A Gentle Reminder:
Presidents, Ministers, Members of Parliament, Councillors and all public representatives are your servants. They exist solely to represent your interests as citizens. We are your “leaders” simply because you elected us to be in positions of authority. Truth of the matter is, the ultimate leaders in a society are the people.
The people delegate their power to a few to be in decision making bodies like Municipal Councils and Parliament. That doesn’t change the fact that the people in these positions are given power by the people and must exercise that public power in a manner that advances the interests of the people and must always be answerable to the public.
When we go to the elections in November, remember to vote for your SERVANTS. Do not vote for BOSSES that do not sympathise with your struggles and view something as a problem only when it affects them personally.
If South African laws are no longer regulatory but rather suggestions, they should let us know. It’s the constitution you gave us that said illegal immigration is unlawful.
Let us talk about Kenya. A beautiful country, rich in potential, yet crippled by the very thing that plagues much of Africa, tribalism. In Kenya, politics is not about policy, it is about tribe. Kikuyu, Luo, Kalenjin, Luhya. Elections become ethnic battlegrounds. Neighbours turn into enemies. Violence erupts not over ideology, but over identity. And while Kenyan leaders fly private jets and park billions offshore, ordinary citizens fight for water, land, and survival. This is the reality you refuse to confront.
Yet you lecture South Africa about Africanism. You preach unity while you are divided at home. You demand our love while you cannot love each other. How can you speak of pan-Africanism when your own house is burning? Tribalism is the cancer that has eaten Africa from within and Kenya is no exception. If pan-Africanism has to start in South Africa, we don’t want it……keep it.
Now ask yourself🤔where do you think the services illegal immigrants receive in South Africa come from? At whose expense? Our clinics are flooded. Our schools are overcrowded. Our hospitals are stretched. And not one single African country is donating to South Africa. Not one is helping us carry this burden. We are not benefiting from your presence, we are subsidising your escape.
You come here seeking what your leaders denied you. But you bring your divisions with you. You bring your tribalism. You demand rights while refusing to demand accountability from your own governments. You expect South Africans to be your saviours while you refuse to save yourselves.
We are not your solution. We are not your escape. We are a sovereign nation with our own poor, our own unemployed, our own sick. We cannot fix what your leaders broke. Go home. Fix your house. Stop asking us to carry what you will not carry yourselves. That is not pan-Africanism. That is abdication. And we are done with it.
How do you balance encouraging citizens to vote for the promise of service delivery while allowing thousands of undocumented people to settle in communities and share the same public resources?
İtalya Başbakanı Meloni:
"İsrail'i kırmızı çizgiyi aşmakla suçluyorum, Filistinli sivillerin katliamını kınıyorum ve İtalya'nın İsrail'e karşı Avrupa yaptırımlarını destekleyeceğini açıklıyorum."
You say nobody hates South Africa, only xenophobia. But you cannot separate the two when you label every enforcement of our borders as an attack. You watched a soccer match, saw South Africans cheer for their team, and somehow twisted that into a referendum on your pain. You carry hurt in your soul? Imagine the hurt of a South African youth who cannot find a job while your compatriots fill positions meant for them. Imagine the hurt of a mother whose child cannot get a bed in a clinic because it is occupied by someone who was never budgeted for. Imagine the hurt of watching your government fail you for 31 years and then being told you are the villain for wanting better.
You cite Mandela, Nkrumah, Machel, and Nyerere. They fought for liberation. They did not fight for open borders. They fought for sovereignty, for dignity, for their people. They would never have asked another nation to carry the burden of their own failures. They would have said, go home, fix your country, build your nation. That is what made them great. Not running. Not blaming. Not protesting in solidarity while your own leaders steal billions.
You say we need new leaders. Yes. We need them in South Africa but you need them more in Zimbabwe. You have been under ZANUPF for over 40 years. Your economy is in ruins. Your people are scattered across the globe. Yet you come here, demanding sympathy, while you refuse to hold your own government accountable.
We are not xenophobic. We are sovereign. We are tired. And we are done being your scapegoat. Go home. Face your leaders. That is where your fight belongs. Not here. Not with us.
Let me educate you not with anger, but with truth. You assume South Africans lack exposure. You assume we believe other African countries are poor and undeveloped. That is not the case. We know the reality. We know Nigeria has oil. We know Ghana has gold. We know Kenya has tech. We know Botswana has diamonds. We know Zambia has copper. We know Zimbabwe has platinum and lithium. We know the DRC sits on $24 trillion in minerals. We know Africa is rich.
But here is what you do not understand, wealth beneath the ground does not translate to prosperity above it. You can have all the minerals in the world but if your leaders steal, your constitutions hostile towards humans rights, if your institutions are corrupt, if your people are divided by tribe, if your healthcare collapses, if your schools crumble, if your youth flee then you are poor. Not in resources. In governance. In accountability. In dignity.
We do not look down on Africa. We look at the mirror Africa refuses to face. We see our own flaws corruption, unemployment, crime and we fight them. We protest. We vote. We demand better. That is what makes us different. We do not run. We stay. We build. We hold our leaders accountable, even when it hurts.
You say we lack exposure. But we see you. We see your leaders flying overseas to get treated, some in our country to get medical treatment, while your children starve. We see your ports exporting raw minerals while your people have no jobs. We are not blind. We are not ignorant. We are honest.
The difference between South Africa and many other African countries is not wealth. It is the willingness to confront failure. We own ours. You run from yours. That is not a lack of exposure. That is a lack of accountability. And until you fix that, no mineral, no resource, no tweet will save you. Go home. Fix your house. Then talk to us about exposure.
Let us not forget that there’s a immigration crisis in this country because South Africans have been voting 4 ANC,
the EFF supports the existence of this crisis therefore voting for EFF is voting for the continuation of this madness, I’m glad the Youth is becoming awake Daybyday
🎥 Group A (Ghanaians repatriated)
South Africans are right - A Ghanaian 🇬🇭
A Ghanaian (Minister of God) states South Africans are right fighting against what is happening in their country by foreigners. He mentions foreigners are
-Hijacking buildings
-Drug pushers
-Breachment of amenities (electricity , water ) ….
#SouthAfrica #Ghana #Africa #SA #updates #News #Africannews #GH
🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦🌍🇬🇭🌍🇿🇦
[WATCH] "They say we're lazy"—Emotional South African woman expresses her pain and anger towards the South African Government for prioritizing foreigners over Locals
Julius Malema " Illegal Foreigners are going to be your future employers, try to be good at them"
Mcebo Dlamini "When you hear a leader saying illegal foreigners are going to be your future employers just know they dont respect you, the regard you as the 5th citizens in your own country. Thats the insult you are been subjected to by leaders who value nothing about you"