Thursday, July 28, 2011
Tour South Africa
Email received:
From: (Name Withheld)
Sent: Friday, September 04, 2009 5:31 PM
Subject: URGENT PRAYER REQUEST
Friends of our family & awesome Christians - Riaan & Tillie Pieters were brutally attacked on 1 September 2009 - Tuesday Night at 10:00pm in their home town Rustenburg after they went out to dinner alone. 4 armed men took them to a remote location then they beat up Riaan, Smashing in his face. 3 specialists are on standby to reconstruct his face the minute the swelling goes down.
His lovely wife Tillie was repeatedly raped and all her finger tips were bitten off during the rapes. They broke her arm and then tried to kill her by hitting a hole in the back of her head. Even though the attack was racially motivated (as Riaan could hear them swearing and making racial slurs), nothing was stolen and Riaan was able to crawl to his bakkie and take them to the hospital.
Both are in ICU, Riaan is awake and continues to thank God that he is alive and has already forgiven his attackers, but Tillie has not yet regained consciousness. They have two small children who were at home but now need all our prayers.
Please join us in Prayer for healing & strength, Riaan’s mother is not taking this very well so extra prayers for their families.
Thank you and I will keep all updated.
(Name Withheld)
Monday, July 25, 2011
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Tour South Africa
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
Tour South Africa
Reading between the lies: South Africa’s crime statistics
Charlene Smith Raped
This week a guard starts patrolling the beautiful, tree-lined street in which I live. Since January there have been 13 criminal incidents, including five armed robberies and five house-breakings, in our block of 20 houses. A woman was badly beaten in one incident and needed 13 stitches in her head.
There has not been a single arrest in any incident this year or last. The only arrest any of us knows of in our community was the arrest of the person who raped and stabbed me eight years ago and that was because a private-investigator friend drove the investigation. The area we live in falls under the policing precinct of Parkview, reputedly the best in Johannesburg.
As neighbours we thought ours was a quiet, relatively crime-free street, until we began comparing notes. The police and criminals rely on us not doing this. If we don’t compare notes, we have little awareness of how seriously South Africa’s police underperform. If you don’t believe me, take a notebook and knock on the doors of your neighbours now, or do something radical: invite them for tea. If you stay in a neighbourhood you think is safe, with plenty of electric wiring, beams, high walls, spikes and razor wire of the sort my street boasts, then you more than any other need to understand your false sense of security.
Take these statistics from one of the at least eight security companies operating in our suburb, and bear in mind this is a suburb where people believe themselves sufficiently safe to jog, walk dogs and wheel babies in prams. Assessing six streets, one of which is a main street and two of which are reasonably long, over four months from July to November, one security company logged the theft of 56 computers, 27 laptops, five printers, 15 cellphones, three hi-fis, two televisions and three PlayStations in 38 incidents. All this information is fed to the police in weekly meetings.
These are not crimes of the hungry; groceries were taken in only one instance. These are syndicates who know that many people now work from home or have computers at home. Jewellery and clothes were also only taken once.
In one instance where seven computers, five laptops, printers, a fridge and a television were stolen, the property was protected by beams, CCTV, a palisade fence, razor wire and brick walls. The call was phoned in, which means all security systems were either deactivated or failed or the people were held up. Burglars and armed robbers are most often coming in not when we’re asleep, but when we’re awake and alarms are deactivated. In an instance in our street, the armed robber had a list and went with the female householder from room to room calling out what he wanted and ticking off computers, PlayStations, jewellery …
In another instance where two laptops, a watch and R500 was taken, the householders were “protected” by beams, CCTV, electric fencing, brick walls and burglar bars.
Police claimed in Pretoria last week that there were 6 711 house robberies in the six months from April to September, up from 6 271 over the same period last year. They said most were in the Free State, Eastern Cape and Mpumalanga, with the least in the Northern Cape and Gauteng. Pardon me if I don’t believe those statistics.
