Bolded sound a bit like this to me ...
It's demeaning to assume Black Africans don't have any large scale farming expertise...
This is coming from someone who's actually lived in the continent
What's up with these absurd comparisons you guys are making? Why can't you just discuss shit rationally instead of trying to unnecessarily demonize what I'm saying? Slavery and sharecropping are much closer to the old systems that were in place there than what I'm proposing. I'm talking about the Black Africans owning the land and the resources and produce. The whites would literally have no power over the land owned by the Black Africans and would only be providing mentoring services. How does that remind you of that pic?
And nowhere did I say that no Black African had any large scale farming expertise. Stop with these stupid straw men arguments. I'm saying that there isn't enough large scale farming expertise among the Native South Africans for them to just take over those farms and maintain the profitability that is there. Again, this is born out by reality. The Black African farmers who have obtained land in both Zimbabwe and South Africa have struggled for the most part and the economies of both countries have suffered. I'm acknowledging reality. Why is that demeaning? Do you guys think that kind of knowledge and expertise is just gained through osmosis? It's not. You have to learn. That means being taught. As I've said, I'm sure they could find some black people in the world that could come and help them, but that's not nearly as efficient as getting the people that have been specifically managing that land for generations. You dudes are letting your anti-white sentiment cloud your judgement. It's not even like what I'm proposing would have to last that long. It would a few years until the Black Africans got the hang of it, and then they'd cut ties.