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Tay Zonday pfp
Tay Zonday
@tayzonday
Crime and poverty in the United States and post-apartheid South Africa have similar economic causes. The largest issue facing post-apartheid South Africa is that plumbing, electricity, mail and other basic infrastructure only had to support 13% of the population during apartheid. The country was simply underdeveloped. Nobody bothered to sustainably scale prosperity. Now, in 2024, a lot of infrastructure for the 13% cannot scale without demolition and ground-up redesign. More than half of the history of the American project (though not the American nation), if we start at 1619, enslaved a sizable minority. Women, indigenous peoples, and many others persisted with “3rd-world” rights or “3rd-world” poverty within “1st-world” wealth. The past fifty years of welfare for the top 0.1% *undid* civil rights gains by women, blacks, and other marginalized groups. While civil rights promised to let them enlarge the wealth island, witchcraft like fiat and neoliberalism kept the poverty:wealth ratio stable.
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Sophia Indrajaal
@sophia-indrajaal
I'm not sure I get the point here. If the Witchcraft of neoliberalism is the economic cause of crime and poverty in both cases, what's the connection with the groups you mentioned? I'm less familiar with RSA, but in USA there are vast swaths of poverty and crime that are unrelated to the history of slavery. Is there more to this than "rich get richer at the expense of the poor"? I ask because similar dynamics seem to play out in places where concepts like Systemic Racism or White Supremacy don't make much sense due to various diverse histories and social dynamics.
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Blinky Stitt
@flashprofits.eth
I don't understand you on this one
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