Saturday, July 17, 2021

Tucker Carlson Interviews Ernst Roets on "The South African Project"

2 comments:

Redneck Texan said...

Who cries for the afrikaners?

There's nothing bad that can happen to them, including genocide, that's going to make the world feel like they didn't deserve their fate.

That would be like asking the world if their anti-apartheid policies from the 90s have led to a better human situation in South Africa. We dont really care about that, we just wanted our righteousness hit back then.

Its our unyielding belief in representative self-government. Our success with this form of government has produced positive prosperous results. But those results were really based on the cultural values of the overwhelming majority of the electorate. We elected people that represented our positive cultural values ...... cultural values rooted in productive European thought processes.

This form of government will always be a reflection of the cultural values of its constituents. If those cultural values are based on corruption and violence and non-productive thought processes ...... that will show up as failure relative to other examples of representative government.

South Africa will eventually be as prosperous, and as violent, as other sub-Saharan African nations.

And I'm not just singling them out because their black. There are many other cultures around the world that lack the proper cultural values to have success with representative democracy. It doesn't work in Lebanon. It doesn't work in Iraq. It doesn't work in many south pacific islands.

But yet we feel its our responsibility to promote our form of government on other cultures. We will never objectively look at the results and find fault with our promotions. When South Africa becomes Zimbabwe it will still be the Afrikaner's fault.

Pastorius said...

All the same ideas are being taught and enshrined in laws and regulations here in the US.

I agree with what Ernst says, "South Africa is just 20 years ahead of everyone else."

We will be seeing all these same problems here in the US, unless something drastic happens.