Just don't let the left do what it did to us in south Africa or zimbabwe.
Get out of S. Africa and Zimbabwe. You dont belong there so whatever you get you deserve.
One of the most important videos whites should watch. It may not change your mind about the way things are and are happening but it will make you think if you give your time to watch this video.[/QUOTE
Just don't let the left do what it did to us in south Africa or zimbabwe.
"Us"?
Who would that "us" be?
The racist white apartheid oppressors who brutalized and murdered innocent citizens?
Your discription, of pre Mugabe Zimbabwe is probably skewed a bit. There is more than ONE way to acheive liberty. theres a right way and a wrong way. If every white person in Zimbabwe was a White Oppressor, I doubt they would have had the vibrant economy they did. Black people had jobs back then, And no it wasnt all mopping floors and washing dishes.
Theyve had nothing more oppressive than they have right now. the skin color is black though, does that somehow make you feel good?
Zimbabwe never had food shortages before. Mugabe has caused this famine - Telegraph
Since 2005, government policies have further hurt the manufacturing sector. Particularly damaging is a law that requires exporters to sell up to 30 percent of their foreign exchange earnings to Zimbabwe’s Reserve Bank at an artificial exchange rate that is a fraction of the real market rate. Members of the ruling regime and their associates have become rich by buying up foreign currency at the official exchange rate and then selling it at the blackmarket rate, pocketing the difference. The final blow to the manufacturing sector has come from the government’s price control policy announced at the end of June 2007. In an effort to stem runaway inflation, the government announced halving all prices. In the six months that followed, manufacturing output fell by more than 50 percent and, unless they could export their goods, many manufacturing firms had to shut down.4 Blessed with some of the best mineral reserves in the world, Zimbabwe has vast deposits of iron, nickel, platinum, coal, chrome, asbestos, diamonds, tantalite, coalbed methane, and gold. Yet mining, which should have boomed over the last decade because of global economic expansion in general and China’s hunger for natural resources in particular, has, with the notable exception of platinum, all but collapsed. Gold is a good example. Zimbabwe has vast reserves of gold still stuck beneath its soil. More than 90 percent of those deposits are located in the granite-greenstone terrain that covers about 60 percent of the country. Zimbabwe has more than 6,000 recorded deposits and the capacity to produce at least 25 tons of gold annually. World gold prices have steadily increased over the last decade. Despite that price increase, gold production in Zimbabwe has plummeted in the last decade. In 2006, Zimbabwe suffered its lowest annual output since 1907 (see Figure 5). As was the case with the manufacturing sector, the government’s decision to force the mining companies to exchange some of their earnings at the official exchange rate undermined gold production. As a result, th