Skepdick, if you want an accounting framework, here’s one: cause and consequence over time.Skepdick wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 7:45 amDon't you get that sense of irony, choking you like a cock at the back of your throat, when you are preaching wrestling with complexity to a complexity theorist?BigMike wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 7:26 am Skepdick, you’re right to call out vague rhetoric when you see it—but threading the needle between justice and injustice isn’t applause lighting. It’s just hard work that doesn’t fit into slogans, and yeah, it’s easier to roll your eyes than wrestle with complexity.
The ANC would certainly disagree with that assessment. Isn't that just circular reasoning?
You haven't threaded the needle between fairness and unfairness for us.
What if it's an unfair question and you are just mistaken. Can't you wrestle with complexity?
Well sure. The context is 2025 and the political power has changed hands.
Heyyy, look! It took you virtually no time to sneak in group identity into the equation. So how do we determine who was; and wasn't part of the group which benefited "unfairly"?
Given that whites are effectively excluded from the higher echelons of the economy via BEE policies; and given that whites have no political power isn't that systemic racism circa 2025?
Isn't it unfair that race is now the deciding factor when having to do business with two equally competent individuals or businesses?
Ohhh "grounding". That stupid Western philosophical idea that has gotten us nowhere in thousands of years.
More applause lights! More!BigMike wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 7:26 am You can’t measure justice by who’s doing the redistributing—you measure it by why, how, and to what effect. That’s the difference. And it’s only visible if you’re willing to look past the cheap binaries and do the harder work of historical and moral accounting.
But sure—if mocking the language helps you sidestep that work, be my guest. Just don’t pretend cynicism is clarity.
I am mocking the language which expresses all platitudes - without communicating any actual work.
You can't do any accounting - simplistic or otherwise; unless you provide us with the accounting framework you are using. Could you tell us the principles of accounting you are accounting by?
Let’s strip this down.
1. Cause: Wealth and land were acquired through conquest, exclusionary law, and forced labor. That’s not group identity politics—it’s just recorded history. Entire populations were legally barred from ownership, education, and participation in markets for decades or centuries. That’s the imbalance.
2. Consequence: The benefits of those policies didn’t vanish when the laws changed. They compounded—like interest. Today’s disparities aren’t coincidences. They’re echoes. That’s not an ideology. That’s structural inertia.
3. Correction: Redress isn’t about punishing the present. It’s about dismantling the machinery of advantage that still hums in the background—quiet, but profitable.
Now you ask: what about 2025? Isn’t BEE and affirmative action now a mirror image of exclusion?
No. The crucial difference is motive. Past systems excluded to dominate. Modern equity policies exist to undo that legacy. If they’re overextended or misapplied, that’s a policy failure—not a reversal of oppression. It’s not symmetrical, because the intent and historical weight aren’t.
And no, “grounding” isn’t a stupid Western idea—it’s what lets us distinguish between justice and power dressed as justice. Without principles, you get whatever the strongest faction wants, justified by nothing but its own volume. That’s not clarity. That’s noise.
So if you want to keep mocking every attempt at principled reasoning as “applause lights,” fine. But don’t confuse sneering for insight. It’s the cheapest seat in the arena—and it builds exactly nothing.