Republican congress seeks AGOA suspension over Taiwan, Hamas

MEMBERS of the US Congress have written to President Trump urging him to revoke South Africa’s AGOA preferential trade privileges. They cite the countries support of Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya (Hamas), and the attempted removal of the Taiwanese embassy in Pretoria, in addition to ‘destructive land reform policies’ and ‘consistent infidelity to the rule of law’, as violation of eligibility criteria for AGOA.

Four congressional members including Andrew Ogles, Joe Wilson, Tom Tiffany and Don Bacon penned a letter last week, claiming the United States had been marginalised under the ANC, and if Pretoria did not act ‘constructively’, to rather pursue a path that includes suspension of diplomatic ties and removal of trade privileges, in addition to sanctions.

Trump recently signed a presidential order suspending aid to South Africa, and granting refugee status to its white minority Afrikaner community over  the signing into law of a ‘confiscation with nil compensation’ land reform bill. The new law opens the door to state seizure of private property in South Africa, in contravention of the constitution.

Pretoria’s consistent undermining of US interests such as “the filing of a baseless claim” before the International Court of Justice following the 7/10 ‘murder of 1 200 Jews including American citizens’ is mentioned. The congressmen are upset that South Africa claims Israel wants to ‘destroy the Palestinians’, while it enjoys close ties to Hamas, allowing two “Hamas-controlled charities” the Al Aqsa Foundation and Al Quds Foundation to operate freely within our borders.

“For decades, officials of the South African government have acted as Hamas propagandists, urging the international community to lift trade sanctions and otherwise engage with the US-designated foreign terrorist organisation.” The Islamist group whose charter calls for the elimination of Israel and its replacement by a clerical dictatorship under a Pan-Arab constellation of states, is opposed to the secular rights and freedoms outlined by South Africa’s own constitution.

South Africa’s ambitious foreign policy under scrutiny

SOUTH AFRICA made headlines this week, and it’s not all good. First up was the public spat between President Ramaphosa and Rwanda’s Paul Kagame over M23 and the DRC. Kagame accuses our president of deploying SANDF troops to further his own interests that include mining, (in the process supporting Felix Tshisekedi and the self-same forces responsible for the Rwandan Genocide).

Next it was Donald Trump’s “Very Bad Things” remark in reference to the signing into law of a bill that allows the state confiscation of property at nil cost. That our President says it won’t be used, is no real assurance to those investors worried about what else is under the mattress.

No sooner had presidential spokesperson Vincent Magwenya indicated that Ramaphosa wished to see Trump over a round of golf in the runup to the G20 Summit to be held in the country this year, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued an extraordinary statement declining to attend.

One cannot help thinking that Magwenya would have been better off inviting Paul Kagame to play golf at Sun City, than issuing informal invitations via the media, playing Trump diplomacy that seems rather shallow considering the range and scope of the disagreement with the USA that has been brewing for over a decade.

Instead of playing a losing game with macho dedollarisation talk inside BRICS with its male-only summits, we could have been rebuilding our continent and avoiding the situation in which we are on the brink of a war with Rwanda. With decades of low-growth and under-spending on security, South Africa lacks the military capability it once had.

Bear in mind that the USA is going through a radical shakeup of its federal government under the auspice of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)to curb a trillion dollar deficit, as it enters a period of protectionism, tariffs and anti-globalism under Trump.

That there is a toxic mix of climate change denialism and ultranationalism congealed around the excesses of the left in the USA is certain. Rubio’s emphatic opposition to Ramaphosa’s buzzwords,(nothing more than empty promises undermining market-led meritocracy) comes on the heels of the Biden administration support for bizarre aid programs around the world that include transgender education for children in India

Instead of crying about aid packages and bail-outs, South Africa could do well to learn from Argentina’s Javier Milei, where his government posted a fiscal surplus for the first time, and in little more than a year. As others might put it: a country that cannot pay its bills, doesn’t get to set a foreign policy agenda.

