@TumishoMasha If you include di shot’left you’ll see we also make time time to see our own country. Ba bangwe bona, motho since ale lagos the whole 40 years.
I just booked a return flight to Durban with car rental for 2 days for around about the same price as a single flight to East London. Being Zulu is starting to seem more and more appealing.
Bom Bom Bom Bom Bom and stuff.... 😎😭
@NgwenyaNhla Lived there for 3 years, the people you see making a noise are all “paid protestors” and social media antagonists.
If the presidents brother wins those mining leases he is fighting so much for, all of this noise will go to zero.
I can bet a good Chenin on this
@Nomaswazi_11 I’ve lived there for 3 years, it’s hard to be an illegal and have some of income in ghana they will find you so they can tax you 😂 you can’t just be a bum either, that place is not kind to poor people, nothing is free and social welfare is non existent.
@Palesa_EFF01 I don’t know if you guys have a WhatsApp group or anything, but you are collectively and coordinated in your endeavor to finish off this party?
“such protests are appeals for the law to take its course, not for individuals to act outside it”
I don’t know what’s so difficult about this point landing with the so called intellectuals.
Dr @MbuyiseniNdlozi, I trust you are keeping well and warm during these cold days sweeping across parts of country.🇿🇦
I agree wholeheartedly with you that our engagements should never descend into ad hominem attacks or belittle education. Education must be valued and defended, for it remains the foundation upon which our children build their futures.
At the same time, it is worth remembering that wisdom is not confined to the classroom. Lived experiences also carry deep insights that enrich society. We must appeal to those who are "educated" to be mindful not to present themselves as the sole custodians of knowledge or to treat others as less wise. They should not speak over communities or appear to be lecturing them on how to advance their struggles.
I am of the view that the in public discourse, the "educated strata" of society should set a good example for children, who each morning commit to the disciplined routine of schooling, by showing respect for the voices and lived experiences of those "less educated". Without such respect, children may grow up believing that disregarding the experiences of the "less educated" is the proper way to engage with others.
My good Dr, I will argue that education achieves its highest purpose when it listens, learns, and collaborates with society in humility. In that way, it becomes not only fashionable, but also inclusive and transformative.
Thank you for engaging my post. Wishing you a pleasant weekend.🙏🏽🇿🇦
1. O kgona ho bula booka (credit)
2. Cheapest (for obvious reasons)
3. Proximity (don’t have use taxi)
4. Long operating hours (batho ba chaisa and only get home ka bo 8pm)
I’ve asked this where I’m from, this is what I was told.
Others say o kgona ho patela ka ntwela
South Africans mara nke le mpotjeng mo.why are you still buying from these people? clearly their intentions is to kill you. to kill ur children. you see these videos on social media everyday. they feeding you poison and you know it.but you still buying from them.WHY???
It's embarrassing to hear that a tourist came to South Africa to film a documentary, and criminals attempted to scam him within seconds.
He claimed that despite showing the police the footage, the South African police did nothing.
Can we both look into those criminals/robberies?
Nigerians collaborating with a South African, blue jacket head is from here🤞🏽
@ThePromiseCFC Eeeei man, just shutup and stop making a noise man. You are embarrassing
We are fine with Ghanaians, you just have a dizzy minister who is trying to be on TV by being silly.