REGARDING EKURHULENI, THE DEPOSING OF DEAD BODIES & OPPOSITION PARTIES BEING GIVE MONEY🔥🔥
LEAKED AUDIO Part 1🔥🔥-
The City Manager of Ekurhuleni has been given 2 weeks leave so that the story can die down. Over the weekend around R23 million was travelling through Ekurhuleni councillors and general’s for protection. He is expecting to close this case also.
The handsome guy and his secretary are the one protecting him. Opposition parties are quiet because he promised to fund their campaigns and lifestyle. We are in trouble here in Ekurhuleni.
Bahlali it’s time to take our municipality back from these corrupt councilors and political party. The body that was disposed is one of our own from Vosloorus. We need to support the family.
I am collecting the names of all councillors who are benefiting and funded from the money stolen from the City. Money meant for potholes, water leakages, robots etc is being shared amongst corrupt individuals.
More LEAKED audio’s on the way.
It wasn't estate management. It was home owners who passed a special resolution to change their conduct rules at an SGM and disallow short term rentals.
Imagine buying a property at the Blyde Riverwalk Estate thinking you’ll be able to earn extra income from Air BnB and the property will basically payoff its own loan then the Estate management dies a complete 360 on you, now you are stuck with a bond you can’t afford to pay.
Commissioner Mkhwanazi is causing confusion here. He buried his mother a month ago, hence his appearance was postponed to today. He said he was the second born of seven kids of this lady. Now, Advocate Sello discovered that the mother he's talking about was 10 years older than him. He's 1975, this lady was born in 1965. He says she was the step mother who brought him up. He cannot explain things properly. 😭 It's going to be a long day!
#MadlangaCommission
If you sit long enough and listen carefully to the testimonies coming out of the Madlanga Commission, and even reflect on what surfaced in the Ad-hoc Committee, a very troubling pattern begins to reveal itself. It’s really not just about isolated lapses or administrative oversights in my zero opinion, rather it points to something far much deeper: a State that does not treat national security with the seriousness, discipline, and urgency it demands. One cannot escape the conclusion that there is a worrisome culture of complacency, particularly when it comes to the handling of sensitive information and the basic standards that are meant to safeguard it.
It is frankly difficult to understand how any official can be entrusted with classified or sensitive state information without holding an active Top Secret clearance. That is not a minor procedural issue rather it certainly goes to the very heart of how a country protects itself. Clearance is not a formality; it is a safeguard. It is meant to test integrity, reliability, and vulnerability. Without it, the entire system becomes porous. The idea that individuals can assume office, take an oath, and immediately access sensitive documents without first being vetted raises serious questions about how seriously the State takes its own rules. Surely the logical sequence should be clear: no clearance, no appointment. That is the standard in any country that genuinely prioritises its sovereignty and security.
What makes this even more concerning is that this does not appear to be a once-off breakdown, but rather a systemic failure that has been normalised over time. When senior officials; those at the very centre of our country's decision-making in a way operate without the required security clearance, it signals not just negligence but a deeper institutional weakness. It suggests that the Minimum Information Security Standards are treated more as guidelines or a checkbox than binding rules. And if those standards are not enforced at the highest levels, then where exactly does accountability begin?
1/2
Ultimately, every individual has a price. With enough financial incentive, be it hundreds, thousands or millions, even those in the highest positions will compromise. It all reduces to a question of ones morality.
If you sit long enough and listen carefully to the testimonies coming out of the Madlanga Commission, and even reflect on what surfaced in the Ad-hoc Committee, a very troubling pattern begins to reveal itself. It’s really not just about isolated lapses or administrative oversights in my zero opinion, rather it points to something far much deeper: a State that does not treat national security with the seriousness, discipline, and urgency it demands. One cannot escape the conclusion that there is a worrisome culture of complacency, particularly when it comes to the handling of sensitive information and the basic standards that are meant to safeguard it.
It is frankly difficult to understand how any official can be entrusted with classified or sensitive state information without holding an active Top Secret clearance. That is not a minor procedural issue rather it certainly goes to the very heart of how a country protects itself. Clearance is not a formality; it is a safeguard. It is meant to test integrity, reliability, and vulnerability. Without it, the entire system becomes porous. The idea that individuals can assume office, take an oath, and immediately access sensitive documents without first being vetted raises serious questions about how seriously the State takes its own rules. Surely the logical sequence should be clear: no clearance, no appointment. That is the standard in any country that genuinely prioritises its sovereignty and security.
What makes this even more concerning is that this does not appear to be a once-off breakdown, but rather a systemic failure that has been normalised over time. When senior officials; those at the very centre of our country's decision-making in a way operate without the required security clearance, it signals not just negligence but a deeper institutional weakness. It suggests that the Minimum Information Security Standards are treated more as guidelines or a checkbox than binding rules. And if those standards are not enforced at the highest levels, then where exactly does accountability begin?
1/2
Someone could go to school for 4 years and study aerospace engineering, then get a PhD with a dissertation related to orbital mechanics, and some instagram influencer who watched a youtube video will be like "actually that guy is wrong" on a topic related to space travel and people will believe them.
I'm not sure how we got here, but I hope we go back to a society where credibility is earned with rigorous training in the associated field, not by a popularity contest.
Thelle Mogoerane Hospital .
The hospital that has no parking for patience and visitors . Parking is exclusively for staff . Rest of us will make a plan next to the bush or by the road .
Let's just be grateful "We" have a public hospital 🙏🏾🙏🏾