Temporary Zimbabwean

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Temporary Zimbabwean

Temporary Zimbabwean

@ZMWZAR

I love life and do all to live it to the fullest.

Harare, Zimbabwe Katılım Ekim 2011
1.7K Takip Edilen539 Takipçiler
Temporary Zimbabwean retweetledi
Former Kleva Black🇿🇦 🇿🇦#FreeCongo#FreeSudan
The drugs worth billions that were caught coming into SA from Malawi reminds me of the 80s when the apartheid govt flooded the Cape Flats with drugs and guns to destabilize the Coloured youth to depoliticize them and stop fighting for their communities.. I dont even blame Malawians. They are being used by the globalists from the West to destabilize the SA youth so they care more about drugs than fighting for their country. Its 2026, we wont allow that bullshit. Aluta Continua!
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History ZAR
History ZAR@HistorySAZAR·
South African athlete Josia Thugwane at the medal ceremony with his gold medal for the Marathon at the Olympic Games, Atlanta, 4th August 1996. Thugwane was the first Black athlete to win an individual gold medal for South Africa at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Credit: Ross Kinnair.
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Gen Jean-Jacques Dessalines
One thing that Natives can learn from racist apartheid regime was that they understood that WHITE poverty has no luxury of time like studying for 3yrs with zero income. Poor Whites were not expected to go to university, most were sent to trade schools or army as paid apprentice
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Sizwe SikaMusi
Sizwe SikaMusi@SizweLo·
“There’s a deliberate disinformation campaign aimed at vilifying black South Africans, particularly the poor. It mobilises strongly held beliefs & opinions xenophobia in South Africa.” I know about these views, though I’d be wary of going full conspiratorial over something that’s been there for a while. Unless we have evidence of a current, fresh organised campaign to this effect. Otherwise, I’ve been been said this x.com/i/status/16710…
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Temporary Zimbabwean
@PolitikalStratu Which version of Socialism are we talking about? USSR Marxist-Lennist? Chinese? Cuban (absolute socialism)? Ujamaa from Tanzania? Kenyan (under Jomo Kenyatta)?Zambian Humanism also called African Socialism? The answer is not so straight forward as most think.
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Engineer Matšhela Koko, MBL
Engineer Matšhela Koko, MBL@koko_matshela·
The Council of the Left shall campaign for a just transition that is publicly planned, worker-led, socially owned, and directed towards employment creation, energy sovereignty, ecological repair, and protection of working-class communities. It shall reject market-led transition models that destroy livelihoods while enriching capital. Nithini nina kwa Khongoloso?
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Sesinga Mavikithi
Sesinga Mavikithi@themankhosi·
Did @IECSouthAfrica declare the USAID Donation of R45 billion to make sure uMkhonto WeSizwe MK Party do not win 29 May 2024 National election and subsequently have 2 hours dashboard Black out something that never happened in the history of South Africa election since 1994.
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Nomfundo. N. Motha
Nomfundo. N. Motha@NomfundoNMotha·
@KSnetne @thankyousiiire @ajeezayGH My guy you keep projecting thing that happen in Ghana on us. South Africa has a formal labor sector with labor laws and a minimum wage. Your minimum wage isGH¢21.77 per day. Ours is R30 per ordinary hours worked. Average worker works 45 hours a week in South Africa.
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Nonfa KING
Nonfa KING@ajeezayGH·
Who did this? 🤷🏼‍♂️😳😳😳😳
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@KSnetne If your are illegal in SA just go home period. This comparing of statistics that literally mean nothing to the man on the street makes no sense.
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DeLightBringer Kiko ☀️
Shifting from an actual economic debate to shouting "go home" and calling sovereign African nations "rubble" is the ultimate white flag. You lost the argument on labor laws, you lost on welfare, and now you’re throwing a xenophobic tantrum because the data doesn't favor you. Ghana’s GDP is growing at a massive 4.7% clip with a record $3,385 per capita, while your economy is caught in a low-growth trap feeding a 33% unemployment queue. The infrastructure is booming, the capital is secure, and nobody is "twerking" over a mall, we are just running our own business codes while you sit around looking for scapegoats!
ᴄᴡᴄ ᴅᴇᴢ@Percy_dez

