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Prince Mashele

Pricking the proud SA heart

2008-12-15 07:33

Prince Mashele

A few days ago, the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation released findings of their annual barometer, which essentially tells a gloomy story about our nation; that a majority of South Africans think that our country is heading in the wrong direction.

The likes of Fikile Mbalula, with a serious dislike of intellectuals, may quickly dismiss what the barometer found in a manner similar to when Professor Barney Pityana was castigated as a hallucinating, armchair intellectual. But any honest South African would agree that, currently, our nation is very apprehensive about the future.

Few would disagree that the state of our economy does contribute to a sense of national depression. Socio-economically, life is tough in South Africa today. The middle class hardly sleep when thinking of the possibility that their debit orders might bounce back, and their flashy cars and ostentatious mansions be repossessed. What a depressing thought!

Under the current economic conditions, to be poor in our country is close to a socio-economic curse. Food prices are unbearably high and taxi fares are so high as though to tell people not to go to work. Those who have jobs are not sure if they will have them tomorrow. For example, new vehicle sales have gone down by 20%. Many enterprises ask the same question: how do we cut costs?

In tough times like these, nations generally look for inspiration from their leaders. It is for this reason that US President elect Barack Obama was quick to announce his economic recovery team, which includes New York Federal Reserve President Timothy Geithner and former Harvard President Lawrence Summers.

By looking at the leadership calibre of Obama's team, the mood of the American nation immediately swung from depression to optimism. The future suddenly became a trip many wished to undertake.

Inspirational leaders

What the Americans have is precisely what South Africa seems to lack today: inspirational leadership! Other than telling us how they will stabilise the economy and ensure that more South Africans do not lose jobs, our leaders continue to promise that they will give social grants to young people up to the age of 18. Where they will get the money from is a question they do not want us to ask. If you dare pose such difficult questions, you are immediately given the status: armchair intellectual.

As if having listened to internal discussions of our political parties about social grants, age limits and such wonderful election promises, Alan Greenspan tells a story in The Age of Turbulence:

    Some... states have extended so many amenities to their citizens that those without an inbred will to work don't. Mundane tasks fall to immigrants and guest workers who gladly collect what is to them a good wage. There are political effects too: a ruling clique can use part of the resource revenue to placate the population and keep people from marching against the regime.

Saying something like this in South Africa would certainly guarantee wrath from our verbally capable leaders. But restaurant goers and hotel frequenters say foreigners now constitute a large part of the workforce in such places. One hopes that these are mere hallucinations of armchair observers, to borrow from the creative Mbalula.

Today our leaders tell us that education should not be considered as part of a barometer to assess political leaders. In other words, we are being persuaded to view Obama and his highly educated economic recovery team as the elite who are not rooted in the masses of the American people.

As we dismiss Obama and his highly educated team, we are then invited to celebrate that, here at home, we are blessed because we do not have Obama and his highly educated team; our leaders are very close to the people. The logic of this celebration is that uneducated leaders are better placed to pull a depressed nation such as ours out of gloom and despair. Or should we wait until our political parties announce their economic recovery teams?

For how long have we heard political leaders disparage the middle class and the rich, purportedly in defence of the poor? In the minds of such leaders, to belong to the middle class is to be removed from the people. So, in order not to be removed from the people you must remain poor until Christ returns!

The irony, though, is that the most vocal champions of this people-centred gospel are themselves not poor and they indeed do not live with the people. If you visit places were the middle class and the rich spend their money, you are most likely to meet one or two spokespersons of the poor busy strategising on how best to sound poor.

Lack of understanding

But the criticism levelled at the middle class is also based on a lack of understanding of the dialectical relations between the working and the middle classes in our society. If you were to ask any poor mother or father in any black or white community in South Africa, they would certainly tell you that they want their children to go to school and become successful in life. When the dreams of this poor mother eventually come true, our political leaders see the child as the enemy of the poor.

In other words, the leaders become extremely unhappy that the dreams of the poor mother have finally come true. The child no longer lives with the people, who remain poor!

