Saturday, October 24, 2015

South Africa a Blueprint for Success

South Africa
The Afrikaners have unveiled a R3.5 billion plan to secure the future autonomy. The Afrikaner is here to stay and does not intend to give up on South Africa. Having deep roots and determination to secure a future for the younger generation by 2020, the summit held in October 2010 proposed a plan of action of commitment. Today, the Afrikaner has almost no choices regarding the future, except to continue to accept the current governance, crime, and elimination of the minority;  emigrate; or create a sustainable future.

The last time the Afrikaners united, apartheid happened and a considerable stable economy was built. The future plans of this determined culture have shaken some people. The Afrikaner has done this before and certainly has the ability, strength of character, and willpower to succeed again.
While Afrikaner independence might not be achievable, or practical, the people have proposed an entirely new concept as a way forward to protect the historical heritage, language, and religious principles. The new plan would include establishing a private Afrikaans university coupled with a bursary for learners. As South Africa has a severe educational crisis, and the future of education does appear to be on the brink of disaster, the Afrikaner will implement plans to ensure the fundamental necessity of education. Besides a university, there are plans for a language center, poverty alleviation, and safety.

Today, many South Africans do not rely on the government for security, medical care, education, and electricity. The past 21 years have seen a decline in service deliveries and destruction of what was built under apartheid. As a democratic country, South Africa remains a Third World country sliding into chaos and a failed state. Although progress by the democratic government to uplift the majority poor people has been marked as positive, there is still much to be done. However, the declining economy and corruption coupled with crime has a detrimental, negative impact on the South African society.

The Afrikaner is focusing on community self-reliance, safety, and quality of life. The Afrikaner is as much an African as the various cultures in South Africa are and want to make a sustainable contribution to the future of this country. Right now, it is becoming impossible for the minority to contribute effectively when doors are closed, unemployment levels rise, and exclusion is the order of the day. The government’s Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) has isolated the minority, forcing many to lose jobs and homes and to live in white squatter camps. The quality of life for many white people has declined into shameful poverty as exclusions continue to block any hope of living a decent life.

The recent spate of vandalizing Afrikaner monuments and statues, the criminalization of the Afrikaner history, racially based legislation, and the abuse of political power has created a challenge for the Afrikaner people. The future identity of the Afrikaner is at risk as the historical past is being destroyed. The Afrikaner’s plan is all about transmitting the history to the younger generation and securing a future in a democratic South Africa. It is not a plan to isolate the Afrikaner, but rather to work with the reality of what is happening in South Africa. The Afrikaner does not intend to retreat away from the challenges, but rather to create circumstances to share with all cultures of South Africa. The Afrikaner cannot live as hostages of the past. Apartheid is gone, and if the Afrikaans people do not take care of the future, nobody else will do so.

For South Africa to become a successful country, there must be a growing private sector, an operative public sector, and active citizens. It would be irresponsible for citizens to leave the future in the hands of a government, as the world has seen the failure in Greece and Zimbabwe. A weak government affects all the people and for too long now the majority has depended on the current government to shape the future of South Africa.

In truth, after 21 years, the Afrikaner is standing united and taking a course of action to determine a bright future by holding on to a vision and building structures to support that vision. The measures adopted by the Afrikaner can help the majority become vigilant and emulate a way to move forward. As the Afrikaner mobilizes toward a future of prosperity, safety, and value, the majority can continue to sit back and depend on the government to shape the future, continuing to live with an inferiority complex, self-hatred, and poverty and call that freedom, or the majority can start implementing and restructuring a secure future.

Opinion by Laura Oneale

PUBLISHED ON THE GUARDIAN LV TODAY - HERE IS THE LINK

 http://guardianlv.com/2015/10/south-africa-a-blueprint-for-success/

South Africa a Dismal Failure as Students Continue to Protest

South Africa
There is chaos, rioting, protests and disgruntled students who are demanding answers from the African National Congress (ANC) and the failure of a government that is South Africa. The ANC will now have to resolve an extremely dismal situation. It is a moment for national social cohesion and reconciliation. The tensions are high, as stone throwing, clashes between students and police who retaliate with stun guns, and tear gas continue.

The university student protests nationwide are a genuine and legitimate educational matter about fees. No politician or political party has a right to grandstand and hijack the student revolution and make political statements. The students all around South Africa are united in their cause of demanding that education must be free. Students rejected Maimane, the leader of the Democratic Alliance (DA) official opposition party yesterday. The students will reject Shivhambu, a top leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF). The students do not want any politician to hijack their revolution.

The ANC are set to join the protest at the Union Buildings in Pretoria, and, in doing so, would be protesting against the ruling party of South Africa. Talk about hypocrisy, anarchy and irony at its best – the ANC has joined the student protest to demonstrate against itself! The ANC are convinced its supporters are stupid and, to some extent, there is some truth in the stupidity of ANC followers. The current situation is now severe, and the president of South Africa never expected such an outcry by the born-free generation. Sadly, many will be like sheep and keep following the leader. The only way now is for all to stand up to all this unnecessary fear and rioting and get a government who cares about the country and all the people.

There are poor students who resort to prostitution, stealing, begging, and living in shacks because the ANC government ignores the feasibility report into free tertiary education. The government does not want to “open the doors of learning” as the Freedom Charter promised, because there are other priorities, such as nuclear power stations. Public servants and politicians are to receive R66 billion wage increase over the next three years, but the ANC does not want to invest in education – the most important investment any country could ever make.

The ANC was created to participate actively in the liberation of non-Caucasian South Africans. They did very well in that department, and many are grateful for the worthy contributions in that regard. The ANC was, however, never created to rule. They hijacked the opportunity and made a mockery of it by trying to fool the very people they helped liberate, hence the unfortunate state of the nation on many critical fronts, including education at all levels.

