apartheid was not "subdued" in the sense... that I was talking about. It simply failed in South Africa, much the way marxism failed in Afghanistan.
What's the distinction between being subdued and failing? If people in one country contribute to the collapse of some system in another country, then how do we know whether or not they subdued the system?
The Afrikaans are hardly comparable to the Pashtuns of Afghanistan and Pakistan-- if anything that metaphor is less strained when the Pashtuns play the role of the oppressed black majority in South Africa, but the metaphor doesn't make much sense that way (...)
I did not intend to use a metaphor. I thought that you were applying a general principle and I intended to apply your general principle to a different example. The message that I am now replying to begins with the words "an interesting example."
Even when the "enemy" is relatively discrete, like the taliban, a military solution is only a stopgap at best because the real enemy is a whole culture, the only way to subdue it is genocide (...)
You wrote "like the taliban", which suggests that the taliban is just one possible example. Did you not intend to suggest that?
You did write "the only way" and that seems to be a kind of claim that is often very difficult to support. After all, there might be some way that you have not considered or imagined. A single alternative method that works will disprove a "the only way" claim.