Returning to the barometer of the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation and our depressed nation, we may now need to find solace in Chinua Achebe's magnum opus, Things Fall Apart. Achebe tells a story of Unoka, an ailing father who encourages his son Okonko after a bad harvest: "I know you will not despair. You have a manly and a proud heart. A proud heart can survive a general failure because such a failure does not prick its pride."

As South Africans ask themselves whether, like Americans, they have inspirational leaders, Unoka would reply to our nation and say: "I know you will not despair. You have a manly and a proud heart." Could it be that, as a nation, we might need to defend ourselves against political leaders who attempt to prick the pride of our collective heart?

  • Mashele is Head of Crime, Justice and Politics Programme at the Institute for Security Studies. He writes in his personal capacity.

    Send your comments to Prince.

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  • Chris 12/15/2008 8:07:09 AM
    On the one hand we keep voting for the same leaders - and on the other hand we see surveys that say the majority of us aren't happy with our leaders! So either the surveys are wrong, or there's something SERIOUSLY WRONG with democracy in South Africa.

    Tony 12/15/2008 8:24:18 AM
    Do the so called leaders in our beloved country know what they are up to? Look at Julius, Zuma,Kgalema etc..PLEASE, they don't have a cooking clue ,only crooking clues and plenty of them at that.You fail the people on a ongoing basis and blame the rest of the world for it. They did not register in time for the by-elections and say that the IEC is against them, what a load of rotten poephols we have as an example.

    Tony 12/15/2008 8:25:21 AM
    Do the so called leaders in our beloved country know what they are up to? Look at Julius, Zuma,Kgalema etc..PLEASE, they don't have a cooking clue ,only crooking clues and plenty of them at that.You fail the people on a ongoing basis and blame the rest of the world for it. They did not register in time for the by-elections and say that the IEC is against them, what a load of rotten poephols we have as an example.

    Sinudeity@Gmail.com 12/15/2008 8:27:56 AM
    The government wants to strengthen the weak, by weakening the strong. They want to improve the wage earner by burdening the wage payer. You dont help the poor, by suppressing the rich. And you dont continue ruling by keeping the uneducated ignorant! God bless the ANC. The biggest burden of South Africa.

    Olivier 12/15/2008 8:32:09 AM
    Beyond brilliant! It seems as if the state has installed incentives to keep the poor poor and uneducated. What more can be expected when leaders such us Malema are chosen for their... who knows? instead of intellectual capability and ability to lead? Let's wait and see, I'm sure we'll be able to COPE...

    Olivier 12/15/2008 8:33:34 AM
    Beyond brilliant! It seems as if the state has installed incentives to keep the poor poor and uneducated. What more can be expected when leaders such us Malema are chosen for their... who knows? instead of intellectual capability and ability to lead? Let's wait and see, I'm sure we'll be able to COPE...

    CJB 12/15/2008 8:34:36 AM
    In the bad old pre-94 days to be educated, skilled and trained for detached independent decision-making, usually meant one was in management, journalism or academia. Generally this meant one had a higher income and was opposed to the Nats' apartheid policies. Nat supporters sneered at "academics" or the "mink and manure set" as though the wealth consequent of the training, etc, disqualifed decision makers.

    Nkhsani Maluleke 12/15/2008 8:40:06 AM
    The anti-intellectual crusade is disheartening. One can symhasise with anti-intellectual protagonists in that the percived enemy can see through the veil of hypocrisy spewed by political hypocrites. Name calling is knee jeck defence meant to dismise challangers of positions.

    CJB 12/15/2008 8:40:34 AM
    While I have never been one for conspicious consumption [a phrase learned from reading J K Galbraith] I also feel no shame at being able to afford to live in a neighbourhood of my choice purely as a result of study and hard work. One thing academics, managers, journos, etc have in common if they are good, is the ability to spot and apply long-term principles. Just as I opposed pre-94 populist National Socialism, I have no shame in opposing the post-94 variety - on principle.

