I found this in a local Cape Town newspaper which was commemorating Youth Day on June 16th. It reminds us of where we have come from and should warn us of the results of unchecked discrimination and where we could end up.




This entry was written by nomad-one and posted on June 29, 2007 at 5:19 pm and filed under Politics. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.
Nur thanks for the post mate, much appreciated! Hope you enjoy the book.
Hey Nur, Thanks for the praise man, and the free advertising! It has been a roller-coaster ride from start to finish. Luckily it is really...
I just purchased this yesterday and I love it. He had on the blog that the editor didn’t work and that it was removed and...
Same problems. He has actually quickly responded to 2 of my 4 questions. It seems like if he knows the answer he replies, if he...
Nur I didn’t know about this. I’ve purchased the Revolution developer pack and it’s really worth the money. I...
I had a similar problem/issue when buying his theme and regretted the purchase ever since. I’ve posted many questions, with no answer,...
Thank-you for highlighting the work of the Foundation. When the crisis first broke out in Cape Town, my flatmate and I bought a large volume...
Khathutshelo makes a few VERY valid points that I’d like to sum up if I may: 1 – No one cares if a site was developed by a white or a...
Great post. This is a hard one..I am what the government classifies as “black” and I am a self taught designer/coder. I...
Hey Nur excellent post. I do not think we need another online social network. We are all on the major ones any ways. What we need is...
The site looks good. It’s got a very Nur feeling design to it! :) Congrats on the last event, sounds like it went well.
The major problem we have it that these “refugees” are not true refugees and the sheer volume of them. Very very few of them...
Love the designs!
Posting tweet...


