Black hope, white fear: The South African government is inadvertently involved in prolonging skepticism against its abilities by its acts of commission or omission
It is logical to me that in any country, where a majority has been denied opportunity in the past because of the myth of racial superiority, there will be a time where some costs have to be born in correcting the injustices of the past. Such costs will normally be incurred by those who are innocent of the perpetration of that injustices but incur it they must, for that is the consequence of history. As Karl Heinrich Marx once said:
"Men make their own history, but they do make it just as they please, they do not make it under circumstances chosen by themselves but under circumstances encountered, given and transmitted from the past. The tradition of all dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living."
The tradition of apartheid shall weigh heavily on our brain so shall the social, economic and emotional costs of the process the new South African government must put into motion in order to move our society to normality. Apartheid was and remains a crime against humanity and cannot be swept under the carpet through the common response of those who cry that they are innocent of the past and therefore should not bear the consequences of it, intended or not
The innocent multitudes of black Africans born after colonialism still bear the costs of the past in that their parents were not able to live their lives to their full potential and thereby adequately provide for their children. This of course adversely affected a chance of the so called "born frees" to start off life at the same level as some of their previously advantaged peers. They have born the negative consequences of a system in which they played no part: that is the nature of history.
During a process of change people will be promoted or appointed to their level of incompetence as we have seen, but at what cost?