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 8:41:36 AM
    Prince, I have been following not only your columns, but also all the analysis you have made. You have been openly biased against the ANC. Indeed I know that you used to lead SASCO and therefore are not neutral in all these. This, plus the fact that you have once worked with President Thabo Mbeki, makes you a very un-neutral columnist. You should re-join politics and reclaim your space. You are no analyst.

    werner 12/15/2008 8:42:16 AM
    I agree with you. We live in a country where people have very selective memories... When people are unhappy about the current leadership all they do is remind them about the previous regime, hand out a crappy t-shirt, promise them the world and sing a couple of struggle songs(machine gun song...).

    Nkhsani Maluleke 12/15/2008 8:46:16 AM
    The anti-intellectual crusade is disheartening. One can symhasise with anti-intellectual protagonists in that the percived enemy can see through the veil of hypocrisy spewed by political hypocrites. Name calling is knee jeck defence meant to dismise challangers of positions.

    Ndlovu 12/15/2008 8:47:35 AM
    The attitude of our leaders toward the middle class is simply indicative of the influence that communism has over the uneducated leaders. Communism tries to eliminate the middle and upper classes. What these idiots don't understand is that it is the very middle class they want to eliminate that holds the key to job creation. Unfortunately the uneducated masses don't realise this and still follow like sheep!

    Sinudeity@Gmail.com 12/15/2008 8:48:54 AM
    You going to call prince a coconut from now on? Because he can think for himself?

    Habari 12/15/2008 8:54:12 AM
    I would agree with you if the things mentioned in this article were incorrect, however Prince has hit the nail on the head. The failure of the current ANC leadership is their inability to read the signs, just like TM did.

    Chris 12/15/2008 9:02:24 AM
    All of us are biased by the sum total of our experience (yes, you too). If Prince has come to a set of conclusions based on rational thought then he has every right to state an opinion - your rantings about bias are irrelevant, irrational, and childish; in the same category as, "my dad can beat up your dad".

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 9:06:01 AM
    Sinudeity@Gmail.com I am simply asking this man to rejoin politics. You cant push a political agenda using a neutral turf such as newspaper columns or television analysing. Journalists are regarded as being beyond reproach,same as judges and preachers. They all now seem to be on the same ANC bashing bandwagon. We will be called names if we give them a taste of real politics for being involved in pseudo politics

    nthatuwa 12/15/2008 9:10:14 AM
    We certanly need to defend ourselves!!!Why sit & complain or even run off to teh west?Why not take charge and claim what's yours by exercising your right to vote?I fail to understand why an adu;t would say that they will not vote cause things are getting bad.In order to put the house in order you must stand up and clean it and set rules to govern it.Let's stop feeling sorry for ourselves.I believe we have plenty of good leaders,American cannot possibly be the only country with sound citizens.

    Steve 12/15/2008 9:10:46 AM
    Where did Prince mention the ANC? The fact that you recognised how Prince's reasonably abstract discourse related to the ANC speaks volumes. As does your pathetic personal attack on him.

    nthatuwa 12/15/2008 9:15:32 AM
    AMEN!!I'm trully amazed by your intelligence.Tell me something,I know your vote is your secrete,but are you a member of any Political party?Either way,you make sound comments and I often agree with you.You make clear observation of thigs and your comments are eye opening.Brilliant.

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 9:20:45 AM
    Sinudeity@Gmail.com I am simply asking this man to rejoin politics. You cant push a political agenda using a neutral turf such as newspaper columns or television analysing. Journalists are regarded as being beyond reproach,same as judges and preachers. They all now seem to be on the same ANC bashing bandwagon. We will be called names if we give them a taste of real politics for being involved in pseudo politics

    Thami 12/15/2008 9:21:30 AM
    Unfortunately, you are no-analyst. You know which agenda you are trying to push and you will only succeed in such forums because these constitutes what is called "ANC-BASHING" columns. Mashele, where were you when Mbeki slapped Winnie Mandela, Khutsong was burning, AIDS denials were the order of the day? DID YOU SAY SOMETHING? I REST MY CASE!!!

