The future of South Africa?

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  • Dave A
    Site Caretaker

    • May 2006
    • 22803

    #16
    Originally posted by Vanash Naick
    I’m totally lost about this concept of the second transition! When did the first transition end!
    So is everyone else, it seems.

    There seems to be some attempt to say phase one was a political transition, and this second phase will be a focus on an economic transition.

    To my mind, it looks increasingly like yet another attempt to lose culpability for all the promised aspirations not delivered on as yet. The last thing the ANC needs is for a large portion of the electorate saying "you have failed me - let's try someone else."
    Participation is voluntary.

    Alcocks Electrical Services | Alcocks Pest Control & Entomological Services | Alcocks Hygiene Services

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    • MGM
      Full Member

      • Apr 2012
      • 55

      #17
      The sad truth is, the majority of failed electorate will not vote for any opposition party. They will simply refrain, making their situation actually worse. But how do you get this across to them?

      Comment

      • wynn
        Diamond Member

        • Oct 2006
        • 3338

        #18
        Don't vote the ANC loses 1 supporting vote!
        Vote for someone else the ANC loses two supporting votes! because they now need to use 1 supporting vote to cancell out your lost vote.
        "Nobody who has succeeded has not failed along the way"
        Arianna Huffington

        Read the first 10% of my books "Didymus" and "The BEAST of BIKO BRIDGE" for free
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        • Justloadit
          Diamond Member

          • Nov 2010
          • 3518

          #19
          Originally posted by wynn
          Don't vote the ANC loses 1 supporting vote!
          Vote for someone else the ANC loses two supporting votes! because they now need to use 1 supporting vote to cancell out your lost vote.
          Eish but this math is two deeficalt for me to undirstands.
          Victor - Knowledge is a blessing or a curse, your current circumstances make you decide!
          Solar pumping, Solar Geyser & Solar Security lighting solutions - www.microsolve.co.za

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          • Blurock
            Diamond Member

            • May 2010
            • 4203

            #20
            Originally posted by Justloadit
            Eish but this math is two deeficalt for me to undirstands.
            Is that why the bulk of the population is kept illiterate? No school books, no teachers, no future. The government is filled with Dr Dolittle's.
            Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

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            • twinscythe12332
              Gold Member

              • Jan 2007
              • 769

              #21
              I guess if you keep everyone stuck at one level, they'll be more controllable... Once you know how to swing one person's mind, the sheep like him will be just as easily swayed.
              The ANC has been making promises by the boat-load... and we've all heard how they don't live up to it. So does that mean the other parties are making promises that are too realistic?

              Comment

              • murdock
                Suspended

                • Oct 2007
                • 2346

                #22
                and all tax money seems to be wasted on...is fraud and corrution investigation...or setting up some form of investigation.

                Comment

                • MGM
                  Full Member

                  • Apr 2012
                  • 55

                  #23
                  I think the opposition, especially the DA, is making huge inroads into the so-called "illiterate" communities. Remember, the illiterate community is there because of apartheid, initially. But 18 years down the line, no change-for-the-better has taken place. It actually got worse, in living standards, for the poor and even the so-called "middle class" community.

                  We are not even half-way through this economic tsunami. Things are going to get tougher, and I think the so-called illiterate and middle class communities needs to take decisive action to stop the plundering of our assets by so-called "leaders". Once the so-called "illiterate" is liberated, we will either have a civil war or a democratic election, depends on the illiterate.

                  Comment

                  • Blurock
                    Diamond Member

                    • May 2010
                    • 4203

                    #24
                    Originally posted by MGM
                    Remember, the illiterate community is there because of apartheid, initially. But 18 years down the line, no change-for-the-better has taken place. It actually got worse, in living standards, for the poor and even the so-called "middle class" community.
                    I have to disagree. The illiterate community is there because the cadres decided on "no education before liberation". Nobody can force you to learn if you do not want to.

                    The illiterate obviously does not have the same access to information such as in newspapers, books, news bulletins and other sources as the literate. They also do not have the same opportunities as the literate and educated and are therefore more succeptable to indoctrination and intimidation.

                    The illiterate should study what happened in other communities that overcame diversity by hard work and learning. The Indian community find themselves at the top of the management chain and have educated as lawyers, doctors and astute business people. This after they came to these shores as indentured labourers with no future.

