Paddington Bear wrote: Fri Dec 20, 2024 3:11 pm
OK, so for the last time I have not been talking about nationalism, you have
Did you or did you not post this:
"all people with a connection to an ‘old country’ tend to put it on a pedestal when they’re not actually there, regardless of what country it is. Hence the phenomenon of internet warriors telling you that Turkey is the greatest country in the world from their flat in Berlin, or Pakistanis from their place in Bradford etc etc.".
All those Saffas in London tapping away online posting their love for the ANC and how SA is perfect, who don't in fact exist. The stereotype of what a Saffa in London posts online, is the exact opposite.
But I'll take you at your word, go back to the original post and ignore the Reddit/nationalism comment that was there to add some colour:
Paddington Bear wrote: Thu Dec 19, 2024 6:59 pm
Rather than a great insight into South Africans this is just diaspora politics and cuts both ways. As one of the all time great reddit AMAs started:
‘I’m a Turkish Nationalist, AMA’
‘What’s it like living in Berlin?’
South Africans in the UK making criticisms grounded in their life experience (in your words "more low level, could get x service better at home etc"), is the same as a smaller group of people who say they're not South African at all and in my experience get very disappointed in the UK then leave (and not as Yeeb assumed back to SA)? Rose tinted just different directions? Doesn't really work, one is saying something as obvious as "the weather is bad", the other is really quite mad.
No clue how any of it refutes my explanation of why someone who isn't from the UK, parents aren't from the UK, has never lived in the UK, wants to pump $100m into UK right wing populism. Until a better explanation is offered I'm going with "his understanding of the UK is cartoonish". I'm open to some greed/self interest take as an alternative as the initial post stated, but there seems to be nothing obvious in that direction at the moment.