📌 Imagine! This bunch are terrible at Maths & it shows! Mumwe akazoti nyantso teererai munzwe zvaoma, another wants 5million for food & says every Sasafrican get R1million every year based on numbers pulled from his as*. Idi*ts in numbers, literally! @SandileMakeba@ibbosnr
And I want to add that he behaves like this: His... inaction-Benefits ED. Action-Benefits ED. Ambiguity-benefits ED. Sabbatical at a critical moment-Benefits ED. GNU-Benefits ED. Anythig he says/does-aligns well with ED timelines! Political clown of note! #noto2030
@LynneStactia Mr:
- Ndini Wacho
- Solo Project
- Ndipei Ndiite
- Zvangu Ndega
- Never Wrong
- I'm The One
- I can do it by Myself
- I don't need Comrades
- I am always Right
- When I Fail, I Win
- Always Perfect
- Worship my looks
- What-is-Accountability
- Keep-Hoping
- ManjeManje
Mugabe-Lite
@LynneStactia Mr:
- Ndini Wacho
- Solo Project
- Ndipei Ndiite
- Zvangu Ndega
- Never Wrong
- I'm The One
- I can do it by Myself
- I don't need Comrades
- I am always Right
- When I Fail, I Win
- Always Perfect
- Worship my looks
- What-is-Accountability
- Keep-Hoping
- ManjeManje
Mugabe-Lite
The moment Three South Africans were caught on camera looting a Malawian national in Johannesburg, South Africa 🇿���
Xenophobic black South Africans keep disgracing Africa all the time with their cr!m!nality🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️😭😭😭
The moment Three South Africans were caught on camera looting a Malawian national in Johannesburg, South Africa 🇿🇦
Xenophobic black South Africans keep disgracing Africa all the time with their cr!m!nality🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️😭😭😭
@LynneStactia The Hardest part wasn't handing over the flag to Matemadanda's wife, but Making EYE 👀 Contact With Her, Because she was L👀king Straight at him. Ndiyo inonzi Ziso👀 Pamuroyi Here paChishona⁉️.
We must locate this Zulu terrorist and get him prosecuted. @CyrilRamaphosa and his @MbalulaFikile regime cannot take Israel to ICJ for Gaza genocide while they do worse in their neighbourhoods.
MEMBERS OF MARCH AND MARCH ARE SUSPECTED TO HAVE KILLED MISHACK BANDA.
In the dust of Pietermaritzburg this June, under a sky that has witnessed too many killings by Black South Africans, a 29-year-old Malawian named Mishack Banda was brutally beaten to death by suspected members of March and March and Operation Dudula, led by @JacintaNgobese. His offence was not because he stole but because the colour of his skin did not appeal to the xenophobic bias of his killers, led by Jacinta.
Mishack Banda, whose father had originally lived
All his life in South Africa as an immigrant carrying only what the poor carry: quiet hope and calloused hands. He swept streets, carried loads, and sent small sums home so that his mother in Malawi could eat, and perhaps a younger sibling could stay in school. He was not a statistic. He was a son. A brother. A human being who believed that Africa could still make room for its own children.
Then, murderers and ruthless criminals headed by @JacintaNgobese started marching, and the march turned bloody. Fear, dressed as righteousness, found its target in an informal settlement.
Stones replaced words. Fists replaced reason.
The eternal posture of the innocent under siege:
Mishack Banda is on the ground, arms raised, not in defiance but in the ancient, wordless plea: “I am unarmed. I am you. Why?”
But Jacinta and her cohorts of witches would have none of that
The rock finds its mark. The circle closes. The mob disperses. And another African mother will soon receive the call that shatters everything:
He was killed by members of March and March under the leadership and instruction of Jacinta. This is not politics.
This is not “taking back what is ours.” This is the sound of a continent devouring its own future. Every time we allow xenophobia to turn brother against brother, we spit on the graves of those who fought for our collective freedom. We tell the world that Black pain only matters when the oppressor is white.
We confess that we have learned nothing from our own history of dispossession.
Mishack Banda was not killed by March and March because he stole a job. He was killed because somewhere a lie took root:
That the stranger is the enemy.
That another man’s hunger justifies their violence.
That blood can wash away their own failures of leadership and economy.
His blood now cries from the ground, not for revenge but for remembrance.
For the mothers still waiting by the phone....
For the children who will grow up without a father’s hand....
For every young African who still believes the lie...
That safety lies in hating the one who looks most like you....
Let the world see this image and feel the shame.
Let consciences stir.
Let the killing of Africans by Africans finally become unbearable to you.