Hijacking of Holocaust Remembrance Day: Screening of Al Jazeera Gaza Documentary refers

Dear Sir/Madam,

Hijacking of Holocaust Remembrance Day: Screening of Al Jazeera Gaza Documentary refers

I am writing to complain and protest with regard to the hijacking of the annual Holocaust Remembrance Day event to screen an Al Jazeera documentary on Gaza: “Al Shifa The Crimes they Tried To Bury”

No matter how one may feel about the recent conflict, in particular the claims made by various parties, such an event is a time of sombre reflection and not a platform for political posturing by organisations and individuals, especially those who are not directly affected by the Holocaust.

A similar event occurred in Ireland this week, resulted in the removal of Jews who turned their backs on President Higgens, in protest at his address where he referred to the Holocaust as ‘an attempted genocide’.

The screening of the documentary in this manner, alongside the lighting of candles, at the Groote Schuur auditorium in which the context of the Holocaust was stripped of its connection to AntiSemitism, was calculated to grandstand.

“In remembering the Holocaust, we recognize threats to freedom, dignity, and humanity – including in our own time. Today – in the face of growing economic discontent and political instability, escalating white supremacist terrorism, and surging hate and religious bigotry – we must be more outspoken than ever. We must never forget – nor allow others to ever forget, distort or deny the Holocaust.” António Guterres, United Nations Secretary-General,

Repackaging the Holocaust as if it were a mere trope, to be superseded by more contemporary issues, is not only offensive, but completely inappropriate given South Africa’s role in the tragedy involving industrial scale euthanasia of Europe’s Jewish population barely 80 years ago. A role our country refuses to acknowledge.

It appears the following organisations were involved in this week’s event: Desmond & Leah Tutu Foundation, Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Gift of the Givers and SAJFP.

The result must be rejected as curated propaganda and replacement theology. Our constitutional rights to dignity, religious freedom and  freedom from war are not served by obliterating history.

Here is what they don’t teach you in our local history books:

One year before the 1938 Evian Conference, Minister of the Interior under the Smuts government, D F Malan passed a piece of Anti-Semitic legislation aimed at preventing Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany entering South Africa. The last ship to arrive before the law went into effect, the SS Stuttgart was thus met by Malan’s brown-shirts in Table Bay with force. South Africa later attended the Evian Conference in France where the leaders of the world discussed the “Jewish Problem” and determined to act collectively to not allow the deportation of German Jews under Hitler to continue.

With thousands entering British Palestine, both the British and Arabs began a well-publicized campaign to stop the flood. It was the Palestinian leader Amin al-Husseini, later President of the All-Palestine government in Gaza (1948-1956) who personally met with Hitler in November of 1941, appealing to the Fuhrer himself to deal with the problem. By that time, the Farhud (Arabic for Pogrom), a violent dispossession of Jews from the Middle East & North Africa at the behest of Husseini, was well under way.

This motion was backed by Arab leaders from Saudi Arabia and Iraq in a round of shuttle-boat diplomacy the same year between Berlin and the Arab world. By January of 1942, Adolf Eichmann was presenting his plan for what became known as “The Final Solution”.

It was a ‘solution’ to precisely the topic under discussion by our own government. Thus at the Wannsee Conference, in the southwestern Berlin borough of Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Germany, and with Hitler notably absent, the Nazi Party delivered its infamous address to the German High Command. A diabolical plan to deal with the 11 million Jews then under Nazi Occupation.

Husseini would later tour the Trebben ‘concentration camp’ murder factory, as he enthusiastically supported the Nazis in their endeavor to ‘kill all the Jews’.

Ceasefire: hostage-release brings home the true cost of this tragic exercise

FOR over 15 months we witnessed a bloody war between Israel and Hamas. Devestation wrought on the Mediterranean seaside enclave of Gaza and the shocking faces of civilians caught up in the tragedy. Prime real estate reduced to rubble. What began as a jubilant victory over the ‘Zionists’, a terror incursion into the State of Israel that killed some 1 195, followed by celebration through the streets of Gaza City and major centers, quickly turned into a painful exercise on how not to go about achieving ones objectives.

