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Australian day...for what?

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By Mike Smith
27th of January 2020

As the long-time readers of my blog know, there is no love lost between me and Australians, especially their stupid hypocritical government. As Pieter-Dirk Uys once said, “So many South Africans have emigrated to Australia that the average IQ of both countries went UP!”

My problem with the Australians is that during Apartheid they were leading the sanctions and boycott campaign against South Africa and actively supported the Marxist terrorist ANC, but now that their beloved Nobele Savages have destroyed South Africa, and the country has become the crime and rape capitals of the world, there is not a single peep from Australia.

Now that thousands of farmers have been killed, do they call for boycotts and sanctions against the ANC regime? Now that the state has been captured and bankrupted by the ANC, Eskom, Denel, SA Airways, Transnet, etc have been looted into bankruptcy…where are the morally superior Ozzies? Shhttt don’t wake them up.

But in 2013 when the useless terrorist Nelson Mandela vrekked, the Australians were quick to send their sympathies and remind us of their role against Apartheid…as if we needed any reminding how it all started in the early 1970s, when prime minister Gough Whitlam banned racially-selected sporting teams from visiting Australia and how prime minister Malcolm Fraser was one of the first international figures to visit Mr Mandela in prison. He also took a deep interest in trying to isolate South Africa.

Economic and trade sanctions gathered pace in the 1980s but towards the end of that decade, opponents of apartheid decided much stronger action was needed to bring about change.

Gareth Evans, as foreign minister in the Hawke government, admitted that Australia helped to lead the international campaign against the regime.

"The trade sanctions, the sports boycotts, the cultural boycotts, were psychologically important, but frankly, were not making too much impact on the regime," he said.

"What made the difference were the financial sanctions, getting the world's banks to stop the flow of capital into the country. The wheels that made the economy turn.

"And Australia played a hugely central role in that."

Australia proudly lobbied the banking system in Europe and in America, as well as other governments through the Commonwealth mechanism, according to the former foreign minister.

"At the end of the day it was that more than anything else that really put the squeeze on the regime," he said.

"We can be quite proud of the role that Australia played," Mr Evans said.

At the same time Malcolm Fraser, as the chairman of the Commonwealth eminent persons group, whose goal was to dismantle apartheid in South Africa, pressured the South African government to fast track Mr Mandela's prison release.

Sometimes I don’t know who the biggest scum was, the useless ANC or the libtards of the world who supported them.

I could still understand the Australian support of the ANC if their own hands were clean, but how they systematically genocided their own indigenous population and stole black children from their families to live with white families, and then preach to South Africa is just psychopathically unbelievable. I mean this was right up into the 1970’s when they were calling for sanctions against South Africa. Go figure.

Nou ja, what goes around comes around, so forgive me for not shedding a single tear when their country burned down recently. I don’t know what they were crying about anyway, because it is only Port Jackson, Black Wattle and Blue Gum trees…all pests in South Africa that we are trying to get rid of. These things grow so fast and take over that in no time everything will be back to normal.

Nevertheless, yesterday was Australian Day. 1788 The day the Brits landed in Port Jackson and started a penile, sorry “penal”, colony of crooks and prostitutes. What never stops to amaze me about Australians is that today, after more than 230 years, you can still see that asocial, criminal gene running through Australians…especially prominent in their government and police members.

Look at this video below. An Australian bloke arrested for displaying an Australian flag on Australia day. What is this world coming to?



Like my mate in Oz said to me the other day meeting up with a German bloke… “Did you notice that it is quite common for Germans and South Africans alike to when we meet, we extend our right hands to shake hands, whereas if you notice, the Australians never do that.

Instead they cock their heads, wink and say “G’day mate”. I’ts in their DNA and stems back to the days they were cuffed to Ball and Chain and extending your right hand would cause you to drop the ball onto your foot.


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