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Apartheid In Black And White: Truth About The Afrikaner, Part 1
[Mercer at Townhall] In a recent translation of Tacitus’ Annals, a question was raised as to whether "there were any ’nations’ in antiquity other than the Jews." Upon reflection, one suspects that the same question can be posed about the Afrikaners in the modern era.

In fact, in April of 2009, former South African President Jacob Zuma infuriated the "multicultural noise machine" the world over by stating: "Of all the white groups that are in South Africa, it is only the Afrikaners that are truly South Africans in the true sense of the word. Up to this day, they [the Afrikaners] don’t carry two passports, they carry one. They are here to stay."

Indeed, the Afrikaners fought Africa’s first anticolonial struggles, are native to the land and not colonist in any normal sense. Yet the liberal world order has only ever singled out Afrikaners for having established apartheid, considered by the Anglo-American-European axis of interventionism to be "one of the world’s most retrogressive colonial systems."

However, while the honing of apartheid by the Afrikaner National Party started in 1948, after Daniel Malan assumed the prime minister’s post, elements of the program were part of the policy first established in 1923 by the British-controlled government.

There was certainly nothing Mosaic about the maze of racial laws that formed the edifice of apartheid. The Population Registration Act required that all South Africans be classified by bureaucrats in accordance with race. The Group Areas Act "guaranteed absolute residential segregation." Pass laws regulated the comings-and-goings of blacks (though not them alone), and ensured that black workers left white residential areas by nightfall.

Easily the most egregious aspect of flushing blacks out of white areas was the manner in which entire communities were uprooted and dumped in bleak, remote, officially designated settlement sites‐ "vast rural slums with urban population densities, but no urban amenities beyond the buses that represented their slender lifelines to the cities."
Posted by: Besoeker 2018-08-31
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=521919