If anyone still thinks this is the anti-apartheid struggle 2.0, think again. Only a fool would believe that Cuban solders fought Pretoria to a standstill, or that South Africa gained its democratic order, not via peaceful negotiation but rather solely through the barrel of a gun. Yet such are the claims made by Palestinian pro-war activists who continue to condone Hamas hostage-taking, a military solution sold to the world by resort to the term apartheid — nothing more than a pointless exercise which merely deflects attention away from an obvious Jihad, whose tactics of martyrdom and sacrifice, directly lead to the deaths of some 40 000 Gazans.

Attacking Israel on the religious holiday of Simchat Torah, the 50th Anniversary of the Yom Kippur War, merely bolstered dispassionate hard-liners in the Knesset and drew forth those advocating a Dresden Solution. The outcome this week, in which a ceasefire went into effect yesterday with the release of three hostages, merely reminds all and sundry that 7/10 was anything but a peaceful exercise in coexistence.

And for months, the issue of the hostages appeared to wane if not disappear altogether, as the Pro-War mobs screaming “genocide” were fed a constant stream of Hamas propaganda, designed to outrage and subvert democracy. Embedding rocket-firing militia inside hospitals, schools and suburbs meant that any counter-strike by Israel was immediately labeled a ‘war-crime’.

You could almost believe the calls to ‘eliminate the Zionist state’, and find virtue in ‘From the River to the Sea”, but strip away these tired slogans, the empty political rhetoric, and all one is left with is the insanity of Jihad, (a Jihadicide as some might call it), in which the only solution being offered up is a clerical Arab dictatorship supported by Iran, this reworking of the old testament versus a vaguely secular democratic state of Israel.

Images of three women surrounded by Jihadists, brought home the manner in which the hostages came to be held by Hamas in tunnels beneath Gaza during 15 months of devastating conflict. They included the joint British national Emily Damari, released and reunited with their mothers in the first act of a ceasefire deal aimed at ending the conflict.

As masked Hamas militia wearing Islamic head-bands surrounded the women, it became clear the news images were no longer of a devastated populace, but rather of a stream of well-fed Jihadists emerging from underground tunnels.

Damari, 28, Romi Gonen, 24 and Doron Steinbrecher, 31, were handed over to the International Committee for the Red Cross in Gaza on Sunday afternoon, ending a protracted ordeal that began with their violent abduction by Hamas on 7 October 2023. We hope this ceasefire process continues.

The Gazan militias should take full responsibility for the mess and cleanup.

Update: Another four women have been released. This time Hamas handed out ‘certificates of completion’, in a bizarre press conference.

READ: Peace requires honest brokerage’ in Gaza – Nelson Mandela Foundation

The confused ‘wokeness’ that passes for online debate these days

IT ALL started with a thread on x.com about ‘how Cape Town was started’, and ‘who lived here before the settlers arrived’?  The platform has become a haven for fringe groups, including opposition parties.

Extremist politician Mehmet Dag, the man behind attempts to remove Green Point’s “Rainbow Crossing”, (whose one-man political party literally campaigned on a platform to implement the death penalty for LGBT, losing its deposit and failing to gain a single ward), was one of the first to weigh in: “Mandela is a Xhosa man The individuals referred to as Khoisan (a name assigned by Afrikaners) I found it difficult to accept the existence of Khoisans in the Western Cape. They were, in fact, Xhosa individuals. The children of Dutch soldiers, known as Coloured people, were born of Xhosa mothers and Dutch fathers. Know your history.”

The conspiratorial tone continued ad nauseum with many claiming “There are no Khoisan” (Rather it was the Xhosa, or at least a ‘Xhosa-affiliated’ group who held territory before the Portuguese and later Dutch arrived, and thus simply telling the story ‘is all a plot to divide and conquer and, steal land.’

Some members of MKP posted essays sans any citations, claiming well-known members of the GNU were behind a bizarre campaign to revise history.

The first time a European person spoke to Africans we lost our land culture dignity and sense of directions. Look like they coming for our history. We will never stop planning and plotting for your kind to go back to where you come from. We will never accept you, bloody swines.” wrote Seni

Vasco da gama in 1510 fought Xhosas and was defeated by xhosas hence Portugal couldn’t colonize South Africa.” added ‘Mr Riley’

Some of the postings went so far as to assert Xhosa identity over the issue despite our own National Assembly passing legislation in 2017 recognising Khoi-san leadership. “Khoi-San communities in the North West Province had thus been “optimistic that the draft Traditional and Khoi-San Leadership Bill will restore their dignity, and at the time urged “Parliament to revoke all the laws that refer to them as “coloured” people”

In 2024, the Annual Opening of the National House of Traditional and Khoi-San Leaders was celebrated.