    JP Strauss 12/15/2008 9:24:36 AM
    Keeping the poor on the brink of starvation is considered good political strategy because they can always be rallied to hate the "rich" (in this country "rich" means living in a tarred street). Keeping a bunch of uneducated sheep happy is much easier than keeping educated individuals happy.

    Cape Town Kid 12/15/2008 9:30:43 AM
    Who is driving the SA debate and in which direction is it goin?We have now resorted to bashing ANC AND GOVT and individuals using long pages and dodgy assessments.In fact SA in modern history,has never been bashed to this extent.So much is wrong in our country and yet we also have the most wonderful successes.Yet what is being CREATED is DOOM AND GLOOM.Everyone has becom an expert but no-one goes out there to protect their communities,no-one goes to the hospital to hold a parentless child. 1+1=?

    LRob 12/15/2008 9:31:23 AM
    Justa little point I would like to make. . . The "free" handouts to the poor are made from Tax money. This is money that is for the most part supplied by the middle class. Without a strong and econoically viable middle class there little Tax coming in. Maybe it's time for the government to start appreciating those of us that are hanging in here, creating jobs and paying Tax. To the poor out there, make sure your kids go to school. Don't ever let anyone tell you education doesn't count!!!?

    Pitso Tsibolane 12/15/2008 9:31:27 AM
    I loved this piece so much i had to re-read it! Could have never said it better...While the people's leaders continue to enrich themselves, the poor continue to be dissapointed! I hope those people classified as the "masses" could see through the facade, the insatiable hunger for power by politicians!May they question what happenned to all the promises of the past 14yrs and also demand delivery going forward OR boot them out!

    Tony 12/15/2008 9:31:51 AM
    The new training is suitable for the new SA.This can be seen in the quality of artisans we are employing lately,same as the quality in our leadership.They get taught to be hard skinned and as stupid as possible so that the masses keep voting them into power.Lets start training programs that actually produce some competence so that we can move forward as a nation. Outsiders think that we are all a lot of dopes. VIVA SHIKOTA VIVA. Shikota will I'm sure be like deodorant to the present stink.

    Sun 12/15/2008 9:41:07 AM
    The new ANC leadership acts as if they are poor, they are multi millionaires themselves like the rest of them. One thing they are sure doing is to go back to the 'struggle' and promote collective-nothingness that create a people who will wait for hand-outs, they are aware a lot of people like slogans and heroes. The most apparent danger in SA today is to involve kids in running of a country, keep youth leagues out of parliament please.

    Cynicus 12/15/2008 9:42:33 AM
    Precisely the message I get ... "middle class is BAD". The progression, it seems, must be from poor as batsh1t, directly to I-am-a-minor-politico-but-deserve-to-live-in-luxury-while-my-constituents-expire-in-poverty. There seems to be no recognition of the middle classes as the spending/economic core of an economy.

    Great, reasoned, piece of writing!

    Watcher 12/15/2008 9:44:17 AM
    the above analysis is not based upon emotion but on fact - just read it CAREFULLY Prince Mashele. Therefore how can facts be biassed??

    Musa 12/15/2008 9:50:23 AM
    The notion that there is no space for professionals/middle class and intellectuals in the ANC is a falacy,the fact that formations within the ANC e.g. ANCYL and Alliance partners are more vocal and better organised at the moment does not mean that professionals,middle class and intellectuals have no influence or unwanted, the ANC is a contested terrain and the quality of the arguments will ultimately win in the long run

    GBOB 12/15/2008 9:52:40 AM
    Viva Prince. Zuma promises illiterate people grants for 18yr olds. Only 5 million registered tax payers must support this lie! He is obviously lying,and Trevor Manual warned against such rash promises.The ANC feeds off lies to the poor who is not knowledgeable and does not read internet comments like mine.From The Bible" My people are dying because of lack of knowledge".

