📊 🚨 LET'S DO SOME MATHS!
Sentenced prisoners in South Africa: 170,000
Illegal foreign nationals in prison: 13,266 = 7.8%
South African citizens in prison: 156,734 = 92.2%
Based on these prison figures, who commits most of the crimes that result in imprisonment in South Africa?
Maths doesn't have feelings. It has percentages.
https://t.co/Kt9NGoFaaj
😂😂😂😂What did I tell you about divide and conquer and treating your fellow brothers and sisters like humans.
Nanso ke indaba 😂😂😂
Unfortunately bhunu is saying painful truths and it needs sober and less emotional minds to digest.
@TheLifeZoomer First Boer I agree with. Talking sense. Those idiots marching and all are bloody lazy cu#%!*+nts. Chasing away our own brothers and sisters.
🚨 Arsenal Legend Ian Wright on the Spence–Partey Handshake Incident:
🗣️ “I know a lot of people will disagree with me on this, but I wasn’t comfortable with what happened. Thomas Partey was there representing Ghana, standing in that line as a professional footballer, and I think he deserved the same basic respect that every other player received.
A handshake isn’t an endorsement of someone’s character, it isn’t a verdict, and it certainly isn’t a statement about legal matters. It’s simply a gesture of professionalism before a football match.
What worries me is how quickly people today are willing to make up their minds before processes have run their course. We all have opinions, and everyone is entitled to them, but there is a reason due process exists.
You cannot build a fair society on assumptions. If we start treating accusations as convictions, then we’re moving away from the principles of fairness that we expect in every other walk of life.
Djed Spence has every right to make his own decision, and nobody should force him to do something he doesn’t want to do. But if you’re asking for my view, I would have shaken Thomas Partey’s hand and then focused on the football. That’s what I would expect from any professional player. The game itself should always come first.
I’ve seen people praising the gesture as if it was some great act of courage, and others condemning it completely. For me, the bigger point is that respect has to be applied consistently. You can’t demand fairness for some people and then deny it to others.
Whether you like Thomas Partey or not, whether you support Ghana or not, the principle remains the same: every person deserves to be treated fairly until the facts are established.
Football is becoming too quick to judge and too slow to wait for the truth. That’s not a road I want the game to go down. My belief has always been simple: respect people, let the proper authorities do their work, and don’t turn a football pitch into a courtroom.”
🚨 Rio Ferdinand on Djed Spence not shaking Thomas Partey’s hand:
“If I were Djed Spence, I’d take some time to sit down and reflect on what happened, then ask myself whether that’s really how I’d want to treat a fellow professional.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinions, but one principle must always remain: people are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. That’s the foundation of justice.
I’ve seen people saying Spence was right because of the allegations surrounding Partey, but allegations are not the same as a conviction. Until the legal process reaches a conclusion, that principle has to be respected.
Whether you agree or disagree, football should remain a place of professionalism and respect. If there’s a personal issue, that’s something to deal with away from the pitch.”