But the merry crowd of smart-phone warriors, neighsayers, revisionists and flat-earth pundits on x.com were having none of it:

Abathwa…That’s What The Tribe Is Called. The ONLY “Khoisans” that can be confirmed are those that ASSIMILATED to African tribes bcoz their clan names were preserved – e.g. Gqunukwebe (assimilated to amaXhosa in 17th century. AmaGqunukwebe became a royal house of amaXhosa under King Tshiwo who reigned between 1670–1702.”

Educate these fools who try and distraught history to make the Khoi’s coloureds, mojority Khois shared clans with amaXhosa but they want to make as if they know better than us.

You propagating lies, The BaThwa who are in Zim and the Pygmies in DRC are related to the !Xam and Khwe! Are you going to say they must leave because they are only native here?”

All I know is San & Bantu tribes live about where they have for ages if they used to spread about more that was stopped by settlements of the settlers who wipe out nations and rewrote history to suite they’re narrative. Examples of what was done here are all over the world.” — Sphezi Mkhathi

Can the settlers just stop it with their altered silly history of South Africa. Y’all need to focus on Europe and it’s history since y’all come from there. Leave Africa to Africans, y’all will never be Africans, no matter how hard you fight or change history. Pathetic c$nts  — Bashene

Some comments that could constitute an ’emotional plague’

Why are you commenting o the affairs of 1651 and before then No amount of historical alterations will cover the Pillage Murder Lies that settlers came with” — Boreka Motlanthe

They want to use them as a vehicle to justify holding on to stolen land because they want to create a break away Country similarly to Israel, so they will need some Natives on board to cement that. — Musa

“Start with the origins of the name Khoisan. Once done, understand the closeness of the 3 Sotho languages. So close that Borwa and Barwa mean the same thing in the respective languages. However, Borwa and Barwa are absolutely not the same thing. Please, my brother. –Podu

“have seen mostly Tswana people, black Namibians and some Xhosa who actually speak some of the khoi languages as well. They are on tik tok if you search. You must actually visit North west, free state, Botswana and you will see they share similar culture and features with khoi –Ntombi Black

The approach this “khoisan” topic is happening is really weird and not productive. We see a lot of “coloured” people coming out and claiming this title. It’s weird and sad because unmixed “khoi” people exist, and I never see them coming out to do these claims. – – Ntombi Black

Point of correction, my good brother. The Khoi (Khoikhoi in full) and The San, are two different “tribes” or “clans”. The Khoi were stable citizens while the San were Hunter Gatherers and had no place of settlement. The San are modern day Batswana, the Khoi mostly Xhosa. — Phillix M. Kokwele

Why is a disgusting settler minding the business that does not concern him. Ypu should be worried that us natives still have intention to dubuli ibhunu for our land. One settler 10 blts. -seni

Correction the name & town yes didnt exit however the mountain ,the two oceans,the sunsets,the beaches  the whole land was always there millions of years before the fuc&*ken Portugese & fokken Voortrekkers

Eventually somebody posted a video of Julius Malema : “We call people Zimbabweans, Malawians, Makwerekwere When we are Makwerekwere as we come from where they come from None of us come from here, we came from the North & found the Koi & San in Southern Africa & settled here We must welcome others as well

Compassionate communication: Talk, talk must replace war, war

MY WISH for this year is that we all spend a little more time to engage each other and our respective communities with active peacebuilding and compassionate communication aka non-violent communication. Over New Year I spent some time reading Marshall Rosenberg’s classic ‘Non-Violent Communication: A Language of Life’. I do agree with many of his ideas about developing a compassionate understanding of language interaction, focusing on immediate needs rather than morality and passing judgement ‘observing instead of evaluating’,  but of course disagree completely with what some will term woke attempts to police so-called ‘microaggressions’.