Criminals depend on us not sharing notes because it makes life easy for them. While we have impressive security in front of our houses, they come over the back walls, or leap across neighbouring walls that lack lights, wire or spikes. As one of my neighbours said: “We’re only as safe as the precautions our neighbour takes.”
We also don’t know crime trends in our street or those that flank us, so we don’t take appropriate precautions. In the streets that flank us at present, we have a group stealing from motor vehicles in driveways. In a fairly busy, but by no means significant, street a block away there have been so many armed robberies lately that house-for-sale signs are mushrooming.
Police keep telling us they rely on us to give them information. A neighbour and I took the incident list we compiled to the head of detectives. She is an individual we like and trust; she is open and energetic. In three sets of incidents we believed we knew who the perpetrators or accessories were or at least where they came from. She gave the list to the sector head — four sectors fall under our station. A week later, when a neighbour went to the woman captain in charge of our sector to establish progress, the captain put her head on the desk and groaned saying she was feeling ill. When the concerned neighbour went to other offices to get help for her, her colleagues laughed and said she always does that.
The police have been to none of the three houses from which we strongly suspect criminal activity came. Three weeks later, nothing has happened from the side of the police; although we in our street now have an e-list and SMS alert, we’re liaising with other streets too.
I called the head of detectives this morning; she said she’d get back to me later today. We also emailed the incident list to the personal email address of Gauteng safety and security MEC Firoz Cachalia; he belongs to the same African National Congress branch as one of the residents. Three weeks later we haven’t heard back from him either. He stays in the area. Police at Parkview claim he has never visited his home precinct.
So here we have a motivated head of detectives with sluggish staff below her and above her a political appointee, the MEC, who is heard but never seen.
It’s little surprise then that police claim residential robberies are up 7%. Indeed, if the experience of our single street and those are us are anything to go by, those statistics are an underestimate.
Why do I say that? Well, take your own example. Have you laid charges every time your car has been broken into, your cellphone stolen or an attempt has been made to break into your home? If you laid charges, was it to satisfy insurance criteria or because you believed an arrest would be made? A neighbour who had laundry stolen off her line never reported it. Nor did two who had attempted break-ins.
Recently when intruders tried to break into my home at 5pm and were chased away by neighbours, I phoned the flying squad. I’d been raped and stabbed in that house, so I was anxious about returning home. The duty officer said: “They’ve gone, what more can we do?” I burst into tears and put the phone down. This is another crime “unreported” and so, according to the stats, it never happened.
The South African Human Rights Commission last week observed that South Africans “still remain unsafe at their homes”. We don’t need statements of what we know; we need creative thinking and action.
We’re increasingly getting the blame placed on the significant number of illegal immigrants in our country for criminality. While other countries register illegal immigrants, we don’t. The approach is similar to that the government adopts to Aids and crime: if we ignore it, maybe it will go away. Each week we spend tens of thousands of rands on deporting thousands of illegal immigrants and see two-thirds of them jump off trains before they reach the border.
So we have high deportation costs and no impact on reducing the flow. But what is the impact on criminality? It’s quite simple; if illegal immigrants are undocumented by the South African state, it means that it makes more sense for criminal syndicates to use illegal immigrants than South Africans. Why? Because they are undocumented, their fingerprints can’t be traced and they have no fixed abode. The government wants them to be invisible and they are, so more crime is being done by invisible people; this is how the government aids criminality.
This week I paid R900 toward the guard starting patrols on our street. R500 was toward the hut and R400 is the monthly cost per resident for a 12-hour patrol. In addition, I pay R350 a month for armed response. I also pay taxes. Last month I received a quote of R12 000 to install new burglar bars — R20 000 if I want beams.
I don’t have that sort of money, but most of my neighbours do. They have high walls, electric wiring, CCTV, spikes, razor wire, palisade fencing, electronic gates, alarms inside their homes. We have millions of rands’ worth of security on our street and guess what? It doesn’t stop the criminals.
The only thing that could is effective policing, a criminal justice system that doesn’t give bail as easily as it does and prisons that hold criminals for their full term. That will only happen once we have political leaders who don’t quibble with crime statistics, but instead commit themselves to protecting law-abiding South Africans from harm.