Mishack is gone, but the question he leaves behind still hangs in the air like smoke:
When will you choose to be human again, @JacintaNgobese?
It is interesting that, in this season of Afrophobia, the xenophobes and Afrophobes seem reluctant to respond when remarks as in this video come from white people, yet they react with outrage when a black person says the same thing.
That raises an obvious question, was Julius Malema right when he argued that the xenophobes are afraid of confronting white people? If the principle is truly the issue, then it should be applied consistently, regardless of who is speaking.
One of the leaders of the xenophobic movement, Ngizwe Mchunu, recently declared that a German living in South Africa is no longer German but South African.
Yet the same individual, together with Jacob Zuma and his MK Party, is demanding that Africans who are legally documented and living lawfully in South Africa should leave the country.
If nationality and belonging are determined by residence and legal status in one case, why is the same principle not applied consistently to legally documented Africans? Is this inconsistency driven by a reluctance to confront white people, while directing hostility towards fellow Africans instead?
Could it be because Jacob Zuma is working with AfriForum? If so, is that influencing who is criticised and who is spared?
What is interesting is that this white South African has described the xenophobes and Afrophobes as not just stupid, but even more stupid than he had previously thought. Yet there has been complete silence from them.
When black people make similar criticisms, they erupt with outrage. But when a white South African says it, they suddenly go quiet. Perhaps Julius Malema was right after all when he suggested that they are afraid of confronting white people.
If they truly stand by their convictions, they should respond consistently, regardless of who is speaking. But quite clearly, they are cowards who only gain their courage against fellow black Africans. Hypocrites!
It is interesting that, in this season of Afrophobia, the xenophobes and Afrophobes seem reluctant to respond when remarks as in this video come from white people, yet they react with outrage when a black person says the same thing.
That raises an obvious question, was Julius Malema right when he argued that the xenophobes are afraid of confronting white people? If the principle is truly the issue, then it should be applied consistently, regardless of who is speaking.
One of the leaders of the xenophobic movement, Ngizwe Mchunu, recently declared that a German living in South Africa is no longer German but South African.
Yet the same individual, together with Jacob Zuma and his MK Party, is demanding that Africans who are legally documented and living lawfully in South Africa should leave the country.
If nationality and belonging are determined by residence and legal status in one case, why is the same principle not applied consistently to legally documented Africans? Is this inconsistency driven by a reluctance to confront white people, while directing hostility towards fellow Africans instead?
Could it be because Jacob Zuma is working with AfriForum? If so, is that influencing who is criticised and who is spared?
What is interesting is that this white South African has described the xenophobes and Afrophobes as not just stupid, but even more stupid than he had previously thought. Yet there has been complete silence from them.
When black people make similar criticisms, they erupt with outrage. But when a white South African says it, they suddenly go quiet. Perhaps Julius Malema was right after all when he suggested that they are afraid of confronting white people.
If they truly stand by their convictions, they should respond consistently, regardless of who is speaking. But quite clearly, they are cowards who only gain their courage against fellow black Africans. Hypocrites!
It is interesting that, in this season of Afrophobia, the xenophobes and Afrophobes seem reluctant to respond when remarks as in this video come from white people, yet they react with outrage when a black person says the same thing.
That raises an obvious question, was Julius Malema right when he argued that the xenophobes are afraid of confronting white people? If the principle is truly the issue, then it should be applied consistently, regardless of who is speaking.
One of the leaders of the xenophobic movement, Ngizwe Mchunu, recently declared that a German living in South Africa is no longer German but South African.
Yet the same individual, together with Jacob Zuma and his MK Party, is demanding that Africans who are legally documented and living lawfully in South Africa should leave the country.
If nationality and belonging are determined by residence and legal status in one case, why is the same principle not applied consistently to legally documented Africans? Is this inconsistency driven by a reluctance to confront white people, while directing hostility towards fellow Africans instead?
Could it be because Jacob Zuma is working with AfriForum? If so, is that influencing who is criticised and who is spared?
What is interesting is that this white South African has described the xenophobes and Afrophobes as not just stupid, but even more stupid than he had previously thought. Yet there has been complete silence from them.
When black people make similar criticisms, they erupt with outrage. But when a white South African says it, they suddenly go quiet. Perhaps Julius Malema was right after all when he suggested that they are afraid of confronting white people.
If they truly stand by their convictions, they should respond consistently, regardless of who is speaking. But quite clearly, they are cowards who only gain their courage against fellow black Africans. Hypocrites!
Meet EFF Leader Julius Malema who has condemned the nationwide protest planned for 30 June. He says that, while he understands the concerns of the organisations involved in the protests, there are legal channels available to resolve the immigration issue.