Lack of compassion for others is indeed  at the heart of many of our conflicts, but attributing wrong-doing to those who speak harsh words, and reaching out for legal solutions for colorful speech, accomplishes exactly what Rosenberg eschews and rejects, which is to evaluate and pass judgement on others. Required reading for anyone wishing to adopt a more compassionate response to the many conflicts which have embroiled communities over the past year.

Rosenberg writes: “What I want in my life is compassion, a flow between myself and others based on a mutual giving from the heart” He outlines “a language of compassion” that ‘replaces our old patterns of defending, withdrawing, or attacking in the face of judgment and criticism, we come to perceive ourselves and others, as well as our intentions and relationships, in a new light. Resistance, defensiveness, and violent reactions are minimized. When we focus on clarifying what is being observed, felt, and needed rather than on diagnosing and judging, we discover the depth of our own compassion. Through its emphasis on deep listening— to ourselves as well as to others—Non Violent Communication (NVC) fosters respect, attentiveness, and empathy and engenders a mutual desire to give from the heart

I wish all my readers, a Peaceful, Fruitful and Prosperous 2025.

 

Ramaphosa stuck in cloud-cuckooland as Pretoria buckles

FOR three decades South Africa has survived on an astonishing goodwill story —  victory against apartheid brought with it a peace dividend, a return to global trade, and cessation of international sanctions. But instead of embracing rapprochement with the West, the country chose a path marred by massive contradictions. Professing non-alignment on a variety of issues, Pretoria essentially orchestrated an alliance with every tin-pot dictatorship and authoritarian regime out there.

BRICS for want of a  better description, is nothing more than a boondoggle of corrupt regimes run by petty bureacrats and traitors to the cause of democracy. None of the constitutional emperatives outlined by our constitution and its so-called apex court in Braamfontein appear to have influenced the current administration and its bizarre policies that support the death penalty for LGBT in Iran, the end of multiparty democracy in Hong Kong and Asia, the elimination of women’s rights in Russia, and return to slavery in Houthi Yemen.

If South Africa were to be judged on its foreign policy alone, one could be forgiven for coming to the startling conclusion that when it comes to braaivleis, sunny skies , pap & boerevleis, we  lack any civil rights at home. Yet our country for all its failings has shown that our multiparty democracy is able to deliver stability and a status quo, that more often than not resembles freedom, if not a free press.

If Pretoria thought its ascendency to the G20 chair this year would somehow translate into business as usual, then economists had better take heed, because Pretoria’s leftist brown-nosing, deflecting serious criticism, after the Russian invasion of Ukraine,  has come to a grinding halt as Donald Trump was re-elected. The Republican-majority US Congress is already beying for our blood.

Key Republicans are already pressing the incoming Trump administration to kick South Africa out of lucrative trade arrangements, including AGOA – the African Growth and Opportunity Act – should the South African government ‘not change its position on Russia, China, Iran and Israel’.

Most at risk is South Africa’s duty-free exports to the U.S. of items such as cars and citrus fruit, and with it the potential loss of tens of thousands of African jobs. South Africa is likely to be under intense scrutiny from the incoming administration.

A publication from the Center for African Studies at Howard University, in 2023, warned that a country wanting AGOA’s preferential trade agreements “cannot act in a manner that undermines U.S. national security or foreign policy interests”.

This as our neighbour Mocambique is collapsing amidst a concerted effort by opposition groups including Jihadists to nulllify the results of the last election. Over Christmas a mass prison breakout saw over a hundred members of ISIS in Mocambique breaking out of max security prison. China itself is under pressure from a major deficit involving government overspending for decades, and is unlikely to be in a position to bail out its fellow BRICS nations.

Only time can tell whether Mocambique, and SADC regains its peacetime footing, but currently the region  resembles Syria rather than Singapore.

The prospect of  R20 to the Dollar should be more than a wake-up call.

