Setjhaba Scheezy

217 posts

Setjhaba Scheezy

Setjhaba Scheezy

@SetjhabaScheezy

LL.B student Jurisprudence Habakkuk 2:3 Scheezy Republic

Katılım Mart 2023
512 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
David Hundeyin
David Hundeyin@DavidHundeyin·
I obviously cannot speak for South Africa because we all know the problem those ones have, but this "hatred of Nigerians in Africa" in my experience is an internet phenomenon. At worst you meet people who display some defensiveness or hostility because of stereotypes they've heard, or because they've had bad experiences with Nigerians before, like when a car rental service in Accra once refused to let me rent a car when I was in town because I'm Nigerian. But beyond that, the truth is I have never been anywhere in the Anglophone part of this continent (except South Africa) where I felt like I wasn't welcome. Not Kenya, not Ghana, not Tanzania, not Zambia, not even Cameroon. What I do know for a fact is that a lot of Nigerians lack self awareness, and they often go to other people's countries and show their full asses, which is what creates whatever bad impression they have of us in the first place. But unlike white people, Africans are infinitely more likely and willing to give you a chance to prove that you are not your stereotype. It's actually our people who need to learn to treat other people's countries with respect when they go there. You don't go to another country and rent a 1-bedroom flat, then pack 10 of your cousins from the village to come and stink out the place. You don't go to another country and start leering at the women and treating them like you're sampling candy in a chocolate factory. You don't go to another country and refuse to fall in line with the local culture and norms, while making yourself as loud and visible as possible. You don't go to a sovereign country and doing "Eze Ndigbo Ghana" - something that will obviously be misinterpreted by the locals as a foreigner setting up parallel political structures in a sovereign country. Basically, when you go to another country (and this applies everywhere not just Africa), you're supposed to keep your eyes open, your mouth shut and your dick tucked in long enough for you to actually figure out how to assimilate! Nobody likes to feel like the national character of their home country is being changed or polluted by lousy outsiders without self-awareness whose volume-to-common-sense ratio is vastly lopsided. Just because they're black like you doesn't make it your country, and doesn't give you the right to act as if you're at home. The same way you people understand how to be on your best behaviour when you're in Brampton, Ontario, and Leeds, West Yorkshire, is how you should also act when you're in Teshie, Accra, and Syokimau, Machakos County. And if that is asking for too much, then you can of course feel free to return to Nigeria and be your truest selves there instead of constantly complaining about how oTheR aFricans dOn'T liKe uS. If you make Nigeria a better place that other Africans want to start moving to, that one sef no go bad. Giant of 200 million people busy complaining about Ghana and Sierra Leone.
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Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
Royale Union Saint-Gilloise
Royale Union Saint-Gilloise@UnionStGilloise·
Yes. President Yama 2000 has arrived. 💛💙 Relebohile Mofokeng joins Royale Union Saint-Gilloise on a four year-deal. More information on rusg.brussels.
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Setjhaba Scheezy
Setjhaba Scheezy@SetjhabaScheezy·
@onyekanwelue Basotho in the Free State province do not attack or chase away foreigners we have large influx of Basotho immigrants from Lesotho and Igbo Nigerians immigrants.
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Onyeka Nwelue
Onyeka Nwelue@onyekanwelue·
And, I have another offering: “Pay the Xenofobie 5 Million Rands” which is a crime novel, set in Pretoria. In the wine cellar turned war room of a fake vineyard outside Pretoria, the Afrikaner woman known as die Maker addresses nine black South Africans. She explains the mission: provoke and execute violent protests against other African nationals. Each will receive 5 million rand from the “Hunters of Kwerekwere,” a shadowy Stellenbosch group. A Tsonga sex worker outside overhears fragments through a vent. The nine are introduced by tribe: Zulu hothead, Xhosa strategist, BaPedi skeptic, BaTswana fixer, BaSotho loyalist, Tsonga pragmatist, Swazi enforcer, Venda mystic, Ndebele wildcard.
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Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