    JK 12/15/2008 9:55:29 AM
    and unfortunately true. What do we have to do to convince people the current policies can't and won't work and that those so-called "close to the people" politicians are just uneducated fat cats who don't care one iota about the fate of the "people" as long as their gravy train keeps on going.

    Rainbow Nation 12/15/2008 9:56:44 AM
    WOW!!! Fantastic article! :)

    Mojojo 12/15/2008 9:57:39 AM
    The answer to your question is Helen Z my friend. If you were not so busy encouraging other sheep to follow, you would see her out in the streets (Even when there are no cameras) out in the communities trying to make a difference. Out there, fighting crime, supporting people in need and doing her best. The current Government only do those things in front of a Camera crew.

    Mr B 12/15/2008 9:57:42 AM
    Prince, fantastic commentary. I whole heartedly agree with you that the lack of strong leadership is at the root of most of the problems. People (read politicians) are more interested in lining their own pockets than looking after the interests of the people. We live in a veritable Eden, but its suffering from a slow atrophy through gross incompetence.

    Chris 12/15/2008 9:59:30 AM
    LRob has hit the nail on the head (as have a few others). Education is THE KEY to the success of our country and of all of our people - we need to provide a GOOD education for all of our children. We need to pay our teachers more, provide them with a decent syllabus, and give them the authority to maintain discipline. Proper education will have a major impact - in the long run - on employment, poverty, crime, corruption etc... Our current education system is wholly inadequate.

    Sinudeity@Gmail.com 12/15/2008 9:59:57 AM
    Im yet undecided. But any political party that preaches cooperation between black and white folks, definitely gets me excited. I will definitely campaign for COPE :)

    Bignosetw 12/15/2008 10:12:37 AM
    Journalists are expected to be neutral when reporting facts. That's not the job of a columnist. "Definition of Op-ed page/article: "Of or being a newspaper page, ... that features signed articles expressing personal viewpoints." The columnist's job is to express an opinion. That opinion doesn't even have to be shared by a majority of readers (witness most of what Jon Quelane writes) but it would seem here to be the case.

    Bignosetw 12/15/2008 10:14:26 AM
    If you feel, however, that Mashele's opinions are straying far from the facts, you are welcome to say so and preferably to present those facts - then maybe some readers will change their opinion!

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 10:15:00 AM
    And your point being? You know nothing, zilch, zero, except the internet. I wonder if you even bother to vote or attend any political meetings. To the rest, I am saying Prince Mashele, being a politician himself should not use a precious neutral space to drive a political agenda. Unless if news 24 like the citizen openly declares its support to a political party. Then we can also know who we are dealing with

    Chris 12/15/2008 10:26:02 AM
    Whatever dude.

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 10:26:32 AM
    Say all these terminology in your nice office, but let me tell you something in the rural areas Television is called the umabonakude (that which sees afar),Radio is called unomathotholo (the supernatural voice) and The journalist is called osiyazi (them that know it all). so if osiyazi says it people will always believe it. So say it in your true colours.

    Thami 12/15/2008 10:27:15 AM
    the guy is a "crying-foul politician" NOT a columnists. I find it very odd that news24 can offer such a platform for political purposes, I thought such forums are for ordinary folks to voice their dis/pleasure happening in our midst. So, Mr Mashele is driven by anger due to what happenned to his BOSS TM. Fact is, they were all sucking up to him and never raised a dissenting voice under him for fear of his "intellectual" sidelining. Can the real Mashele please stand up please!

    fizzpop 12/15/2008 10:42:06 AM
    Prince was sasco leader(my leader during studying times)he have proven good leadership amd desion making skill,I have worked with him through sasco ,ancyl and pya(progressive youth allience).Prince is unbias at all.