It would help too if we had a police commissioner who was respected for integrity.
Posted by Dark Raven at 10:52 AM
Charlene Smith Raped
This week a guard starts patrolling the beautiful, tree-lined street in which I live. Since January there have been 13 criminal incidents, including five armed robberies and five house-breakings, in our block of 20 houses. A woman was badly beaten in one incident and needed 13 stitches in her head.
There has not been a single arrest in any incident this year or last. The only arrest any of us knows of in our community was the arrest of the person who raped and stabbed me eight years ago and that was because a private-investigator friend drove the investigation. The area we live in falls under the policing precinct of Parkview, reputedly the best in Johannesburg.
As neighbours we thought ours was a quiet, relatively crime-free street, until we began comparing notes. The police and criminals rely on us not doing this. If we don’t compare notes, we have little awareness of how seriously South Africa’s police underperform. If you don’t believe me, take a notebook and knock on the doors of your neighbours now, or do something radical: invite them for tea. If you stay in a neighbourhood you think is safe, with plenty of electric wiring, beams, high walls, spikes and razor wire of the sort my street boasts, then you more than any other need to understand your false sense of security.
Take these statistics from one of the at least eight security companies operating in our suburb, and bear in mind this is a suburb where people believe themselves sufficiently safe to jog, walk dogs and wheel babies in prams. Assessing six streets, one of which is a main street and two of which are reasonably long, over four months from July to November, one security company logged the theft of 56 computers, 27 laptops, five printers, 15 cellphones, three hi-fis, two televisions and three PlayStations in 38 incidents. All this information is fed to the police in weekly meetings.
These are not crimes of the hungry; groceries were taken in only one instance. These are syndicates who know that many people now work from home or have computers at home. Jewellery and clothes were also only taken once.
In one instance where seven computers, five laptops, printers, a fridge and a television were stolen, the property was protected by beams, CCTV, a palisade fence, razor wire and brick walls. The call was phoned in, which means all security systems were either deactivated or failed or the people were held up. Burglars and armed robbers are most often coming in not when we’re asleep, but when we’re awake and alarms are deactivated. In an instance in our street, the armed robber had a list and went with the female householder from room to room calling out what he wanted and ticking off computers, PlayStations, jewellery …
In another instance where two laptops, a watch and R500 was taken, the householders were “protected” by beams, CCTV, electric fencing, brick walls and burglar bars.
Police claimed in Pretoria last week that there were 6 711 house robberies in the six months from April to September, up from 6 271 over the same period last year. They said most were in the Free State, Eastern Cape and Mpumalanga, with the least in the Northern Cape and Gauteng. Pardon me if I don’t believe those statistics.
Criminals depend on us not sharing notes because it makes life easy for them. While we have impressive security in front of our houses, they come over the back walls, or leap across neighbouring walls that lack lights, wire or spikes. As one of my neighbours said: “We’re only as safe as the precautions our neighbour takes.”
We also don’t know crime trends in our street or those that flank us, so we don’t take appropriate precautions. In the streets that flank us at present, we have a group stealing from motor vehicles in driveways. In a fairly busy, but by no means significant, street a block away there have been so many armed robberies lately that house-for-sale signs are mushrooming.
Police keep telling us they rely on us to give them information. A neighbour and I took the incident list we compiled to the head of detectives. She is an individual we like and trust; she is open and energetic. In three sets of incidents we believed we knew who the perpetrators or accessories were or at least where they came from. She gave the list to the sector head — four sectors fall under our station. A week later, when a neighbour went to the woman captain in charge of our sector to establish progress, the captain put her head on the desk and groaned saying she was feeling ill. When the concerned neighbour went to other offices to get help for her, her colleagues laughed and said she always does that.
The police have been to none of the three houses from which we strongly suspect criminal activity came. Three weeks later, nothing has happened from the side of the police; although we in our street now have an e-list and SMS alert, we’re liaising with other streets too.