@KSnetne As always, you not making sense All this because we asked you to go home Your countries must be rubble You even twerk about having a mall

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Jacinta Ngobese🇿🇦
Jacinta Ngobese🇿🇦@JacintaNgobese·
I’m telling you we are fighting an entire SYSTEM that wants the South African black person to cease to exist so that foreigners can write us off‼️‼️ Then they lie and tell you they are fighting the very same white people…They even go to the extent of romanticising Cheap labour and labelling jobs as unwanted by South Africans because you just aspire for banks while you sit at home and not work hoping for ownership of a bank!!! And yet we are the ones that are funded by Israel??
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History ZAR
History ZAR@HistorySAZAR·
Walter Sisulu, then secretary general of the ANC, at his home in Orlando, c 1954. Credit: George M. Houser.
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History ZAR
History ZAR@HistorySAZAR·
Young Jonas Gwangwa in the late 1950s. Credit: Drum Archives
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History ZAR
History ZAR@HistorySAZAR·
Major General Lucky Nhlanhla Ngema (second from left) at the Jan Smuts Airport, meeting his family after years of being in exile, 1990. Photo: Ngema Family
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Africa First
Africa First@AfricaFirsts·
Dog Across the Bantu Belt in Africa 🐕😲 🇹🇿🇰🇪 Swahili — mbwa 🇿🇦 Zulu — inja 🇿🇦 Xhosa — inja 🇿🇦 Ndebele — inja 🇸🇿 Siswati — inja 🇿🇼 Shona — imbwa 🇿🇦 Venda — mmbwa 🇿🇲🇲🇼 Chichewa/Nyanja — galu 🇨🇩🇨🇬 Lingala — mbwa 🇨🇩🇨🇬 Kikongo/Kituba — mbwa 🇨🇩 Tshiluba — mbwa 🇧🇮 Kirundi — imbwa 🇷🇼 Kinyarwanda — imbwa 🇺🇬 Luganda — embwa 🇺🇬 Runyankole — embwa 🇰🇪 Kikuyu — ngui 🇿🇲 Bemba — imbwa 🇧🇼 Tswana — ntsa 🇿🇦🇱🇸 Sotho — ntja 🇿🇦 Sepedi — ntja 🇦🇴 Umbundu — ombwa 🇦🇴 Kimbundu — mbua 🇿🇦🇲🇿 Tsonga — mpfuxa 🇳🇦 Oshiwambo — ombwa 🇳🇦 Herero — ombua Compiled by Africa First
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Gen Jean-Jacques Dessalines
South Africa doesn't have bottomless resources to monitor Americans , Russians, Chinese , Nigerians, Somalians, Pakistanis,etc who escaped own countries What happend to international diplomacy where embassies take active role in managing own citizens in foreign countries
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DeLightBringer Kiko ☀️
You can’t even keep the streetlights on in Johannesburg, but you want to police who enters the country from Accra. Fix the power grid before you try to fix the borders.
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Nonfa KING
Nonfa KING@ajeezayGH·
TO Better understand The bitterness of Black South Africans 🇿🇦 let’s look at History!! The historical fact is that South Africa had white-led governments for decades before 1994, and Mandela became the country’s first Black president through the democratic transition that ended apartheid. For most of South Africa’s modern history before 1994, political power was held by white governments, even though Black South Africans were the majority of the population. Some of the key white leaders during the apartheid era included: •D. F. Malan (1948–1954) – led the government that formally introduced apartheid. •J. G. Strijdom (1954–1958). •Hendrik Verwoerd (1958–1966) – often called the “architect of apartheid.” •B. J. Vorster (1966–1978). •P. W. Botha (1978–1989 as Prime Minister/State President). •F. W. de Klerk (1989–1994). Under apartheid (1948–1994), Black South Africans were largely excluded from national political power and could not participate in national elections on an equal basis. The country’s leaders and ruling institutions were controlled by the white minority government. When negotiations took place in the early 1990s, Nelson Mandela, F. W. de Klerk, and other leaders agreed on a transition to majority rule and democratic elections. The 1994 election brought Mandela to power as president. The idea of “power sharing” can refer to the transitional arrangements that helped move South Africa from apartheid to democracy. Supporters saw this as a way to avoid civil war and ensure a peaceful transition. Critics argue that the settlement left some economic structures largely intact and did not go far enough in redistributing wealth and land. Like literally Black South Africans Didn’t even have access and freedom in their own country 🇿🇦🥹🥹🥹💔💔💔
