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CNN’s Kyra Phillips has led her viewers to
believe that dangling a noose—an impolite and impolitic form of
expression—is a hate crime; a black man beating a white man to a
pulp—not so much. Being maimed or murdered, evidently, doesn’t compare
to being maligned. Phillips and the feminized establishment media have
difficulties differentiating a felony from an affront to feelings. No
wonder these wonder men and women are mum about who’s killing whom in the
democratic South Africa, the pride of the liberal press.
While black South African criminals are not neglecting other blacks,
they are, overwhelmingly, targeting Indians and whites. According to the
South African Institute of Security Studies, “Only 32 percent of all
blacks questioned knew someone who was a victim of crime,” compared to
66 percent of Indian adults and 56 percent of white adults. The
color of
crime and its casualties both in America and South Africa is the
proverbial elephant in the room—to be touched upon only if the victims
can be vilified as racists.
The BBC as well as New Zealand and Australian television news-networks
have covered the racially motivated
killing campaign Africans are conducting against the Afrikaner
farmers of South Africa. Not Kyra and her colleagues at Fox, MSNBC, ABC,
and CBS. No wonder, then, that the orchestrated ethnocide against the
entire Afrikaner people has not been brought out into the open, as they
like to say on CNN.
Ethnocide, as defined by Michael Mann, a leading historical sociologist,
is “state-induced cultural assimilation, through hegemony and
suppression.” The warmed-over Marxists governing South Africa with the
West’s blessing are leading the charge against the country’s Afrikaner
past, patriotism, and institutions.
Afrikaans, in particular, has come under the ANC’s attack, as the
government attempts to compel Afrikaans schools to adopt English.
Afrikaans-speaking universities, for example, have been labeled racist
in the New South Africa and have been forced to merge with “third-rate
black institutions so that campuses may be swamped by blacks demanding
instruction in English,” to quote the Afrikaner intellectual, Dan Roodt.
The ANC’s attempts to tame and claim South-African history have been
extended to landmarks in the annals of the founding people—these are
being slowly erased, as demonstrated by the ANC’s decision to give an
African name to Potchefstroom, a town founded in 1838 by the
“Voortrekkers” (Dutch pioneers). The leader of those pioneers, Marthinus
Pretorius, founded the capital, Pretoria. It is now Tshwane! Durban’s
Moore Road (after Sir John Moore, the hero of the Battle of Corunna) is
Che Guevara Road; Kensington Drive, Fidel Castro Drive. The cherry on
the cake is Yasser Arafat highway, down which the motorist can speed on
the way to the Durban airport.
As a subject in the school curriculum, history was initially neglected
during the transition to majority rule. The establishment of the “South
African History Project” changed that. The Project’s aim, according to
Sasha Polakow-Suransky of the Chronicle of Higher Education, has been “a
resurrection of the subject as a prominent field of study in the
national school curriculum.” Unfortunately, following the American
academy’s example, the trend has been away from “the pursuit of
objective historical truth,” toward a postmodern, politically correct
reconstruction of historical events, with the aim of fostering “certain
values,” in the words of Kader Asmal, the minister of education in 2000.
“You have books appearing that interpret the history of South Africa
only according to the perspective of the liberation struggle,” avers
Pieter Kapp, a retired professor of history at Stellenbosch University.
Indeed, “Since 1994, tales of European conquest are slowly beginning to
disappear from the nation's classrooms, giving way to epic accounts of
black anti-apartheid heroes,” writes Polakow-Suransky.
Like it or not, the modern marvel that was South Africa—with its space
program and skyscrapers—was not the handiwork of the black
nationalist movement now dismantling it; but the creation of those
persecuted, pale, patriarchal Protestants.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
November 23
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