Home | Forums | Mark forums read | Search | FAQ | Login

Advanced search
Hot Topics
Buraku hot topic Shinzo Abe Former Prime Minister shot Dead during speech?
Buraku hot topic Those Koreans got a lot of nerve
Buraku hot topic 'Paris Syndrome' strikes Japanese
Buraku hot topic Warm and Toasty
Buraku hot topic Russia's Putin violates the Japanese
Buraku hot topic Russian Shenanigans
Buraku hot topic Anti-Foreigner Demo In Saitama
Buraku hot topic This is the bomb!
Thanatos' embalmed botfly hot topic Where The Hell Did Everyone Go?
Buraku hot topic Looking for the Japanese Elon Musk
Change font size
  • fuckedgaijin ‹ General ‹ F*cked News

Mandela's Passing, Puzzling Tribute

Odd news from Japan and all things Japanese around the world.
Post a reply
3 posts • Page 1 of 1

Mandela's Passing, Puzzling Tribute

Postby Yokohammer » Fri Dec 06, 2013 8:41 pm

Is it just me who finds this a tad hypocritical?

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters that Mandela, who died Thursday at age 95, “fought (with) a strong will to eliminate apartheid and achieved a great deal by putting national reconciliation at the center of his nation-building.”

Use your cookie magic to read the entire article at JT:

Japan offers tributes to human rights giant
User avatar
Yokohammer
 
Posts: 5090
Joined: Tue Sep 30, 2008 6:41 pm
Location: South of Sendai
Top

Re: Mandela's Passing, Puzzling Tribute

Postby matsuki » Sat Dec 07, 2013 12:13 am

In the following year, Mandela was invited to an international conference on the news media in Kyoto, where he delivered the keynote speech on media freedom.


:keyboardcoffee:
User avatar
matsuki
 
Posts: 16047
Joined: Wed Feb 02, 2011 4:29 pm
Location: All Aisu deserves a good bukkake
Top

Re: Mandela's Passing, Puzzling Tribute

Postby Mike Oxlong » Wed Dec 11, 2013 2:28 pm

Perhaps Mandela was more of a kindred spirit to Abe and his LDP that is generally recognized...

Nelson Mandela, The Che Guevara Of Africa
To some extent, Mandela’s legend has been nourished—even created—by sentimental Westerners. The measure of the man whom Oprah Winfrey and supermodel Naomi Campbell have taken to calling “Madiba”—Mandela’s African honorific; Winfrey and Campbell’s African affectation—has been determined by the soggy sentimentality of our MTV-coated culture. “Madiba’s” TV smile has won out over his political philosophy, founded as it is on energetic income redistribution in the neo-Marxist tradition, on “land reform” in the same tradition, and on ethnic animosity toward the Afrikaner.

Guru and gadfly, sage and showman, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela is not the focus of this monograph. Boatloads of biographical stuffing can be found in the odes penned to the man. Concentrating on Mandela, moreover, in a narrative about South Africa today would be like focusing on Jimmy Carter in an account of America of 2010. Going against the trend of hagiography as we are, it must be conceded that, notwithstanding Mandela’s agreement with the “racial socialism” currently contributing to the destruction of South Africa, his present role in his country’s Zimbabwefication is more symbolic—symbolic such as his belated, tokenistic condemnation of Mugabe to an intellectually meaty crowd of “moody models, desperate divas and priapic ex-Presidents,” who convened to celebrate Nelson’s ninetieth. The focus of our attention is, then, not the aging leader but his legacy, the ANC. Or “The Scourge of the ANC,” to quote the title of the polemical essay by Dan Roodt.

The patrician Mandela certainly deserves the sobriquets heaped on him by the distinguished liberal historian Hermann Giliomee: “He had an imposing bearing and a physical presence, together with gravitas and charisma. He also had that rare, intangible quality best described by Seamus Heaney as ‘great transmission of grace.’” Undeniably and uniquely, Mandela combined “the style of a tribal chief and that of an instinctive democratic leader, accompanied by old-world courtesy.” But there’s more to Mandela than meets the proverbial eye.

Cut to the year 1992. The occasion was immortalized on YouTube in 2006. Mandela’s fist is clenched in a black power salute. Flanking him are members of the South African Communist Party, African National Congress leaders, and the ANC’s terrorist arm, the Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK), which Mandela led...

http://personalliberty.com/2013/12/09/n ... of-africa/
•I prefer liberty with danger to peace with slavery.•
User avatar
Mike Oxlong
 
Posts: 6818
Joined: Wed Oct 20, 2004 5:47 pm
Location: 古き良き日本
Top


Post a reply
3 posts • Page 1 of 1

Return to F*cked News

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 15 guests

  • Board index
  • The team • Delete all board cookies • All times are UTC + 9 hours
Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group