John

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John

John

@pataderp

tweets = momentary thoughts (probably constitute shitposting too)

Afrique du Shithole Katılım Ekim 2010
426 Takip Edilen625 Takipçiler
Nickolaus Bauer
Nickolaus Bauer@NickolausBauer·
Wrestled with this rebuttal, Ash Müller I’m still trying to see recognise that your heart is probably in the right place. But you can’t go unchallenged. To characterise Ponte as en “empty shell” waiting “to see whether the people inside are ready to rebuild” is lame analysis.
Ash Müller@Askash

I finally took a tour of Ponte City. For years I’ve driven past it, written about it, spoken about it, and used it as a reference point whenever the conversation turns to Johannesburg, urban decay, or the rise and fall of great cities. But I had never actually been inside. Ponte City opened in 1975. 54 storeys. 173 metres tall. For 48 years it held the title of the tallest building in Africa, only losing it to a tower in Egypt that beat it by just a few metres. At its peak, around 1,000 people lived here. At its lowest point, nearly 8,000 people were packed into the building without proper water or electricity, and Ponte was labelled Africa’s first vertical slum. The stories from those years sound unreal. Entire floors used as brothels. Trash piled up inside the hollow core to the 14th floor. It took three years to remove the waste, and over twenty bodies were found during the clean up. Trucks couldn’t reach the site, so workers carried everything out by hand. Since 2014, the internal windows have been welded shut to stop people throwing rubbish into the centre. The building was refurbished before the 2010 World Cup, and today around 2,000 people live there. When I arrived for the tour, my guide warned me not to panic if I heard a loud bang. Residents sometimes throw nappies or trash out of the windows. Not exactly the welcome you expect when entering one of the most famous residential towers in Africa. And yet, walking inside, I was surprised. Biometric access, 24-hour security and over 480 cameras monitoring the building. Just past the turnstiles was a box full of house keys on the floor. A simple system so school kids can collect their keys and go home if their parents are still at work. We went up to what used to be one of the penthouse suites. Today it’s a shared entertainment space for residents. Baby showers, birthdays, after-work gatherings. The view from the top is incredible, and also a little heartbreaking. In the 1990s, this exact penthouse could be rented for about R800 a month. Four bedrooms, two lounges, sauna, jacuzzi, braai area, fully furnished. From there we went to the community centre, where volunteers help children with homework after school. Downstairs, there’s convenience retail for residents. Fruit and veg shop, takeaway, butcher, tailor, pizza place. A small ecosystem keeping the building alive. Then we went to the centre - Ponte’s famous hollow core. Built on a slope, the circular design made structural sense, but standing there feels like standing inside a monument to everything that went wrong in the Johannesburg CBD. Cold metal stairs, dark concrete and echoes bouncing up fifty floors. And then, a bang. Someone threw a full bag of rubbish into the middle of the core while we were standing there. My guide didn’t even flinch. “They clean every day,” he said. That moment was really profound. Because you can install cameras, weld windows shut and hire security. But if people don’t respect the place they live in, nothing really changes. Standing inside Ponte feels symbolic of what happened to Johannesburg. A city that was once ambitious, modern, proud. Then hollowed out by neglect, mismanagement, and people who stopped believing the space belonged to them. And yet, Ponte refuses to die. The building recently went up for auction. It’s still unsold, which tells you someone believes there’s even more value left in it. The tour ended in the underground parking with rows of cars - some working, some abandoned, some stripped down to nothing but shells. Ponte is not just a story about urban decay. It’s a story about what happens when a city loses control and what it takes to build that control back. And walking out of Ponte that day, I couldn’t stop thinking that Johannesburg and Ponte City have something in common. Both were once symbols of possibility and both went through years that nearly broke them. Yet, both are still standing, waiting to see if the people inside are ready to rebuild again.