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Sizwe SikaMusi
Sizwe SikaMusi@SizweLo·
On 29 July 1987, Thomas Sankara addressed the Organisation of African Unity summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and warned that if his fellow African leaders did not stand with him, he might not be there the following year. Less than three months later, he was assassinated. In his speech entitled A United Front Against Debt, Sankara was trying to convince other African heads of state to refuse to pay their foreign debts collectively. He argued that if Burkina Faso stood up to the West alone, he would not survive the backlash. He famously concluded that segment by saying, "If Burkina Faso stands alone in refusing to pay the debt, I will not be here at the next summit. On the other hand, if with everyone's support we decide not to pay, we will be able to use our resources for our own development." While Sankara routinely spoke out against the paralysing nature of Western aid, coining the famous maxim, "He who feeds you, controls you", at this specific 1987 OAU summit, he focused heavily on how foreign debt was a modern tool of conquest. Sankara viewed debt as a moral and historical scam and argued that the lenders were the same former colonisers who had merely swapped their military uniforms for suits, transforming themselves from colonial rulers into "technical assistants", or, as he bluntly called them, "technical assassins". To Sankara, debt was a "cleverly managed reconquest" designed to make African nations financial slaves, ensuring their growth and development were permanently dictated by foreign rules. He argued that Africa owed nothing. Instead, he asserted the West owed Africa a massive debt that could never be repaid, a debt of blood that was shed during slavery, colonialism, and World War II, where African soldiers died to liberate Europe from Nazism. He famously noted that if a poor man steals, it is a crime of survival, but when the rich steal through financial systems and exploitation, it is called policy. He argued: "The debt cannot be repaid, first because if we don't repay, lenders will not die. That is for sure. But if we repay, we are going to die. That is also for sure." Before the OAU speech, Sankara had been vocal about how in his country, foreign aid, especially food aid, undermined self-sufficiency and dismantled local economies. He contended that such assistance, far from solving structural problems, reinforced a logic of economic and cultural subordination vis-à-vis donors. In the end, Sankara said all he could, but tragically, his peers did not join him; many sat in uncomfortable silence or offered polite applause. Just less than three months later, on 15 October 1987, he was assassinated in a coup led by his close associate, Blaise Compaoré, with Western backing.
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@HistoryFactou @khumbu101 The money received for posting rubbish about SA must be worth it for sure. Telling illegal immigrants to leave is not a crime but hey sadza and covo are expensive
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Historical Facts
Historical Facts@HistoryFactou·
Why trade with South Africa if it does not want African nationalities on its land. Therefore, African countries should BAN BUYING SOUTH AFRICAN MADE GOODS.
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@HistoryFactou @khumbu101 Jealousy makes you nasty. We fought for OUR government so that it ASSISTS citizens. Invoke karma as much as you want this country we are fighting that it does not collapse to levels of some African countries and I have been to many. If it means being hated so be it
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Historical Facts
Historical Facts@HistoryFactou·
@khumbu101 @ZMWZAR Why jealousy of what is not mine. Enjoy your hate crimes but karma is not dead. The law of karma will apply very soon.
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