As survey results dominate headlines, they often obscure the deeper intersection of race, inequality, and historical injustice that continues to shape South African public life.
eish! heavy on putting race and inequality in the same sphere. i think the polls being for job creation the most is just a reflection of how the economy actually is. i don't think anyone would care about specific social issues if they can't even get food to eat, or food security.
in the same sense we can talk about the violence and sadness—depression of the youth towards the government. issues like that are less addressed when everyone is just looking to have something to eat. this system, as socialist as it tries to present itself, was not built to benefit Black people, it was built to exploit us, as my friend Kutlwano said. so will we ever really properly transition?
in short, out of my gibberish, it is always a race issue!
eish! heavy on putting race and inequality in the same sphere. i think the polls being for job creation the most is just a reflection of how the economy actually is. i don't think anyone would care about specific social issues if they can't even get food to eat, or food security.
in the same sense we can talk about the violence and sadness—depression of the youth towards the government. issues like that are less addressed when everyone is just looking to have something to eat. this system, as socialist as it tries to present itself, was not built to benefit Black people, it was built to exploit us, as my friend Kutlwano said. so will we ever really properly transition?
in short, out of my gibberish, it is always a race issue!