Comments on the nature of Bantuness aside, your article is spot on.
I always ask my UK friends who believe in mass migration as a good in and of itself, why it is that the UK is not Nigeria.
And I ask them how many Nigerians would be needed in order for the UK to take on all the characteristics of Nigeria.
The answers tell me none of them have ever considered migration practically. For each of them assume that there is something magical about the UK, that it automatically exists at some imagined equilibrium of civilisation in their mind, which is independent of how people think and behave.
It is quite terrifying to see this madness act our slowly to produce another third world country with third world conflicts.
Wouldn't existing UK laws on discrimination (which include religion and ethnicity as protected characteristics) allow companies to be prosecuted in the UK if they were structured the clannish manner described here? If someone from one clan refused to interview someone from another clan for a top job in a UK firm, they could be rightly prosecuted.
Prosecutors and police are hopefully aware now that it's more important to uphold the law than worry about being accused of racism since the Rotherham abuse scandal. Riot if you want but the law should apply to everyone.
I am assuming the pseudonymous SOTEL company is based in Somilia so it is of course legal and acceptable to operate that way in their own country.
I guess the difficulty is proving this type of discrimination, but I don't think it will become institutionalised unless our discrimination and equality laws are repealed (ironically the Conservatives would be most likely to do this).
Good article but one thing to mention: Bantus are not an ethnic group, they are a genetic and linguistic group. For example, I live in Zimbabwe and the local ethnic group are the Shonas, who speak a bantu language. Ndebeles are a different ethnic group who live in the South of the country, but they too fall under the category "bantu" because the language they speak is likewise characterised by the same language structure. Most of sub-Saharan Africa is Bantu in this way, but you will never find an African who identifies ethnically as "bantu".
Comments on the nature of Bantuness aside, your article is spot on.
I always ask my UK friends who believe in mass migration as a good in and of itself, why it is that the UK is not Nigeria.
And I ask them how many Nigerians would be needed in order for the UK to take on all the characteristics of Nigeria.
The answers tell me none of them have ever considered migration practically. For each of them assume that there is something magical about the UK, that it automatically exists at some imagined equilibrium of civilisation in their mind, which is independent of how people think and behave.
It is quite terrifying to see this madness act our slowly to produce another third world country with third world conflicts.
Wouldn't existing UK laws on discrimination (which include religion and ethnicity as protected characteristics) allow companies to be prosecuted in the UK if they were structured the clannish manner described here? If someone from one clan refused to interview someone from another clan for a top job in a UK firm, they could be rightly prosecuted.
Prosecutors and police are hopefully aware now that it's more important to uphold the law than worry about being accused of racism since the Rotherham abuse scandal. Riot if you want but the law should apply to everyone.
I am assuming the pseudonymous SOTEL company is based in Somilia so it is of course legal and acceptable to operate that way in their own country.
I guess the difficulty is proving this type of discrimination, but I don't think it will become institutionalised unless our discrimination and equality laws are repealed (ironically the Conservatives would be most likely to do this).
Good article but one thing to mention: Bantus are not an ethnic group, they are a genetic and linguistic group. For example, I live in Zimbabwe and the local ethnic group are the Shonas, who speak a bantu language. Ndebeles are a different ethnic group who live in the South of the country, but they too fall under the category "bantu" because the language they speak is likewise characterised by the same language structure. Most of sub-Saharan Africa is Bantu in this way, but you will never find an African who identifies ethnically as "bantu".
Two articles in a row from you where I'm left saying to myself "bloody hell"