READ: BRICS, a boondoggle of dictators, homophobes & outright misogynists

SEE: Hamas SA Support Network

SEE: South Africa is becoming another front in the war against Israel

SEE: South Africa is not pro-Palestinian its Pro-Hamas

SEE: Iran & Qatar have their fingerprints all over South Africa ICJ case

Thoughts following Reconciliation Day

ON 16 December 1995, the first celebration of ‘Reconciliation Day” took place. It was timed to coincide with the inaugural meeting of the  ‘South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission’. Convenor Desmond Tutu described the holiday as ‘serving the need of healing the wounds of Apartheid’. The holiday was meant to replace the ‘Day of the Covenant’, a controversial celebration bound up with apartheid ideology —  in particular Voortrekker pretensions towards a special connection when it came to God and religion. Having disposed of one of the key elements of apartheid theology, the commission quickly embarked upon several special hearings, including investigations into the media, as well as the role of religion.

Releasing the first five volumes of its final report on Oct. 29, 1998, (and the remaining two volumes of the report on March 21, 2003). The commission claimed to have uncovered ‘the truth about human rights violations’ that had occurred during the period of apartheid.  With a special emphasis on gathering evidence and uncovering information — from both victims and perpetrator — and not on prosecuting individuals for past crimes, the commission proclaimed its divergence from the Nürnberg trials that had prosecuted Nazis after World War II.

None of the commission’s findings were ever held up by a court of law, and the body of evidence relating to apartheid was simply cast aside in favour of a form of reconciliation, which boils down to “love thy neighbour”. If Reconciliation Day has become just another holiday on our nation’s calendar, analysts may be correct in stating: “The promises of 1994 have devolved into a strategic defeat”,  this whilst South Africa pursues the exact same Nurenberg stance it rejected when it comes to solving problems in the Middle East before the International Criminal Court (ICJ)?

I am constantly amazed by those who seek to compare the Israel-Palestine conflict to the history of my own country, yet refuse to take any lessons away from our 1994 negotiated peace settlement which came about **because we talked it out, instead of warring it out**.

Is it because the analogy with apartheid was never going to be sustained in an actual conversation between the two sides? Allowing this canard to continue unabated, without criticism, serves one aim alone, which is to cast an obvious religious conflict over the final status of Jerusalem, a Jihad by Jihadists armed with a Charter outlining their Jihadist goals, as the modern-day equivalent of the US civil rights movement.

I am greeted by a litany of militia-backed disasters in the region on my social media feed on a daily basis, all of which merely demonstrate that war is not a solution to a political and social problem involving three major religions. The tragic toll on the Gazan civilian population, and a war which has now extended into Lebanon and Syria, parts of which were once ‘Palestine’ prior to the British Mandate period, is not only a tragedy for all humanity but a massive disappointment for those who continue to advocate peace, and a form of active reconciliation, which boils down to ‘tikkun‘ a Hebrew word that means ‘repair or restoration of the world’ — an objective which seeks to accomplish more than merely ‘atoning for one’s sins’.

At some point both sides need to talk to each other, and this can never happen so long as “River to the Sea” eliminationist rhetoric is taken for normal discourse by people like our own President.

Likewise, at home, if we keep rejecting attempts to enforce the parameters of the TRC, in which those who failed to apply for amnesty were meant to suffer the consequences of civil and criminal prosecution before the courts, (what happened to the funds reserved for such prosecutions?) we end up with two diametrically opposed policies: one preaching reconciliation at all costs (with no tangible economic restoration nor any legal closure), the other, seeking to inculpate all and sundry when it comes to foreign policy before the International Criminal Court.

[AI rewrite published by The Star, 18 December 2024 without writers consent]

They’re eating the Quds of the people that live there?

THIS week Kevin Bloom, a Daily Maverick associate editor waded into a controversy surrounding ‘Gift of the Givers’ (GOTG). The group faces allegations of channeling funds designated for humanitarian relief to organisations such as Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya (Hamas), who are listed as terrorist groups by a number of countries, including Australia, Canada, European Union, Japan, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States .

To date GOTG has refused to open its books to public scrutiny and vehemently deny any involvement in underhand activities.

