It took three people: Jacinta Ngobeze-Zuma, Ngizwe Mchunu and ‘PhekelaMthakhati’ to force companies to comply with basic employment laws. Meanwhile we have over 400 Members of Parliament who sit idly while companies break laws daily 😪
Mysol makes headlines Again:
Mysol was talking to the youth of about two hundred (200). That would be studying with R4 million, in various training programs.
They would also received a R2000 allowance on monthly basis. He also made mentioned that every year, he took about twenty (20) students to University and pay their study fees.
He says he's doing all this to give back to the community and empower the youth of this country.
🔥👌🔥
@Markosonke1@Oppenheimer702 We have South African gardeners in my neighborhood. We have carpet cleaners, Trekkie cleaners, welders, builders and many more. I'm struggling with your point. All these are in the East Rand, Gauteng
"It's an African culture that when a woman gets married, she leaves her community or country to joing her husband community. Not the other way around. My Nigerian brothers please bring our sister in laws home"
-Nigerian woman living in Nigeria
During apartheid, Black South Africans were deliberately locked out of the system.
After 1994, we were told to step up, build the economy, and provide for our families.
They said go back to school because Bantu education gave us poor skills.
Now we’re educated.
We’re skilled.
We’re ready.
But what does the government do?
Nothing.
They sideline us.
Big positions still go to whites and Indians while they open the borders wide for cheap foreign labor, both skilled and unskilled, forcing us to compete against our own people in our own country.
This is systematic exclusion.
Foreigners must go.
Time to face our government head-on. #PutSouthAfricansFirst