Thursday, November 8, 2012

Mandela Foster Rubin & A Rainbow Too Red?

"Review: Douglas Foster pierces the surface in 'After Mandela' --By Martin Rubin, September 16, 2012

"Foster gives us a portrait of a vibrant nation, full of contrasts and contradictions, of wealth and poverty, of diversity and sophistication alongside ingrained attitudes and resistance." ...

Ever wonder why Third World nations and Third World migrant enclaves inside First World nations are unfailingly characterized by the mainstream media as being "vibrant"? 

 'It would take someone from the next generation to see things from a fresh angle and in a different light. … The ideal of a nonracial, nonsexist, egalitarian society at the southern tip of Africa lived on. Young South Africans would determine if that big idea, and everything it implied, would vanish, or yet prevail.'
"'After Mandela' makes it clear that this idea enduring is not only key to a peaceful developing South Africa but indeed to the whole continent. In fact, the stakes in that noble experiment's success are high for all of us, wherever we happen to live."
In other words, the future of South Africa and the increasingly multicultural/ever-less white Western nations depends upon something happening to human nature that has never before taken place in history. Sort of like betting all that you own and the lives of your grandkids' grandkids on a roulette wheel number that is not even printed on the spinning wheel.
At least it is enlightening to once again get a glimpse inside the echo-chamber media bubble and its absurd ideologically driven utopianism. On the other hand, maybe to test the validity of this worldview predicting our vibrant future, we can just ask some of the many white farmers in the former Rhodesia,  now Zimbabwe, how all this never-ending idealistic propaganda is working out for them. Sadly, however, we can't dig them up just for that.
National Homicide Rates
"The UNODC [United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime] made a study in 2012 that includes most countries of the world. The following lists show only the most recent data. Intentional homicide in this case is defined as unlawful death purposefully inflicted on a person by another person. ... homicides per 100,000 inhabitants ..."
China - 1.0
U.K. - 1.2
U.S. - 4.2
South Africa - 31.8