I called the head of detectives this morning; she said she’d get back to me later today. We also emailed the incident list to the personal email address of Gauteng safety and security MEC Firoz Cachalia; he belongs to the same African National Congress branch as one of the residents. Three weeks later we haven’t heard back from him either. He stays in the area. Police at Parkview claim he has never visited his home precinct.
So here we have a motivated head of detectives with sluggish staff below her and above her a political appointee, the MEC, who is heard but never seen.
It’s little surprise then that police claim residential robberies are up 7%. Indeed, if the experience of our single street and those are us are anything to go by, those statistics are an underestimate.
Why do I say that? Well, take your own example. Have you laid charges every time your car has been broken into, your cellphone stolen or an attempt has been made to break into your home? If you laid charges, was it to satisfy insurance criteria or because you believed an arrest would be made? A neighbour who had laundry stolen off her line never reported it. Nor did two who had attempted break-ins.
Recently when intruders tried to break into my home at 5pm and were chased away by neighbours, I phoned the flying squad. I’d been raped and stabbed in that house, so I was anxious about returning home. The duty officer said: “They’ve gone, what more can we do?” I burst into tears and put the phone down. This is another crime “unreported” and so, according to the stats, it never happened.
The South African Human Rights Commission last week observed that South Africans “still remain unsafe at their homes”. We don’t need statements of what we know; we need creative thinking and action.
We’re increasingly getting the blame placed on the significant number of illegal immigrants in our country for criminality. While other countries register illegal immigrants, we don’t. The approach is similar to that the government adopts to Aids and crime: if we ignore it, maybe it will go away. Each week we spend tens of thousands of rands on deporting thousands of illegal immigrants and see two-thirds of them jump off trains before they reach the border.
So we have high deportation costs and no impact on reducing the flow. But what is the impact on criminality? It’s quite simple; if illegal immigrants are undocumented by the South African state, it means that it makes more sense for criminal syndicates to use illegal immigrants than South Africans. Why? Because they are undocumented, their fingerprints can’t be traced and they have no fixed abode. The government wants them to be invisible and they are, so more crime is being done by invisible people; this is how the government aids criminality.
This week I paid R900 toward the guard starting patrols on our street. R500 was toward the hut and R400 is the monthly cost per resident for a 12-hour patrol. In addition, I pay R350 a month for armed response. I also pay taxes. Last month I received a quote of R12 000 to install new burglar bars — R20 000 if I want beams.
I don’t have that sort of money, but most of my neighbours do. They have high walls, electric wiring, CCTV, spikes, razor wire, palisade fencing, electronic gates, alarms inside their homes. We have millions of rands’ worth of security on our street and guess what? It doesn’t stop the criminals.
The only thing that could is effective policing, a criminal justice system that doesn’t give bail as easily as it does and prisons that hold criminals for their full term. That will only happen once we have political leaders who don’t quibble with crime statistics, but instead commit themselves to protecting law-abiding South Africans from harm.
It would help too if we had a police commissioner who was respected for integrity.
Posted by Dark Raven at 10:52 AM
Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Tour South Africa
The Nerve of Mandela
By Emanuel McLittle
QUOTE: “All men are not created equal. There is but one single explanation for the 6,000 years of strife, the spilling of an ocean of blood, the sacrifice of light years of progress, and the basis for the current global power struggle. All of this is the result of at least two unalterably opposing types of souls, one vicious and animal like, the other enlightened and human, fighting. Both are wrapped in an immortal struggle to dominate one planet.
The goal of any confidence game is to create a sense of doubt about the obvious.
Sociopaths, the leaders of more than three billion of the earth's people, operate through the veins of nations, its political structure. But the swindling of retirees out of their savings, or the smooth tongue needed to motivate others to commit immoral or illegal acts is child's play compared to the international drama currently being acted out on the world stage. Let there be no doubt, the draw strings that open and close the intermission curtain, the lighting to control perception (the media), the actors whose lies boggle the mind, all hang from a ventriloquist's string. They want to fool us all.