                    The Afrikaner community was devastated after the Boer war. The British army's scorched earth policy forced them off their farms to find work on the mines. The Great Depression and the "poor white" issue is well documented. These same people started Iscor, Eskom, FVB, KWV, the Rembrand group and others. They started co-ops to assist farmers to sell their produce. Education was important and was the key to job creation.

                    Our immigrant communities of Etiopians, Zimbabwians, Greeks, Portugese and Congolese are setting up shops and starting businesses from virtually nothing. They are sometimes forced to start over because locals burn down their businesses out of spite or genocide. They don't give up, but start over.

                    What is wrong with our people? Why do we grow up as beggars, thinking the world owes us a living? Have we no pride? Why do foreigners have to come here to show us how things should be done?
                    Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

                    Comment

                    • murdock
                      Suspended

                      • Oct 2007
                      • 2346

                      #25
                      and the reality is...people would rather employ these people coming in from other countries...because they are prepared to WORK for a wage..

                      Comment

                      • Dave A
                        Site Caretaker

                        • May 2006
                        • 22803

                        #26
                        Originally posted by Blurock
                        What is wrong with our people? Why do we grow up as beggars, thinking the world owes us a living? Have we no pride? Why do foreigners have to come here to show us how things should be done?
                        I would love to hear thoughts on that particular mindset challenge.

                        One of the things that strikes me - is it really unique? Genuine entrepreneurs have always been a minority in any society.
                        The second thing to point out is immigrants tend to be more entrepreneurial than average anyway. Which isn't really surprising - the mere act of picking up and moving to a different country is in itself pretty adventurous.
                        Participation is voluntary.

                        Alcocks Electrical Services | Alcocks Pest Control & Entomological Services | Alcocks Hygiene Services

                        Comment

                        • desA
                          Platinum Member

                          • Jan 2010
                          • 1023

                          #27
                          "Who rules South Africa? - Pulling the strings in the battle for power", Martin Plaut & Paul Holden, Jonathan Ball Publishers, 2012.

                          Available in CNA & most bookstores.

                          I'm in the early stages of the book, & already a fairly clear picture is emerging of the chaos around us. An excellent, although detailed, read.

                          To my perhaps simplistic mind, a civil war, or corrective coup, may be some of the ways forwards towards ridding SA of this scourge. Would that a decent, honest government step up to the plate & fulfill the dreams of SA's people. The post 1994 experiment with Democracy (African Socialism) has been a dismal failure.
                          In search of South African Technology Nuggets(R), for sale & trading in South East Asia.

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                          • murdock
                            Suspended

                            • Oct 2007
                            • 2346

                            #28
                            if you keep giving...people will take...and when you change what you have been doing all along...how can you expect people to change their mindset...

                            when i grew up...i wanted something...i wash cars...deliver newspapers...pack bags at the supermarket...my kids on the other hand...want something...my ex wife has taught them to just put out their hand and expect...so when my daughter comes to me with a list of all the outstanding pocket money "i owe her" i ask her what she has done for me to deserve the pocket money...she tells me it is "her right" ...so you know what i told her....i phone her the other at 10 am...to ask her what she is doing about finding a job...she is still in bed sleeping...but i must still pay maintenance...yeah right.

                            my point is you give give give...dont expect them to work for stuff...lots of fathers/parents who have had it tough are guilty of giving their kids too much (because they battled when they were young and dont want their kids to battle) create the lazy monster they turn into...a little hard work never killed anyone..

                            like this incident where they were considering a R20 levy that everyone had to pay for services...it was thown out.
                            Last edited by murdock; 05-Jul-12, 10:43 AM.

                            Comment

                            • Blurock
                              Diamond Member

                              • May 2010
                              • 4203

                              #29
                              I agree with Murdock. Our work ethic is very low. It starts with discipline. There can be no love without discipline. Teach your kids when they are young. Don't wait until they leave school and then try to change their ways.

                              I have recently fired a client due to potential reputation risk. These guys were too lazy to work. They did not even make their own phone calls. Someone else had to make the call and then hand them the phone while the person on the other side was waiting. They more than often pitched up for work at 9 or 10 am while the staff had to let themselves in at 7am.
                              Excellence is not a skill; its an attitude...

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