    Nationalist 12/15/2008 10:42:38 AM
    The fact is SA is an African country with millions living in poverty, so we need to concentrate on improving their lives. Being in government in SA means you fall in the poor class so our so called intellectuals do not want government position or politics. Also we have hundreds political parties that make SA to have intellectuals working against each other as they oppose each other politically. It sad that you compare yourself with America there are success stories in Germany where grants do work

    ClassicalGenius 12/15/2008 10:46:41 AM
    A few years ago at a party I attended a dentist, and ANC member, said "We must keep these people poor otherwise we will not have anyone voting for us (the ANC)." Keeping the masses poor and dependant on the ANC govt is a strategy to keep them in power. I am dismayed at the quality of this outcomes based education (OBE) and the very low expectations from our children. I guess with this education our children will become 'drawers of water and hewers of wood' as Verwoerd intended!

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 10:53:36 AM
    Say all these terminology in your nice office, but let me tell you something, in the rural areas and townships Television is called the umabonakude (that which sees afar),Radio is called unomathotholo (the supernatural voice) and The journalist is called osiyazi (them that know it all). so if osiyazi says it people will always believe it. So say it in your true colours

    Cape Town Kid 12/15/2008 11:01:05 AM
    Your HZ is rascist. She only goes to certain communities to USE them to further her career.Nothing about humanism or empathy. NOTHING!You say we r "sheep" but we can see a rascist even if it is hidden in your sort of "niceties".

    Chris 12/15/2008 11:03:46 AM
    And that, my friend, is the entire problem. The people of this country are uneducated. We can have an argument over how this sad state of affairs came into being but... it's irrelevant; what matters is what we do now - educate the people.

    AJ 12/15/2008 11:11:13 AM
    The real Mashele did stand up. Just because the message is not one you want to hear does not make devoid of merit or untrue. I suppose if he toed your party line you would think the article was just brilliant. I would be embarassed to lay my lack of intellect down on a forum for all to see as you do so casually.

    Deano 12/15/2008 11:14:03 AM
    You have obviously done your research Prince. The sad fact is that education will be frowned apon simply because our "wannabe" leaders have none. With Zuma and Malema in the drivers seat, anybody with a hint of smarts will simply be labled "counter revolutionary", and put aside. Sad but true.

    SPL 12/15/2008 11:15:52 AM
    Totally agree with you that education is the key to solving most of RSA's problems. But Government / ANC needs to realise that they need to teach the poor how to fish rather than to give them free fish (taken from others who can fish).

    sufficiently educated to be concrned 12/15/2008 11:25:31 AM
    It's the fat cats and not the middle class who have flashy mansions and cars. The middle class have basic cars and middle sized homes. The anti-intellectual stance from the ill educated in political life is another way to keep their poitions. As one of the other commentators says - keep them poor nd illiterate and the anc will stay in power - what a condemnation!

    nthatuwa 12/15/2008 11:27:40 AM
    SUPER!!i'M ALREADY DOING IT.I GOT MYSELF THE COPE T-SHIRT.WILL BE WEARING IT TOMORROW.MY FAMILY IS NERVOUS THAT I'LL BE ABUSED BY ANC SUPPORTERS.WHY SHOULD WE BE AFRAID?I WAS PROUD SEEING BLACK & WHITES TOGETHER AT THE CONFERENCE,SINGING.I'LL CERTANLY BE THERE TOMMOROW.I HOPE THEY'LL SING THAT AFRIKAANS SONG,I WANNA LEARN THE LYRICS.LOL.MY SOUL IS FILLED WITH HOPE!!

    ms Marple 12/15/2008 11:31:34 AM
    Beware of intellectuals, they have often been spoilt children, picked up a degree after dad paid for 4 years of partying at uni, then walked into old boy network job w fat pay, marry a pretty girl who find status irresistable. Once there, the poor is merely an overall wearing doormat, the intellectual babies are born, nursed by a poor "maid" - and the cycle starts again. This cycle, WILL BE BROKEN IN SA, FACT. viva ANC

    Ginger 12/15/2008 11:38:10 AM
    Don't you find it amusing that communism was written by a middle class white man who ended up poor because he lived above his means because he had a social standard to live up to (see biography on wikipedia). Marx's philosophy didn't even make an impression during his own life time.

