6 December 2013

The Unfulfilled Legacy of Nelson Mandela

On Thursday 5 December 2013, Nelson Mandela passed away peacefully at his home in Johannesberg. The world mourns the loss of the most prominent figurehead of freedom and equality of modern times, and South Africa mourns the passing of a father figure.
Mandela, of course, achieved an historic feat: causing the transition of his country from a white-minority-led government to a proper democracy. He protested against the system of the time and, as a result, was imprisoned by the government for 27 years for his 'crimes', during which time he suffered incredible hardships. He became the symbol of all those fighting to end apartheid, a symbol who eventually caused the upheaval that allowed him to walk free once more. He then went on to serve for several years as the President of South Africa, endeavouring to ensure that every single person in the country's population, black or white, was treated fairly and accorded the same rights as one another. He remains one of the greatest figures of our time, and he will be missed. But now that he is gone, it is inevitable that a single question will be raised: how far does South Africa still have to go in order to fully achieve his dream of equality?

It is a legitimate query. Mandela may have spearheaded the movement that paved the way for a system built to grant equal rights to all, but that doesn't mean that all that was dreamed has actually happened. Sure, there are far more native South Africans in positions of power than there ever would have been if not for his actions, the black population as a whole is better off, and his story has inspired countless people- and will continue to do so for many generations- but that doesn't explain why so many of the white population still live inside their gated communities, whilst thousands of people still wander around outside with little more than a plastic bag to their name. It hasn't helped all the poor black children still living on the streets or in slums. I know it sounds harsh but, if apartheid had truly been ended, there would be just as many white children out there, sleeping in alleyways and wondering when their next meal would be.

When Mandela started on that 'long walk to freedom' that would eventually land him in the seat of power, his vision of equality for all was just that- a vision. A hope, a pipe-dream, something about which you thought "It'd be good if that happened". And now, so many years later, and despite the many positive changes that have undeniably come about due to his actions, it still has much the same status- although there has been significant progress in dismantling the political and social aspects of apartheid, the wealth gap and mindsets of much of the white minority remain largely unchanged. Bureaucracy, finances and logistics have gotten in the way of a brilliant man's beautiful dream that really should have come to full fruition. And that's terrible.

Nelson Mandela will be remembered as a great humanitarian, a strong and caring leader, and a shining beacon for all those who are oppressed and without hope. Rest In Peace.

4 December 2013

Leave The Haters Alone!

Please don't tell me this is a thing.

Please don't say that homophobia exists on the internet. This cannot be! You must be joking! The cake is a lie!

By now, you've probably heard about Tom Daley's 'coming out' video, wherein he says that- although he "still fancies girls"- he is currently dating another man, and he's happy. Now, if the internet has taught us anything (apart from the fact that sneezing pandas are god damn adorable), it's that some people can't bear the idea of someone else being happy, to the point where they feel the need to physically type out their indignation into a 140-character text box. This is dumb. If you are one of these people, you are dumb. Go away.

And yet, as dumb as the situation may be- and it is very dumb- it was hardly unanticipated, was it now? Homophobia, racism and other such unpleasantries are rife on comments pages across the web. Apparently intelligent human beings post blogs about how homosexuality is 'unnatural', or how females should be forever subservient to their 'superior' male counterparts. It's a thing guys.

Senseless hatred is a thing.

Of course, all these idiots spewing foul vitriol at Tom Daley are misguided and stupid and terrible and disgusting. The way this guy was born is no reason to insult him. It's abhorrent that people can be so ignorant. Duh. But come on, we knew this would happen- it always does. The sequence is always the same:

1 - Prominent public figure reveals personal revelation,
2 - Stupid people make hateful remarks about said revelation,
3 - Intelligent people make hateful remarks towards the stupid people because they are stupid,

Aaaaaand nothing gets resolved. The public figure is still what they said they are, the stupid people still believe their hateful remarks, and the world's just that little bit angrier at itself. It's an exercise in futility.

Do you remember the advice that teachers always gave you in primary school about bullying? You know, the whole "ignore them and they'll go away" charade that never works? Well, I really think that it's our best shot at dissuading the haters.
Just leave them alone. Leave them in their chatrooms, to shout away at each other until their keyboards are hoarse. Don't waste your time on them- you've got more important things to worry about, like who got knocked out on X Factor or why your hair won't go the way it did last week.

Sure, haters suck. But that doesn't mean you have to give them something to suck on.


[Subject inspired by fellow blogger Floraidh- read her blog here.]