolutions in New York alone. It was defeated because we refused to surrender. Because we fought on the streets, in the courts, in the prisons, and in our own hearts.
You speak of "cartoon history," yet you reduce our suffering to a script. You mock Sarafina!, a film that captured the spirit of our youth, the fire of our resistance. You call it poor education. But let me ask you, where were you when we were dying? Where were you when we were protesting? Where were you when we were voting for the first time?
If African people ever decided to protest face their own government if they ever choose to march against corruption, to demand accountability, to overthrow the thieves who have stolen what is rightfully theirs, South Africans will support them. We would stand with them. We would amplify their voices. Because we know what it means to fight. We know what it costs. But for as long as you don’t see your hypocrisy and dishonesty, African will remain where it is. That is not South Africa’s problem.
But until then, do not teach us about our history. You have not earned that right. You have not paid that price. Stay in Zambia and do what you people do in Zambia.
Let us talk trade. because what is economics without numbers South Africa and Nigeria are the two largest economies on the continent, But here’s the twist, our trade relationship is surprisingly imbalanced. South Africa actually exports more to Nigeria than it imports and by a significant margin.
According to recent trade data, South Africa exports approximately $2 billion to 200 million and $500 million. South Africa sends machinery, electronics, vehicles, chemicals, and manufactured goods to Nigeria. Nigeria primarily exports crude oil and refined petroleum to South Africa, along with some agricultural products.
So, to answer the question clearly, No! cha! nee!, South Africa is not importing more from Nigeria than it exports. We export more.
Nigeria is Africa's largest oil producer, with reserves of over 37 billion barrels. Yet the industry is dominated by foreign giants like Shell, TotalEnergies, Chevron, ExxonMobil. They extract, export, and repatriate profits while Nigerian communities suffer oil spills, pollution, and poverty. The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) is notoriously opaque, with billions in revenues unaccounted for.
Nigeria has vast deposits of gold, limestone, tin, coal, zinc, and lead. Yet most mining is artisanal and unregulated. Foreign companies control the licenses and profits. The Mining Act of 2007 was supposed to reform the sector but enforcement is weak, corruption is rampant, and local communities see no benefit.
Nigeria has the largest natural gas reserves in Africa over 200 trillion cubic feet. Yet the country flares gas, imports refined petroleum, and fails to harness this resource for domestic power generation. Foreign companies export liquefied natural gas (LNG) while Nigerians live without electricity.
Nigeria has millions of hectares of arable land, yet it imports food rice, wheat, fish because agricultural value chains are underdeveloped. Foreign companies control processing, distribution, and export. Nigerian farmers remain poor.
The Question is who is managing these resources? Not Nigerians but Foreign multinationals. Political elites. Corrupt officials. And you the people? You watch from a distance starving, powerless, bitter towards the wrong people, fleeing.
Now, let that sink in. While Nigerians threaten to retaliate against South African businesses like MTN and MultiChoice, they are actually benefitting from a trade surplus in our favour. South African companies invest billions in Nigeria, create jobs, and pay taxes while Nigeria exports raw materials and imports our manufactured goods.
This is not about xenophobia. This is about economics. We are not dependent on Nigeria. Nigeria is dependent on our investment and our goods. That is not arrogance that is fact.
So when Nigeria threatens to retaliate, you are threatening your own economy. You are threatening your own jobs. You are threatening your own people. And we will not be intimidated by a country that cannot even fix its own electricity.
Let the numbers speak. South Africa leads. South Africa builds. South Africa does not beg. Not now. Not ever. You should be learning from us, replicating and doing better!!!!!
You claim immigrants make an enormous contribution to food security in South Africa. Let me ask you a simple question, what were our people eating before they got here?
Before the influx of foreign nationals, South Africans were farming. We were planting. We were harvesting. We were trading. We had thriving agricultural communities, commercial farms, subsistence gardens, cooperative markets. We fed ourselves. We fed our neighbours. We exported to the region. We were not starving.
So do not insult our intelligence by suggesting that without immigrants, South Africa would go hungry. That is not only false it is patronising. Our people have been feeding themselves for centuries. We have the land. We have the climate. We have the knowledge. What we lack is political will, investment, and protection from an onslaught of unregulated foreign traders who undercut our own farmers, pay no taxes, and operate outside the law.
Let us talk about what immigrants are actually doing. They are opening spaza shops, selling produce, and dominating informal markets not because they are better at it, but because they are not subject to the same regulations, taxes, and licensing requirements as South Africans. They bypass our systems. They exploit our loopholes. And then they are celebrated as "contributors to food security."
Meanwhile, South African farmers struggle to compete. South African vendors close their doors. South African children go to bed hungry not because there is no food, but because our government has failed to protect our own people from being undercut in their own economy.
We are not xenophobic. We are not ungrateful. We are not blind. We see the truth. And the truth is this, South Africa fed itself before they came. South Africa can feed itself after they leave. We do not need saviours. We need sovereignty. We need leaders who put South Africans first.
So save your propaganda. We are not buying it. We know what we were eating before they arrived. And we will eat it again without their help, without their pity, without their presence. They should go and make these contributions in their own countries. We thank them for their service.