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John
John@pataderp·
@RiseAgainstEvil @POTUS The fact that he says this shit because he knows people eat it shows that EFF supporters must be among the dumbest people in SA.
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Alice VL
Alice VL@RiseAgainstEvil·
Julius Malema is unnerved and unhinged as he lashes out against @POTUS.
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Nickolaus Bauer
Nickolaus Bauer@NickolausBauer·
@DlalaNje Making grand conclusions after a hour complimentary tour you took several months ago is at the very best weak tea. To be unwilling to recognise this is ignorance or a feeble attempt at clickbait. @Askash
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John
John@pataderp·
@BoknRoll That’s against the spirit of rugby. Or something.
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Zwelinzima Vavi
Zwelinzima Vavi@Zwelinzima1·
President Donald Trump’s threat to strike Iran’s power stations, widely reported across international media including CNN and BBC, has been treated largely as a matter of strategy. What is striking is not only the threat itself, but the silence that accompanies it. The deliberate targeting of a country’s electricity infrastructure, with full knowledge that it will cripple hospitals, water systems and civilian life, is not merely a tactical option. It raises the most serious questions under international humanitarian law and, on any serious reading, constitutes a war crime. Such conduct would place Trump as a sitting or former president within the reach of universal jurisdiction, exposing him in principle to prosecution for war crimes in foreign courts. Yet this legal reality is scarcely mentioned. The omission to mention this is an indictment of a Western media culture that strains to analyse power while shrinking from naming its illegality and international law consequences. Ziyad Motala Professor of International Law, Howard Law School.
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Luke Elvy
Luke Elvy@Luke_Elvy·
It’s hard to fathom @garyplayer @TheBig_Easy & @TrevorImmelman all very proud South Africans, haven’t offered a single comment on the sensational scenes in their homeland this week. Is it not possible to even offer congratulations on a superb week for the game & nation? Telling.
LIV Golf@livgolf_league

👏 A lap of honor around 18 for @SouthernGuards ♥️ Today wasn't their day but they've done their nation proud 🇿🇦 #LIVGolfSouthAfrica

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John
John@pataderp·
@pierredevos This is such a telling tweet. Embarrassing for you.
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John
John@pataderp·
@terryjt1 Maybe the majors, one day, might have something with as good a vibe as South Africa had.
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John
John@pataderp·
@Scaramucci Gonna block you just because you’re dumb, and you’re bringing down the tone of my TL.
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Anthony Scaramucci
Anthony Scaramucci@Scaramucci·
Here’s the question nobody in Washington is asking about the Diego Garcia strike: how did Iran know exactly where to aim? They don’t have satellite coverage of the Indian Ocean. Someone gave them the targeting data. Who? And what does that make this war?
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Keanu
Keanu@Keanubtc·
Nothing says Happy Human Rights Day in South Africa quite like chanting for the murder of white people🇿🇦
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John
John@pataderp·
@ZeldalaGrangeSA They attacked to destroy the risk of missile attacks on Europe and Israel.
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Zelda la Grange ©™✌
Zelda la Grange ©™✌@ZeldalaGrangeSA·
The US attacked Iran to bring about 'regime change'. President Trump now said there is no one left to negotiate with. So why don't they stop the attacks because he implies the regime is gone?
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John
John@pataderp·
@ILephale49233 @UlrichJvV No, you’re displaying the typical low-IQ approach. You didn’t own shit. You’re not owed shit. Geographical existence doesn’t count for shit. Hell, even in 2026 you need a PTO in TTL.
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T-mile
T-mile@ILephale49233·
@pataderp @UlrichJvV Why buying stolen property? Your ancestors came and stole our land now you asking us to buy stolen land. You must be sick in your head.
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Dr. Benway
Dr. Benway@DearestDr·
My take: Israel has a right to exist and a right to defend itself. It has a right to kill those who hurt its citizens. If Israel starts a war, it must fight its own war. Europe owes Israel no military loyalty. If the US wants to fight Israel's war, Europe owes the US no loyalty.
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John
John@pataderp·
@KP24 I’m not sure how you’d ensure they play Ireland in the quarterfinals though.
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Kevin Pietersen🦏
I’m watching highlights of school boy rugby from SA yesterday, the depth in that sport in SA is off the charts. The SA schools rugby team could actually semi final at next years RWC in Aus! 👀
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Ben Karpinski
Ben Karpinski@followthebounce·
Absolute scenes as Gary Player parachutes in at LIV Golf SA final day
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John
John@pataderp·
@ILephale49233 @UlrichJvV You have 148 laws in place which give you preference. Buy your own land, you pathetic loser.
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T-mile
T-mile@ILephale49233·
@pataderp @UlrichJvV ANC Government failed Black people while they were trying to impress white minority. Black South Africans are landless.
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T-mile
T-mile@ILephale49233·
@pataderp @UlrichJvV Bought from who because white people displaced Black people and settled. They didn't have the right to sell the land at first place. And they killed a lot of Black people for no reason.
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