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S.Africa: IMPORTANT: Black Journalist: What a Zuma presidency would really mean…

WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.

Original Post Date: 2007-12-02 Time: 00:00:00  Posted By: Jan

[This is a very important article. A friend gave me this article from THE STAR yesterday, but I see it is here on the web. Read this.

It seems as if Zuma is also being bankrolled by some interesting people including a rich Indian in Durban named Reddy.

Zuma is dashing around the world calming people down. Of course, Zuma will owe “favours” to COSATU and Vavi and the lads – and I’m sure it will cost the country dearly – not that I care.

If Zuma digs a bigger hole for this country… then so be it. The weaker this country and the ANC become, the easier it will be for us to make other survival plans.

Helen Zille wrote an article in THE STAR yesterday where she spoke about the ANC’s reference to “the enemy” and the “Jacobin Option” (which we’ve discussed here before).

I’m liking these developments. Let’s go COMMUNISM and UMSHINI (Machinegun). Lovely stuff. Let’s stop all this mucking around about what S.Africa is really about. This is an insane system which whites fought against tooth and nail – and rightly so.

I’m sick of all this Liberal posturing and rewriting of history – let’s get down to WHAT THIS GAME HAS BEEN ABOUT SINCE THE 1950’s (and even earlier) – BLACK COMMUNISM! Jan]

The battle within the ANC, which has culminated in a landslide nomination for Jacob Zuma to succeed Thabo Mbeki, is not narrowly about a duel between two politicians who want to lead the ruling party.

It is about much, much more. It is about something much bigger.

In truth, the nominations and the actual elections in Polokwane will be the climax of a battle royal for the heart and soul of the ANC. This battle has been raging for the past few years.

It has, on many occasions, been fought in the run-up to and during several conferences of the ANC held in the past decade. The battle raged during the ANC conferences in Mafikeng (1997) and Stellenbosch (2002).

‘They have fully exploited the fallout between Zuma and Mbeki’

On the one hand, you have the South African Communist Party and the Congress of South African Trade Unions.

These are the people who have accused the ANC of having sold out by moving towards the right of the political centre and adopting economic and other policies which reflect the shift.

In the eyes of these people, Thabo Mbeki personifies the leadership of the ANC that has sold out the movement and bowed to capitalist powers.

For many years, the SACP and Cosatu have tried, without success, to impose themselves on the ANC and to force the organisation to adopt socialist policies. Their last attempt was at the ANC policy conference in August.

In December, at the upcoming crucial conference of the ruling party, this lobby supported by the coalition of the aggrieved and angry (against Mbeki) is set to register its first historic victory.

They have fully exploited the fallout between Zuma and Mbeki for their own benefit. And the nominations at the weekend reveal that the many years of hard work are about to yield some handsome benefits.

In Zuma, this lobby has found a willing and perfect vehicle to take over the ANC. They have found someone in the core leadership of the ANC who is not only warm to their ideas, but someone who will deliver the ANC on a silver platter to them.

And, unless something happens between now and December 20, the ANC, as we know it through its policies, will cease to exist.

This is, in my view, the true meaning and the consequence of the nominations landslide that has handed Zuma this massive advantage as the party approaches Polokwane.

The question that many of those whose nomination shows that they don’t want Mbeki, is whether they have knowingly voted for a takeover of the ANC. Will they resist it?

The question Mbeki needs to answer is what has he done to drive these ANC members into the hands of the left lobby.

If nothing changes in the next three weeks, we should all brace ourselves for attempts by the left to introduce massive changes in policy. Current policies would be replaced by pro-working class and pro-poor policies.

The economic policy of this country, which has been the foundation for growth, is set to change.

It will change because some within the lobby that will soon run the ANC and government will argue that, yes, the economy has grown, but it has been a jobless growth.

Another major change with a major impact on the economy would be measures introduced to make it impossible to import goods into this country and to encourage individuals and companies to buy local.

This would, for instance, among other things, stem the flood of cheap Chinese-produced clothing into the market and create opportunities for local entrepreneurs.

If the change comes, as I think it will, then the basic income grant, emphatically rejected by Mbeki, will become policy.

Free electricity and water might also become a reality for the multitudes who have been led to believe so by leftist organisations.

These will not be the only changes.

Once Zuma is in place, other people will be placed strategically to implement policies and effect the changes that will introduce a red revolution.

While some of these changes will not be immediate, the year 2009, when the new government takes office, will be an opportunity to introduce them.

And that, in my view, is the sum total of what the landslide nomination of Zuma for ANC president means.

And this, I would submit, is much more serious than his ability as president.

This is much more serious than Zuma’s shortcomings as an individual as well as the legal problems that lie in the horizon for him.

    • Source: http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?art_id=vn20071130100827475C865708