Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Nov 29, 2022 4:13 pm
What seems more likely to me is that you refuse to even allow the development of a position that requires calmness and tact to bring it out. What you proceeded to do is act
to shut it down, not to open it up.
UTTER nonsense. I have given you every opportunity to develop your position, and yet, you still have not done so. [Except: see below re that which you posted while I was drafting this post.]
In my last post, I affirmed that: "I was hoping to inspire you to say something concrete and meaningful. If mine is a revisionist history of South Africa, then what, in your view, is the unrevised history?"
How do you keep a straight face claiming that I am
shutting down a conversation when that question quite obviously does the opposite? It was an explicitly open question that you could have answered however you preferred.
Your response to that question?
*Crickets*
It seems that you don't even
want an open conversation, just to bitch and moan that one is impossible.
So, to prompt you further, in the further interests of an open conversation: what, exactly, is your concrete and meaningful
non-revisionist history of South Africa?
I have no idea, because you still haven't provided it.
Here, the opportunity of an open conversation remains.
Will you take advantage of it or will you continue to complain that it's not possible?
To put that open question to you in other words:
What is revisionist about my position that South Africa was colonised and exploited, and what is the non-revisionist history?
I'm not shutting you or anybody else down, although I
will continue to call you out on your disingenuous BS.
I'm giving you every opportunity to provide an answer. Here, again - still - that opportunity is. Right in your hot little hands.
Take it up or quit complaining that you haven't had it.
You finally, though, start to get to the point with this:
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Nov 29, 2022 4:13 pm
I did not say that SA could not be seen as colonial, I meant to say that it cannot be seen exclusively through that lens. SA was founded by Europeans in accord with an existing, and extremely different, organizing system. What I implied, but yes did not flesh out, is that the talk about SA in fair terms requires a more nuanced exposition, as a starting point, than what is possible with the extremely reduced and binary ‘colonialism’ term.
Here's your opportunity to flesh out that more "nuanced" exposition then. Go on and take it up if you care to. If not, quit lying about not having been given the opportunity.
Yes, though, the stark truth of colonialism
is reductive and binary: the stronger took whatever the hell they liked from the weaker, oppressing them as a matter of course.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Nov 29, 2022 4:13 pm
So to describe a world that has been substantially created by colonial projects requires not a brute judgmentalism — so predictable, so reductive, so typical of the Left-Progressive perspectives and hurling of moral blame — but a different and a fuller perspective.
Again: go ahead and provide us with that different and fuller perspective rather than railing about being inhibited from doing so. Nobody's stopping you. I don't even have the power to stop you: I'm not a moderator of this forum nor have I ever even corresponded with a moderator.
I am not stopping you from expressing yourself, dude. Say whatever it is that you have to say. Just don't expect me to agree with you. It's pretty clear I won't.
Ah, but, curiously, I see that while I have been composing this reply, you have had more to say. Great. You have found the courage to be more explicit. Here's the relevant extract from your post:
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Nov 29, 2022 4:49 pm
It ‘cannot be right’ because it [SA] was, in a larger vein, the construction of a civilization within a regional context that sought to create something completely different and indeed non-actualizable by any tribal or social group within that region. A colonial project, typically, is a
funnel system whereby the resources of the exploited colony are channeled into a fuller leading to a port where they are sent to the mother-country. SA is more comparable to the US which broke the strict colonial (funnel out) model.
South Africa was a complete civilizational unit if I can put it in this way.
Oh boy. So, your claim is that South Africa was not a colony because it was not - so you say - a "funnel out system" but was instead a "complete civilizational unit".
Whatever the hell it is you mean by a "complete civilizational unit" is anybody's guess, but here are two facts:
Firstly, the tribes in South Africa were already civilised. They had no need of help from Europeans to build those "units" of civilisation, let alone "complete" ones, whatever the distinction is.
Secondly, Europeans waltzed into those black people's southern lands, set up colonies, and exploited them not because they wanted to benefit the native population, let alone to altruistically set up "civilizational units", but because they were in it for themselves and what they could get out of the natives and their land.
You surely know all of this, so your protestations are clearly disingenuous.