Cheshire Cat
The most curious thing..
What's happened to HIGNFY - schedule change?
What's happened to HIGNFY - schedule change?
I watched the c overage until I had had enough, looked on the internet for a bit of news about other stuff and then stuck on the last episode of The Wrong Mans. Tonight, on catch up, I will watch one of the doco's on him that aired last night.
It's really not hard is it? At the touch of a button or click of a mouse we have access to all the entertainment and information our heart desires. I cannot understand people complaining about what is on the TV, turn the bloody thing off or over if you don't like it.
FFS - I'll be in bed and asleep well before then.
If you think this is over the top, just wait until Betty Windsor snuffs it. We will never hear the last.
I happen to know a number of people who were in the SACP in the 1950s and early 1960s who would be interested to see your "compelling evidence". It's certainly true that the ANC and SACP worked very closely together - the simple reason being that the SACP was the only party from 1948 onwards that wholeheartedly opposed Apartheid - but the issues of actual membership were often far less straighforward than you seem to believe.
Once the committed brutality of the apartheid regime became apparent in the early sixties, Mandela came to the conclusion that state violence could only be combatted with violence against the state. But he distinguished between four forms of violence - sabotage, guerrilla warfare, terrorism, and open revolution, concluding that sabotage alone was acceptable. His activities were confined to attacks of sabotage against infrastructure that supported the state.
The quality of his political leadership was such that he led a disciplined campaign of controlled violence against a state that was committing intolerable acts of violence against its own people (including murderous attacks on unarmed innocent people). Three decades later, when he was released from prison, he had the genius to resume his active leadership of the anti-apartheid campaign, by promoting negotiation and reconciliation.
His worldwide reputation today hangs on the principles that he applied throughout his life, both before his imprisonment and afterwards. A great man and a great leader.