Even when the plot is hidden, the international players reveal enough for us to figure out the motive, as well as who is pulling their strings. This said, let us focus on Nelson Mandela, who recently emerged from retirement, at 85-years-old, to play a pivotal role in yet another scrimmage between the two great sides. Today the stage is set in the Middle East. The names are only coincidental. In every age there was an American viewpoint and an Iraqi viewpoint, with every man and woman in the world on one side or the other.
Mandela's job is to use his reputation as a persecuted black man, freed from a dungeon in the dessert, in 1990. His very presence impugns a conviction. White people, all white people, locked him away for 26 years of his life. He was branded a hero for all the dark people of the world for opposing white domination.
International brokers, his soul brothers in "high places," took control of Africa's wealthiest nation, placed a living martyr on its throne to reign over an idea far beyond the borders of South Africa.
People of color, in this case, the Iraqis, are said to be the perpetual victims, Mandela implies, of nation-thieves, white, western Christians out to rule the world, a desire of their own hearts.
Mandela was strategic. South Africa was merely the staging ground for the false guilt used all around the world, for various scrimmages. Mandela's impact on the rest of the world is psychological and works like a silent weapon. When Mandela speaks, as he did recently, when he accused, "America of introducing chaos in international affairs," it is a strategic chess move. With little to no experience in politics, except the killing of whites and rival Zulu tribesmen, Mandela has no legitimate claim to greatness. There are no intelligent papers penned by Mandela. Others wrote all the speeches he delivered. His thoughts belong to others. He solved none of South Africa's internal problems. He is of average intelligence and has no money other then what was given to him for his role in South Africa's fall. So, how did he become a hero?
Mandela is called one of the world's "tallest" statesmen even before he emerged from his prison cell. Fellow Marxists around the world who created Mandela now want him to use his racial capital to influence President Bush, who is smart enough to refuse to take Mandela's telephone call. It did not take a lot of nerve for Mandela to show his face after reigning over the destruction of South Africa's prosperity. To accuse America is his true nature.
Like billions of his soul brothers, Mandela is incapable of creating and building anything. His type waits for others to create and build. Then they infiltrate and take over.
I believe apartheid, set aside in 1992, was a feeble, unjust and unworkable attempt, on the part of white South Africans, to separate from the dissimilar personalities obvious in the two rivalling types of humans.
South Africa is now the AIDS capitol of the world, with 55 percent of its black population testing HIV positive, according to the U.N. South Africa also leads the world in violent crime. There are more murders and rapes (per capita) in South Africa than anywhere on the globe. To cover up, Mandela and his successors have created new forms of censorship in order to hide the mess. South Africa's Jesse Jackson, Desmond Tutu, recently asked for American aid, following the mass exodus, since 1994, of more than half of South Africa's commercial farmers. This has cut food production down by 60 percent. The reason for the mass fleeing is the near 1,500 murders of small and large white farmers by black thugs carrying military weapons, possibly distributed by the ANC.
The U.S. media is silent about South Africa's killings and rapes, where white women and even small white children are intentionally infected ( RAPED !!! ) with the AIDS virus. To suppress the truth about their ( MARXIST ) brethren, world wide, is their job.
There are deep and vital reasons why the news is twisted by the elitists. Western liberals claim that the leopard-like carnage we see in South Africa is due to pent up rage, for years of apartheid. But I disagree. I propose that humans are not created equal and that what we are seeing in South Africa is the evidence that at least some men are endowed with the souls of vicious animals. Like Saddam Hussein, billions of people are dark in nature, murderous without flinching and seem gratified by horror. I further propose that this is not based on race or national origin. In fact more than half the world may belong to this race. Most are not black.
The real reason for the so-called third world is the mentality of the third world. The left says that education; the removal of poverty and the elimination of racism will make men equal in prosperity. But if that were so, America and England would be a heavenly paradise. This is where the most educated people in the world live, work and play. No, education is not the key. Wealth is not it, nor is racial equity. It is spirit gifted with some degree of illumination, without which one cannot see which way to go.
