Personally, I believe in self-determination, but in the context of one South Africa - so that my self-determination is based in this region, and with my people.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
South Africa gives me a perspective of what's real and what's not real. So I go back to South Africa to both lose myself and gain awareness of myself. Every time I go back, it doesn't take long for me to get caught into a very different thing. A very different sense of myself.
Self-determination could mean independence, confederacy, federal and autonomy.
International law says people fighting for self-determination can use force in order to achieve their independence.
Argentina wouldn't exist if not for self-determination, and this can't be valid for some but not for others.
We need self-confidence in our ability to build Africa. I trust in Mali and I trust in music.
I'm a person that's grounded in faith and believe that my core values, motivation, inspiration, draw from a conception of the world in that way.
From exam grading to health education to professional training to democratic participation, paths towards self-realization and success in the world are often daunting and obscure: journeys only the privileged feel confident setting off along.
If you don't have liberty and self-determination, you've got nothing, that's what this is what this country is built on. And this is the ultimate self-determination, when you determine how and when you're going to die when you're suffering.
I went to Africa without the perspective of a balance between teaching people the truth, which has been my calling, and helping people who have physical problems, like AIDS and orphans and hunger.
Our notions of self-determination are, on the whole, something of a myth. We are governed almost exclusively by our own peculiar habits, which makes those who rail against them that much more remarkable.