Founder Imtiaz Sooliman claims his funding process is ‘fool-proof’ since any transfer of funds to projects overseas is ‘authorised by the Reserve Bank, and local politicians such as Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma’

One would really need to be a fool to believe that since the funds are in Dollars, the process is obviously “Jew-friendly” and not related to any money-laundering involving Gulf States, Hezbollah or Iran? It says so in Sooliman’s self-penned autobiography, trust us?

“Strike terror into the hearts of your enemies and Allah’s enemies” are not exactly the words of a humanitarian, reaching out to reconcile either sides to a conflict? Sooliman’s statement appears to have been made at a Congress of Business and Economics (CBE) gala dinner event in Johannesburg on 23 November.

In a licentious piece, best summarised as: “I’m not that kind of a Jew, but of course, Imtiaz Sooliman is not that kind of Jihadist either”, (or “I’m a Great Journalist, believe me’) , Bloom fails to grapple with any of the central allegations raised by critics . Instead he quotes at length from the ‘Book of Sooliman’, in a process of obsessive, literary myth-making, redolent of a contemporary debate amongst scholars of the Koran. The Medina and Mecca periods in which followers of Muhammad went ‘from being a weak, persecuted minority in Mecca to a powerful force with allies in Medina,” displays two very different versions of the prophet.


I hesitate to even bring up the subject here, because, much like a modern review of Moses and the tabernacles, what one ends with, are two very different versions of events — one depicts a man of peace, the other a man of war, and Hollywood has always failed at presenting us with credible biopics when it comes to religious chronicles. It is a touchy subject, I know.

Which may explain why Bloom feels the needs to regale all and sundry on his conversion to latter-day agnosticism when it comes to the Middle East? I get the gist, the man was once a bible-scholar, escaped Sunday School or life in a Yeshiva and Seminary and lived to tell the tale? Still nothing like forcing those who happen to believe in such fairy-tales as scripture, to view the world, exactly like Bloom, on pain of facing a secular inquisition, in which the very definition of secularism is up for grabs, where you get cancelled if you don’t cough up the correct words? Or worse, a religious inquisition you get your head chopped off for not uttering the correct mantra?

Is Bloom serious when he claims he “wanted to know from [David ‘Kiffness’ Scott] … whether he confirmed or denied that his global hit had contributed to anti-immigrant and/or racist sentiment in the United States and beyond“?

Cherry-picking from an assortment of online tweets involving the meme musician, the Bloom appears to have relegated his target to the arena of matinee club theatrics (a billion fans would tend to disagree), without bothering to consider why those seeking to cancel Scott are in the same league as those wanting to rename Jerusalem and every other Hebrew city, with their former colonial Arabic names? This whilst seeking to persuade all and sundry that if the Jihad is for a just cause, and the money meant for disaster relief ended up funding a religious rally, which just happened to attack a music festival on a Jewish holiday (50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur War), we should just look the other way?

Doing this has resulted in over 12 months of absolute bloody mayhem.

SEE: The Kiffness Refuses to be silenced after Sooliman Critique

Logan Case: High Court upholds ‘petty apartheid’

THE SITUATION is all too familiar. A 25-year-old black man Thabiso Danca, found that he was welcome and able to enter a Cape Town pub whenever accompanied by white colleagues. But without the gift of whiteness, he wasn’t even recognized at the door. The situation escalated when Danca, upset at being denied entry on Friday 1 December 2022 appealed to fellow lifesaver, Christopher Logan for assistance. According to a statement by the Pub, “the door personnel requested Danca’s identification to verify his age”
Frank’s door policy, like most pubs, is not under 21, “he failed to produce a valid ID and was denied entry to the pub.” It is clear from photographs that not only was Danca an adult, but he looked like an adult. This is not exactly a case of a ‘baby-faced’ teen appearing at a City venue and being denied entry, or a 21-year-old being confused with a 20-year-old, but rather an adult being told to beat it, because, well he isn’t white.