No, it is not IQ. It is Spirit. Entire continents like Africa, with 2,000 varieties of vegetables, roots, fruits, legumes and grains, to say nothing of the immense wealth in minerals, diamonds and gold would not have a third of population starving, continuously. Africa could be among the wealthiest continents in the world. But it is not. The spirit is not there. It is here, in America. And everyone knows it. Does that mean that we do not make terrible political misstates? Certainly we do. Nevertheless, that has not stopped heaven's gift basket from falling on us.
Mandela presided over great wealth earned by others and still he left South Africa in chaos. He helped to reduce a wealthy nation to near poverty status.
He stands next to Saddam and defends Iraq not because he believes so much in Iraq's cause but because they are brothers in the truer sense that FOX, CNN or ABC can comprehend. Saddam and Mandela are of the same heart and they know it. All of the evil of this world know each other.
North Korea, China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, most of Europe, Asia, Syria, and the majority of the UN Security Council, are all on Saddam's side, no matter their rhetoric. This treatise is not entirely about Mandela. It is about redefining the real nature of our current global conflict, with Iraq in the middle at this time. All the political deviants know each other. It is the people of good-will who are strangers. This is also about every other conflict we have ever had, since a man with one world view bludgeoned his brother, who had a different world view, to death. The friction is eternal. The stakes are higher than ever. No more wooden clubs. Now comes the threat of atomic weapons. Prophets predicted their use.
This is the time to know for sure, what side you are on”.
Article from Jan's www.africancrisis.org website.
By Emanuel McLittle
QUOTE: “All men are not created equal. There is but one single explanation for the 6,000 years of strife, the spilling of an ocean of blood, the sacrifice of light years of progress, and the basis for the current global power struggle. All of this is the result of at least two unalterably opposing types of souls, one vicious and animal like, the other enlightened and human, fighting. Both are wrapped in an immortal struggle to dominate one planet.
The goal of any confidence game is to create a sense of doubt about the obvious.
Sociopaths, the leaders of more than three billion of the earth's people, operate through the veins of nations, its political structure. But the swindling of retirees out of their savings, or the smooth tongue needed to motivate others to commit immoral or illegal acts is child's play compared to the international drama currently being acted out on the world stage. Let there be no doubt, the draw strings that open and close the intermission curtain, the lighting to control perception (the media), the actors whose lies boggle the mind, all hang from a ventriloquist's string. They want to fool us all.
Even when the plot is hidden, the international players reveal enough for us to figure out the motive, as well as who is pulling their strings. This said, let us focus on Nelson Mandela, who recently emerged from retirement, at 85-years-old, to play a pivotal role in yet another scrimmage between the two great sides. Today the stage is set in the Middle East. The names are only coincidental. In every age there was an American viewpoint and an Iraqi viewpoint, with every man and woman in the world on one side or the other.
Mandela's job is to use his reputation as a persecuted black man, freed from a dungeon in the dessert, in 1990. His very presence impugns a conviction. White people, all white people, locked him away for 26 years of his life. He was branded a hero for all the dark people of the world for opposing white domination.
International brokers, his soul brothers in "high places," took control of Africa's wealthiest nation, placed a living martyr on its throne to reign over an idea far beyond the borders of South Africa.
People of color, in this case, the Iraqis, are said to be the perpetual victims, Mandela implies, of nation-thieves, white, western Christians out to rule the world, a desire of their own hearts.
Mandela was strategic. South Africa was merely the staging ground for the false guilt used all around the world, for various scrimmages. Mandela's impact on the rest of the world is psychological and works like a silent weapon. When Mandela speaks, as he did recently, when he accused, "America of introducing chaos in international affairs," it is a strategic chess move. With little to no experience in politics, except the killing of whites and rival Zulu tribesmen, Mandela has no legitimate claim to greatness. There are no intelligent papers penned by Mandela. Others wrote all the speeches he delivered. His thoughts belong to others. He solved none of South Africa's internal problems. He is of average intelligence and has no money other then what was given to him for his role in South Africa's fall. So, how did he become a hero?
