@kimheller3 80% of all white SAns are racist.
Most of them aren't aware that they are racist.
My racism test: if there is a race you wouldn't want your daughter to have babies with, you're racist towards that race.
I’m not from Malawi, my grandfather was. Both my parents are South African and that is what I am too. I am proudly South African! I am also proud of my Malawian roots doe, that’s my family’s history!!! I’m an African who loves africa and its people. I’m not xenophobic at all!!!
South Africa remains among the most unequal countries on the planet 💔💔
some depressing stats:
- the richest 10% own 86% of all wealth
- the top 1% own 55% of total wealth
- the bottom 50% have negative wealth (liabilities exceed assets)
📝 2026 World Inequality Report
Four Home Affairs officials on a R25k salary per month, ran a visa scheme that made a combined asset portfolio of R16m in just one little HA office in Mpumalanga.
They sold 'study visas' to Nigerians, Zimbabweans, Somalians who run shops & salons.
Hayi ndincamile xem!
@kras52336471087@Sinawo_Thambo Julius is not new to the game, he knows all good and bad characters of it. He was a praise singer of Mkhwanazi way before Mkhwanazi was known to the ordinary people
@Sinawo_Thambo Don't rush to activate a defensive mode, give the process a chance to unfold. If CIC is not in the wrong he will be cleared by the process. Over explaining things might make you suspicious.
What exactly is breaking news about this correspondence? Because a law enforcement official seems to have been communicating information with a public representative.
Is the suggestion that whistleblowers are corrupt when they whistle blow to Julius Malema?
When Lt General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi goes on about how he communicated his concerns before his press briefing, to the Portfolio Committee Chair of Police, to the National Commissioner and to the President of the Republic, were his communications suspicious?
If sharing of information of conduct within public institutions with public representatives in order to aid accountability is a crime, then the Parliament of South Africa is at risk of collapse.
I would dare the Madlanga Commission to consider taking the phones of all MP’s to test this claim. Khan is not the first nor the last official of a public institution to purportedly share information with an MP.
MP’s who are pretending to be outraged should be careful, because the basis of their effectiveness in Parliament relies heavily on this type of information sharing.
I would particularly caution the Chair of SCOPA, who seemingly could not even sleep due to excitement. His entire portfolio relies on whistleblowers and information sharing from people in public institutions, his disdain for one based on a narrative is surprising.
WATCH | A young innovator from Nxamkwana near Mdantsane in the Eastern Cape has, through his company Spectacles4TheBlind, developed AI-powered smart glasses for people with visual impairments. The glasses help users navigate their surroundings more independently.
One of the most overlooked forms of wealth is having complete ownership of your time.
Waking up and knowing nothing about your day will be decided by someone else is priceless.
They do not hate Julius Malema because he has failed. They hate him because, despite years of relentless attacks, they have failed to defeat him politically, morally, and ideologically.
Their frustration comes from the fact that they cannot find a fault significant enough to destroy his credibility. They cannot measure their leaders against him because many of those leaders lack the courage, conviction, and influence that Malema commands. It is difficult to defend leaders who inspire little confidence, while Malema continues to inspire loyalty, debate, and admiration across the African continent.
Whether one agrees with him or not, Julius Malema remains one of the most recognised and influential political figures in Africa. His voice resonates from local communities to international platforms. Even global leaders and institutions find themselves responding to his political positions, while many of his critics struggle to make an impact beyond their own local circles.
What pains his opponents most is seeing him remain relevant, loved, and politically resilient despite every campaign launched against him. They celebrate every allegation as if it were a conviction and every investigation as if it were a guilty verdict. Yet if the Madlala Report fails to substantiate the accusations against him, many of the same voices will simply move the goalposts and attack the very process they once celebrated.
History has shown that genuine revolutionaries are often both loved and hated. Julius Malema occupies that space. To his supporters, he represents fearless leadership, economic justice, and African self-determination. To his opponents, he represents a political force they cannot ignore and have not been able to silence.
Love him or hate him, Julius Malema remains standing. And that reality continues to frustrate those who have spent years predicting his political demise.