Joko
900 posts

Joko
@InBenie
Not a bot trust me. On my path to being an engineer/ entrepreneur.












Gege’s work right before JJK0 was the draft of Yuta, Maki, and Rika. The boy had strong physical abilities and straightforward personality, while the girl was timid. She could control the strongest fujikin called “Masked.” Gender-swapped YutaMaki. Rika stayed pretty much the same





@elonmusk @drk_2_lite South Africa should be sanctioned and shunned by the world.













One of the smartest decisions of his presidency.’ 🏛️🇿🇦 Alec Hogg explains why Cyril Ramaphosa sending Roelf Meyer to Washington is a brilliant move to repair damaged US-SA ties and protect trade. 🇺🇸🤝 #BizNews #AlecHogg #RoelfMeyer #SouthAfrica #Diplomacy #AGOA

Elon Musk’s latest tirade against South Africa is a masterclass in billionaire bait-and-switch. He claims Starlink is banned solely because he isn’t Black, a narrative he pushes to his 200-million-plus followers as proof of "viciously racist" laws. In reality, the 30% local equity requirement he decries is a standard part of the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (B-BBEE) framework that hundreds of other U.S. giants, including Microsoft, have navigated for decades without the "drama". Musk’s "principle" against these rules conveniently ignores that South Africa has already pivoted to accommodate him. As of December 2025, the government introduced Equity Equivalent Investment Programmes (EEIPs), allowing foreign firms like Starlink to skip the equity transfer entirely by investing in local infrastructure and skills. Instead of taking the win, Musk has escalated to hurling expletives at senior diplomats and alleging (without evidence) that he was pressured to "bribe" his way into a license. The irony is thick: while Musk plays the victim of "reverse racism", his refusal to follow local law is the primary hurdle keeping high-speed internet from the very rural South African communities he claims to want to help. It isn't about the color of his skin; it’s about a billionaire who believes his birthplace owes him a waiver for the same rules everyone else follows.




























