According to Scripture love has two aspects:
1. love acts (defined in the Ten Commandments) &
2. love attitudes (found in 1 Cor. 13: 4-7)
These can't exist in isolation. One's heart and mind must have the love attitudes of 1 Cor. 13 as one does loving acts in the Decalogue.
Accusing us of "Islamophobia" is a pathetic deflection that won't silence Christians or any South African who values truth over political correctness.
Yusuf Cassim, a Muslim from the DA, has been sworn in as Deputy Minister of Higher Education and Training under President Cyril Ramaphosa's latest reshuffle. The backlash on social media isn't baseless hate; it's a legitimate alarm over placing someone whose faith is fundamentally incompatible with Christian and Western principles in a position of influence over our youth and institutions.
Islam and Christianity are not compatible. They are not "different paths to the same God." One is built on submission to Allah and Sharia, the other on grace through Christ and individual liberty. Look at every nation where Islam dominates; apostasy is punished, women are second-class, free speech is crushed under blasphemy laws, and Western values like equality and secular governance erode into theocracy. This is not "phobia," it's observable reality from history and current events across the globe. Importing or elevating this ideology in South Africa is a death sentence for the remaining Western foundations that's left.
Redi Tlhabi and others can cry about a "small coordinated minority or bots" all they want. That's the same pathetic script used to dismiss any pushback against demographic and cultural shifts that threaten our way of life. South Africans, Christians, and anyone paying attention have every right to question this appointment without being smeared. The higher education sector is already a disaster of declining standards, race-based policies, and failing students, now we're supposed to pretend faith has no bearing on priorities?
We see the pattern. We see the incompatibility. And we will not be silenced by guilt-tripping labels. South Africa needs leaders who uphold merit, freedom, and our Christian heritage, not those advancing an ideology that has proven hostile to it time and again.
This is not about one man personally, it's about the civilizational reality we refuse to ignore.
Besides dressing like he’s in the Taliban, whilst being in a very gay, leftist political party, Yusuf Cassim is completely unqualified to be Deputy Minister of Higher Education.
He is:
- 36 years old.
- Only has a BCom Accounting degree from Nelson Mandela University. In 2012 he was elected SRC President there as the DA Students' Organisation candidate.
- He has never worked as a professor, lecturer, teacher or administrator at any university or college.
- His higher education experience is limited to student leadership.
Surely the DA could find someone more qualified?
In my opinion they chose him as a promising up-and-comer that could get them some Muslim votes away from the PA.
With the DA it’s always about the votes, not what’s best for SA.
ISIS follows Islam.
PFI follows Islam.
PAK army follows islam.🇵🇰
Hamas follows Islam.
Jaish-e-Mohammed follows Islam.
Lashkar-e-Taiba follows Islam.
Al-Qaeda follows Islam.
Tehrik-e-Taliban follows Islam.
Hizbul Mujahideen follows Islam.
Yet, according to liberals, terrorism has no religion. 😐
Yasser Arafat was Egyptian. He literally invented the “Palestinian people” in the late 1960s.
Now we’re supposed to believe this 60-year-old political invention is an ancient indigenous population.
The historical illiteracy is actually embarrassing.
@CyrilRamaphosa Ohhh, in the UK we surly know all about Africans transcending boarders trust me. Got a few over here if you want to tell us where to drop them off!
🧵 Concerning the current immigration-related discourse, I've noticed that a lot of people who are opposed to protests and discussions regarding illegal and uncontrolled immigration across various news and social media platforms strawman, gaslight, and minimize the issue. From what I've observed in the South African political environment, these detractors fall into seven distinct categories:
1/10
Conclusion
When I observed and analyzed who opposes anti-illegal and uncontrolled immigration discourse through the lens of misdirection, minimization, and distortion, critics almost always speak from at least one of these seven biases.
This opposition stands in stark contrast to objective good-faith objectors to immigration protests. Such individuals do not gaslight or strawman the debate; in fact, they explicitly acknowledge that illegal and uncontrolled immigration is a severe crisis, that citizens' grievances are entirely legitimate, and that the state has comprehensively failed to regulate immigration and enforce its own laws. They oppose street protests or citizen-led enforcement strictly on procedural or ethical grounds. These objectors will also rightly stand against taking the law into one's own hands, against xenophobic rhetoric, and against xenophobic violence, while simultaneously defending citizens' democratic right to raise their grievances through peaceful protests.
By removing these principled, good-faith objectors from the equation, we can see clearly that the remaining mainstream media and political opposition relies entirely on the seven manipulative frameworks detailed above.
9/10
I was never a practising, observant Muslim.
Yet, even I wanted Islam to take over Europe and the West until I was a teenager.
We are taught that Islam's greatest achievements are conquest and colonialism.
We are taught that the greatest thing we could ever do is enable the invasion and conquest of non-Muslim countries.
This is a fact that only a former Muslim would tell you.