The quality of education in South Africa is inferior, and entrance level for higher education facilities are not suitable for all the young people. Offering free education will cause congestion within the system. The education system will fail, especially if youngsters enroll at a university just to be there and not really to learn. The repeat rate and drop-outs will become a huge burden and will cost the government. The government is dealing with a multi-layered problem, and there is no easy solution. President Jacob Zuma has announced that there will be no increase in fees for the next year.

There is no doubt the ANC has failed the youth of South Africa, and there is little time for damage control now. The government should not use the notion of autonomy of the university as an excuse for the failure of bad governance. It all goes to show that the ANC government undermines the intelligence of the black people and, in particular, at its constituencies, where someone has to die before the ANC responds.

Opinion by Laura Oneale

PUBLISHED ON THE GUARDIAN LV TODAY - HERE IS THE LINK

http://guardianlv.com/2015/10/south-africa-a-dismal-failure-as-students-continue-to-protest/




South Africa Informal Trading

Keeping the wheels of the SA economy turning. Informal trade at a suburban market. TV remotes, counterfeit CDs, empty buckets, fruit, farm fresh chicken, cow heads and much more. With the high unemployment rate, people try to make a living and at times find this frustrating. 

It's called a "basement market." It is crowded, and offered product items and product lines are similar in character and thus forcing them to compete on price and hence, threatening scale of profitability.

Therefore, reducing income per individual to a below-the-bread-line point. They got here by circumstance and not entirely entrepreneurial spirit. 

Survivalist sector. The hawkers avoid direct competition. Prices are therefore set by agreement. They recognize they are selling to the lower end of the market. Therefore, prices are rock bottom. You can get a quarter or half of everything, be it cabbage, melon, pumpkin or cell phone.

At times, the police arrest the hawkers and confiscate their goods on the pavements, and this is traumatic for these poor people trying to earn enough money to survive. Confiscating goods from vendors is devastating for them because they add very slim markups.







With thanks to Gauta Komane







Thursday, October 22, 2015

South Africa - A house divided

Its not #feesmustfall or #ANCmustfall now it is all about #studentsmustfall. Watch the higher education minister laugh about a very serious situation in South Africa.  I guess the born free students know Blade is a selfish, inconsiderate and senseless man.  The house is divided and the government should realize the extreme urgency and calm the rioting students before the division becomes uncontrollable.

Watch the video here -

http://lifeissavage.com/2015/10/22/heres-blade-nzimande-saying-students-must-fall-and-laughing-video/



Gauta Komane  wrote -
The University Spring can go either of two ways. 1. So far, it is not an ideological project and is not aimed at overthrowing the government. It is a specific protest for a specific purpose, namely, to seek extra funding for universities. All Nene needs to do is to announce an adjustment budget. And Blade could stand surety for universities that apply for bank loans. Everything settles down and it is business as usual as the Guptas, Nkandla, the aeroplane, Hlaudi and other iconic phenomena live on to define our inexorable decline for a few more years before another major uprising.
2. Or, the protest could spill over into poor townships and villages where the most disaffected youth begin copycat and more uncontrolled and this time violent attacks on symbols of governmental power and inequality. This is, to borrow from John Vorster, too ghastly to contemplate

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Riots Teargas and Rebellious Students

Will there be international condemnation for the current riots happening around South Africa? University students are protesting over fees and increases, they want free education. Government must do something, but what will the African National Congress (ANC) do about this unruly behavior.
Thousands of students gathered outside parliament today, chanting, singing and dancing, demanding that the minister of higher education address their concerns.  Police were called in to control the mob and tear gas and stun grenades were fired, sending students into a frenzy.  Sounds familiar does it not, remember the 1976 Soweto riots, when students marched and demanded better education, including freedom, teargas was fired and stones were thrown at the police who in turn opened up fire killing several hundred. The world condemned the apartheid government for the killing of students. it was a national outcry...... Now it is happening again, and this time it is the ANC who instigated the 1976 riots that will have to take appropriate action.  I wonder ...........................................

 On the morning of June 16 1976, an estimated 20,000 students from several Sowetan schools began a strike in the streets of Soweto. The protest was against the introduction of the Afrikaans language in local schools.
The black students protested against the forceful use of the Afrikaans and English language teaching. It was during 1975 that the Regional Director of Bantu Education announced the call of Afrikaans language usage for certain subjects including mathematics in schools. This new language launch was for students in 7th grade upwards, and informed that the natural indigenous languages used by the students would only be for religion, music and social lessons............ READ THE ENTIRE ARTICLE - HERE IS THE LINK

 http://dillydee.blogspot.co.za/2013/06/remembering-soweto-uprising.html

SOURCE

http://www.msn.com/en-za/news/featured/chaos-as-protesting-students-force-their-way-into-parliamentary-precinct/ar-BBmhKqj?ocid=spartandhp


As Clifford T Smith said:
Higher education institutions currently receive only 12 percent of the government’s overall education budget, with the Department of Higher Education’s task team on university funding recently confirming that if they were to be funded at the world average, they would be receiving about R37bn instead of the R22bn they received in the last financial year.

That is right. Blade and his ANC comrades are short changing students to the tune of R15Billion per annum! That translates to full tuition fees for 375,000 students every year - almost 38% of all university students in South Africa..

Students must use their intelligence and realise that they and their parents have given control of the budget to ANC at the polling booth year after year since 1994. Now it is time to try a different tack and give control of the budget to other parties.

As the saying goes: Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Students who boo DA and don't call the ANC to account are like battered wives who keep returning to their violent husband for another beating. Even though ANC disrespects them to the tune of R15 Billion per annum they still cannot wake up and smell the coffee. None so blind as those who refuse to see.