Mandela is called one of the world's "tallest" statesmen even before he emerged from his prison cell. Fellow Marxists around the world who created Mandela now want him to use his racial capital to influence President Bush, who is smart enough to refuse to take Mandela's telephone call. It did not take a lot of nerve for Mandela to show his face after reigning over the destruction of South Africa's prosperity. To accuse America is his true nature.
Like billions of his soul brothers, Mandela is incapable of creating and building anything. His type waits for others to create and build. Then they infiltrate and take over.
I believe apartheid, set aside in 1992, was a feeble, unjust and unworkable attempt, on the part of white South Africans, to separate from the dissimilar personalities obvious in the two rivalling types of humans.
South Africa is now the AIDS capitol of the world, with 55 percent of its black population testing HIV positive, according to the U.N. South Africa also leads the world in violent crime. There are more murders and rapes (per capita) in South Africa than anywhere on the globe. To cover up, Mandela and his successors have created new forms of censorship in order to hide the mess. South Africa's Jesse Jackson, Desmond Tutu, recently asked for American aid, following the mass exodus, since 1994, of more than half of South Africa's commercial farmers. This has cut food production down by 60 percent. The reason for the mass fleeing is the near 1,500 murders of small and large white farmers by black thugs carrying military weapons, possibly distributed by the ANC.
The U.S. media is silent about South Africa's killings and rapes, where white women and even small white children are intentionally infected ( RAPED !!! ) with the AIDS virus. To suppress the truth about their ( MARXIST ) brethren, world wide, is their job.
There are deep and vital reasons why the news is twisted by the elitists. Western liberals claim that the leopard-like carnage we see in South Africa is due to pent up rage, for years of apartheid. But I disagree. I propose that humans are not created equal and that what we are seeing in South Africa is the evidence that at least some men are endowed with the souls of vicious animals. Like Saddam Hussein, billions of people are dark in nature, murderous without flinching and seem gratified by horror. I further propose that this is not based on race or national origin. In fact more than half the world may belong to this race. Most are not black.
The real reason for the so-called third world is the mentality of the third world. The left says that education; the removal of poverty and the elimination of racism will make men equal in prosperity. But if that were so, America and England would be a heavenly paradise. This is where the most educated people in the world live, work and play. No, education is not the key. Wealth is not it, nor is racial equity. It is spirit gifted with some degree of illumination, without which one cannot see which way to go.
No, it is not IQ. It is Spirit. Entire continents like Africa, with 2,000 varieties of vegetables, roots, fruits, legumes and grains, to say nothing of the immense wealth in minerals, diamonds and gold would not have a third of population starving, continuously. Africa could be among the wealthiest continents in the world. But it is not. The spirit is not there. It is here, in America. And everyone knows it. Does that mean that we do not make terrible political misstates? Certainly we do. Nevertheless, that has not stopped heaven's gift basket from falling on us.
Mandela presided over great wealth earned by others and still he left South Africa in chaos. He helped to reduce a wealthy nation to near poverty status.
He stands next to Saddam and defends Iraq not because he believes so much in Iraq's cause but because they are brothers in the truer sense that FOX, CNN or ABC can comprehend. Saddam and Mandela are of the same heart and they know it. All of the evil of this world know each other.
North Korea, China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, most of Europe, Asia, Syria, and the majority of the UN Security Council, are all on Saddam's side, no matter their rhetoric. This treatise is not entirely about Mandela. It is about redefining the real nature of our current global conflict, with Iraq in the middle at this time. All the political deviants know each other. It is the people of good-will who are strangers. This is also about every other conflict we have ever had, since a man with one world view bludgeoned his brother, who had a different world view, to death. The friction is eternal. The stakes are higher than ever. No more wooden clubs. Now comes the threat of atomic weapons. Prophets predicted their use.
This is the time to know for sure, what side you are on”.
Article from Jan's www.africancrisis.org website.
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