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Kommies word 80 [boodskap #47417] Sat, 28 July 2001 21:42
Jonas  is tans af-lyn  Jonas
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Andrew Kenny skryf in die "CITIZEN" van 25/07/2001 onder die opskrif "Eighty
years of shame", as volg:

"The South African Communist Party was born 80 years ago this week, and so
has born shameful witness to the evil ideology of communism which has
brought poverty, backwardness, famine, torture and death to tens of millions
of ordinary people while enriching a tiny elite.
The first Communist to come to power was Lenin in 1917 in the Russian
"Revolution" ? actually a coup by a small group of middleclass conspirators.
Lenin was a typical Communist leader: aristocrat by birth, bourgeois by
upbringing, contemptuous of peasants and workers, and fanatically
anti?democratic.
His first steps were to set up the institutions of terror and tyranny. His
disciple, Stalin, followed his course, slaughtering more people than Hitler
and plunging Russia back into the dark ages.
Lenin's only criticism of Stalin was that he was "rude", by which he meant
he came from a working-class background, which offended a roaring snob like
Lenin.
Stalin and his fellow Socialist, Adolf Hitler, formed a pact in 1939 jointly
to invade and enslave Poland. This started World War Two. Communism is a
modern form of slavery. The standard slave?owner's apology used to be that,
"Yes, my slaves are not free, nor rich, but they are assured of shelter and
food every night".
Communist apologists try to make the same argument.
In South Africa in 1922, the Communist Party led the most violent
insurrection in our history.
The Communists were outraged because the mine?owners wanted to bring black
men into skilled jobs on the mines. The Communist war cry then sounded
around the world: "Workers of the World Unite, and Fight for a White South
Africa".
This disgusting racism is a natural result of Marxist ideology, which seeks
to divide men into opposing groups.
The most prominent South African Communist today is Tony Yengeni. Communism
always leads to the masses living in squalor while the elite live in luxury.
So Yengeni, driving his enormously expensive limousines and owning several
luxurious houses while millions are hungry and homeless, is simply being
true to his Marxist beliefs.
He refuses to answer questions from Parliament about how he got his latest
gleaming Mercedes and pays a fortune for blustering advertisements in the
Sunday papers. Karl Marx would be proud of Tony Yengeni.
Communism should be judged in the same way as Nazism, as a brutal and
depraved system of exploitation, and condemned by all honest men."
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