Ounka
Ounka@OunkaOnX·
Oh boy, this is really heavy 😂
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Neo Mokoari
Neo Mokoari@NeoMokoari·
Neo Mokoari tweet mediaNeo Mokoari tweet mediaNeo Mokoari tweet mediaNeo Mokoari tweet media
Johannesburg, South Africa 🇿🇦 ZXX
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Times LIVE
Times LIVE@TimesLIVE·
A coalition representing 160 civil society organisations across South Africa has called for the arrest of “vigilante” ringleaders behind the wave of anti-immigrant attacks in South Africa. timeslive.co.za/politics/2026-…
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Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
Adika
Adika@Adikastakes·
South Africa is 2nd position and qualifying for the round of 32 as it stands💔
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Sahel Revolutionary Soldier
A Nigerian brother took food to the Malawians in Durban, South Africa. He expressed solidarity to them and shared his hope that relief would ne brought to the people soon.
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Dr Ayilola 🇬🇧 👨‍⚕️ 🩺
South Africans, both at home and in the diaspora, will need to apologize for how Nigerians and other Africans were treated in South Africa. For me, that is the only condition for supporting South Africa at this World Cup. So under this tweet, I only want apologies from South Africans.
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Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
Fahad Amir
Fahad Amir@FahadAmirN·
I SUMMARIZED THIS EXCHANGE 🇿🇦: We are against illegals in SA 🇳🇬: But I am not illegal 🇿🇦: We don’t want foreigners who take our jobs 🇳🇬: I created jobs for South Africans 🇿🇦: We just want you to leave our country even if you created jobs & are documented 🇳🇬: No problem, pay what I invested, I will leave 🇿🇦: We will see you on June 30th NOTE: That business might get destroyed & the owner killed if this issue is not handled swiftly.
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Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
Musa Ronalds
Musa Ronalds@MusaaRonalds·
Let me educate you not with anger, but with truth. You assume South Africans lack exposure. You assume we believe other African countries are poor and undeveloped. That is not the case. We know the reality. We know Nigeria has oil. We know Ghana has gold. We know Kenya has tech. We know Botswana has diamonds. We know Zambia has copper. We know Zimbabwe has platinum and lithium. We know the DRC sits on $24 trillion in minerals. We know Africa is rich. But here is what you do not understand, wealth beneath the ground does not translate to prosperity above it. You can have all the minerals in the world but if your leaders steal, your constitutions hostile towards humans rights, if your institutions are corrupt, if your people are divided by tribe, if your healthcare collapses, if your schools crumble, if your youth flee then you are poor. Not in resources. In governance. In accountability. In dignity. We do not look down on Africa. We look at the mirror Africa refuses to face. We see our own flaws corruption, unemployment, crime and we fight them. We protest. We vote. We demand better. That is what makes us different. We do not run. We stay. We build. We hold our leaders accountable, even when it hurts. You say we lack exposure. But we see you. We see your leaders flying overseas to get treated, some in our country to get medical treatment, while your children starve. We see your ports exporting raw minerals while your people have no jobs. We are not blind. We are not ignorant. We are honest. The difference between South Africa and many other African countries is not wealth. It is the willingness to confront failure. We own ours. You run from yours. That is not a lack of exposure. That is a lack of accountability. And until you fix that, no mineral, no resource, no tweet will save you. Go home. Fix your house. Then talk to us about exposure.
James@MrJamesKe

A lack of exposure has led many South Africans to assume that other African countries are poor and undeveloped. The reality on the ground often tells a very different story.

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Setjhaba Scheezy retweetledi
Code Keeps Kings
Code Keeps Kings@Babtin_·
Being South African on Twitter is a fulltime job. The moment you open your eyes, you're already on national duty, defending the country against allegations, stereotypes, & random attacks from people who've never been here. Kubi! 🇿🇦😂
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