I still see a lot of tribalism out there. Whites have deemed it quite unacceptable among themselves and it should be that way. Tribalism is stronger among minorities and you could argue that white oppression or other pressures makes this acceptable. I would like to see an end to it completely but I think theres a long way to go particularly if theres too many people in denial of it.
In RSA and yes, in other parts of Africa as well, it is NOT about race at all, but rather, fore real TRIBES, which no longer really exists as such, but it's about ancestral history.
For instance, the Xhosa HATE the Zulus. The Xhosa have always been the majority of the damned STINKING COMMIE ANC. Until Winnie Mandela started the WAR on the Zulus, to get them to stop being okay with whites and voting for the ANC ( which the Zulus never had supported nor voted for ) hence the "necklacings, torture, and murders of them. And then there is the fact that several 100 years ago, it was the Zulus who conquered the Xhosa and made them their slaves. But there are other tribes in what is now the RSA and yes, THIS is tribal!
Think gangs here. Think CRIPS V. BLOODS V The Latin Kings, V MS 13, etc.! THIS IS NOT RACIAL!
And then there is the stupid, phony "HISPANIC" term! Cubans look down on Mexicans and others, Puerto Ricans also hate the Mexican as well as others, Dominicans loathe the Haitians and so on and so on and so on!
The original white English settlers here, were anti the German ones, who were here almost as long and there were more German ones that Brit ones.
The anti-white crap has been stirred up by race baiters, who have made money from it, for only a little bit more than 100 years. But it REALLY took off, big time, relatively recently, in the middle of the 20th century, but only reached the boiling point within the last 50 + years.
The black populace was voting for GOPers, in Obama voting kind of numbers, from Emancipation onwards, until recently. Oh there were blips, here and there, but a BIG DEAL in the Chicago GOP, woman was the person who seconded Nixon's nomination, at the 1960 GOP convention.