    Ginger 12/15/2008 11:43:16 AM
    How many politicians live in townships? How many live in big European styled houses and drive big American or German cars? How many politicians even set foot in townships unless it is for a political rally? How many politicians expect you to judge them for something they did 15 years ago or longer and over look what they are doing today?

    MJ 12/15/2008 11:44:27 AM
    Just a thought - does ubuntu encourage people to go out and study, work hard and succeed or does it encourage them to chill at home?

    Kenko 12/15/2008 11:44:47 AM
    are those "services" that everybody complains the ANC doesn't deliver? Could it be the BMW's, Mansions and Farms the ANC promised to everybody who vote ANC? And now COPE promises to pick up the loose ends and deliver on those promises to all who vote for them? If this is the case, COPE will only lead the country to ruin faster. Well maybe I'm wrong and all they really promise is refuse removal, sanitation, water, road maintenance and sewerage treatment. I hope so.

    Arnold 12/15/2008 11:56:23 AM
    It seems that many ANC Supporters on this column would rather call people names when one disagrees with them instead of using rational and common sense to argue a specific point. Rather focus , debate and talk about the issues, tell us your viewpoints about the issues that is brought up instead of calling us names, then we can take matters forwards.

    Tebzano 12/15/2008 11:56:40 AM
    Blade Nzimade says the ANC belong to the poor and the working class( Members of the Union) and nobody reprimands him. The ANC has never belonged to the poor, it always belonged to all of us. Proudly Middle Class.

    Lungig 12/15/2008 12:06:58 PM
    Prince , Thanks for this column. What I see is that they want this country to move back to the 'Dark Ages' where onbly those who rule had a say and others had to listen. I thank my Grandfather who saw it fit to educate his children irrespective of what gender, as this has resulted in us getting the kind of education we want

    Kenko 12/15/2008 12:11:46 PM
    are those "services" that everybody complains the ANC doesn't deliver? Could it be the BMW's, Mansions and Farms the ANC promised to everybody who vote ANC? And now COPE promises to pick up the loose ends and deliver on those promises to all who vote for them? If this is the case, COPE will only lead the country to ruin faster. Well maybe I'm wrong and all they really promise is refuse removal, sanitation, water, road maintenance and sewerage treatment. I hope so.

    Kingzile 12/15/2008 12:20:52 PM
    The working class does not necessarily represent the unions, it represents that class that owns no means of production, including the middle class and the subsistence farmers/ smmes. There is on the other side the Bourgeoisies that owns the means of production and are a selected few who rakes in massive profits at the expense of the majority. Yes the same ones who would rather retrench than sustain jobs. Those who chose profits over jobs. You are probably in the working class

    Dave 12/15/2008 12:46:16 PM
    If the majority of South Africans think that our country is heading in the wrong direction then theoretically the ANC should either drastically loose support at the ?09 elections or we should see huge voter apathy. Registrations are up so if we do not see a drop in support for the ANC then we never will - ANC will rule with no accountability and this is when I pack my bag. Vote with your brain not your heart!

    Thami 12/15/2008 12:49:53 PM
    "The real Mashele did stand up" MY FOOT. I feel sorry for WHITE SOUTH AFRICANS because people like Mashele are taking advantage of your ANC Hatred and are manipulating you. Questions that you need to ask these"pseudo-columnists" are: were where they all along? (@ Least I know Tony Leon was vocal) 2.What were their opinion/s during the last decade or so? 3. When did they suddenly realise that things are going wrong? The sooner they give you answers to these questions, the better.

    Concerned 12/15/2008 1:05:03 PM
    I have never heard an article speak to me like this one did. I am always made to feel like an outsider beacuse of my hard earned education which I must say is not due to any rich parent as I had no parents but rather due to hard work and loans. Why education seems so irrelevant today beats me. We claim to want economical power, how? We accept the excuses from the employees about lack of skills because that is what we would rather live with for some weird reasons. Skill people and save on grants.

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