Given the context of ongoing race-based discrimination, (yes for all practical intents and purposes structural apartheid didn’t end in 1994, it merely lost any legal basis for its existence), Danca was rightfully upset at being treated as a minor. The words patronising and patron both have a similar pedigree, deriving from the Latin Pater, meaning ‘Father’. So we all get the gist of the central complaint, and the sequence of events which resulted in Logan ticking off staff and management in front of social media the very next day. The incident resulted in an altercation in which Logan was accused of ‘being the instigator, and the side-bar drama of who videoed who, from what angle, is of little consequence and absolutely not the crux of the matter.
This week owners of Hank’s Olde Irish Pub in Bree Street were ‘awarded R1.25 million in damages by the Western Cape High Court for ‘false accusations of racism on social media’
In retrospect, given Hank’s Pub’s ability to muster legal forces, it might not have been a good idea for the two friends to confront the Irish establishment directly. But here’s the rub, the entire ‘anti-racist’ movement which characterized the nation’s campuses for the past decade has literally advocated ‘confronting racism wherever and whenever it occurs‘. Yet the wobbly left have been rather silent on this account because the man being accused of defamation isn’t black?
This is not a lesson in how to go about filling out a discrimination claim, but one would have expected there to have been some effort made at tackling the central case, in this respect the SAHRC failed miserably, as the entire matter ended up coming a cropper on the strange assumption that video material of the later Saturday confrontation, the second incident, was somehow ‘the evidence’ of the first and vice versa, and of course, a ‘white person cannot experience racism’. Clearly Logan wasn’t the one being discriminated against here, he was acting out of solidarity with his companion. The fact of the denial of entry is not in dispute.

I very much doubt if one could ever persuade a jury comprising 12 citizens that a Saturday was the Friday in question, but we shall never know? (see below)

So once again our justice system turns out to be nothing more than an obstinate legal bureaucracy, in which the only issue for consideration was whether or not a ‘right of admission policy’, trumped any objections raised about the arbitrary application of a rule according to race-based criteria? All this while our law has been hijacked by libel lawyers intent on expanding the definition of libel law to include influencers and political activity?

Social media influencers not subject to press freedom?

The court has perversely ordered Christopher Michael Logan to pay the damages because heaccused John Papadakis of racism and shared a video on social media, claiming that his friend, Thabiso Danca, was denied entry to the pub because of his race.”

The social media outrage, according to the court, “led to significant reputational harm, financial losses and emotional distress for the pub and its co-owners, the Papadakis brothers”. The damages were awarded to Latari House (the operating company for Hank’s Olde Irish Pub) and brothers Viron and John Papadakis who, at that stage, were co-owners of the pub.:”

Since I have been unable to find any reference on SAFLII to the case, I am unable to read the exact wording of the decision, (anyone willing to assist here?) but from my own experience of dealing with the Western Cape division, the context in which racism occurs in our country has turned out to be of little consequence. This is the self-same division which trashed the TRC Report in 2010 and again in 2018, in the process dumping our Preamble. The Constitution is only in force when it comes to the Constitutional Court, and available to citizens at great cost it seems? The portraits of Judge President’s reaching all the way back to the old Cape Colony still line the High Court’s vaulted halls. Clearly such portraits belong in a museum?

More concerning is the manner in which ‘Papadakis and Co’, (or at least their supporters), have run a campaign before the courts, objecting to the pair’s membership of various student political organisations. You read that correctly, the latest tweets on X.com go so far as calling Logan an “EFF plant”, when the facts are both were members of DASO on campus, and so what? Our Constitution protects the right to membership of political parties irrespective of one’s race or social status?

The resulting miscarriage of justice is all too reminiscent of the manner in which apartheid officials banned student organisations and their members en masse during the 80s, without any opportunity for appeal, as officials continue to defend petty apartheid in our City.

Yes, our justice system has once again demonstrated that it lacks capacity to assess the facts when it comes to capital crimes and defamation cases. Where the West has a jury system, our legal system abolished jury trial in 1969, citing international embarrassment at the appearance of black persons before all-white juries. Closing down public participation in the justice process, lay-assessors are rarely used, the more so when tricky issues such as racism arise. Our courts all too often resort to a strategy known as ‘obfuscation of law’. The Logan decision merely bolsters this perception.

Then again, most Fridays are already Saturday when it comes to the Cape Bar?

SEE: Legal Storm over Irish Pub Racist Saga set to continue

SEE: Police Investigation Clears Pub Owners of Racism