@MsibiGugumsibi8 -Life changing business deal
-H100 Business van
-A house in Mogale City
-A loving partner/Marriage
-Wealth
-2 more businesses in food and clothing
-Peace, Wisdom, Health
-Decor equipment
-Spiritual growth
We gave. We shared. We opened our arms. And what did we get in return? Drugs. Human trafficking. House hijackings. Illegal mining. Murder. We've had enough of the crime. We've had enough of the suffering. We are taking our country back.
You invited them with no housing plan. No job plan. No integration plan. Just a speech about ubuntu. And now we are the problem for complaining? Your incompetence is killing our people.
Malawians are protesting and causing a myhem in Durban. It's allegedly that they also throwing stones at passing vehicles. No South African has ever done something like this in any African country
A very interesting country where the people who claim to be fearing for their lives are on TV, dishing out threats to the people they claim made them fear their lives but those people just Marched in the streets asking those who are illegally in the country to GO‼️
Apparently there’s an anti Jacinta group where they are reporting her page and advising each other how to obtain fraudulent documents from Home Affairs. No plan of going home whatsoever but silencing South Africans. We are South Africans and they won’t win this war they started
WATCH 🎥
Millions of rands worth of municipal equipment, including TLBs, tipper trucks and water trucks, remain unused.
Residents are asking a simple question: Why buy the machines if they are not going to be used to serve the people?
I stand with South Africans
As Namibians, we should be very careful not to blindly go against South Africans whenever concerns about immigration are raised and immediately label everything as xenophobia. The moment we dismiss every concern as xenophobia, we risk opening ourselves to the same challenges in our Namibia that we work hard to keep peaceful, stable and functional.
South Africans are increasingly being gaslighted to feel that being frustrated about illegal immigration, crime and the ultimate breakdown of their fabric automatically makes them xenophobic. That dangerous oversimplification could easily happen in Namibia too if we are not vigilant.
As Namibians we have built a culture where corruption is not casually accepted. We live in a country where politicians, CEOs, directors, public officials can be arrested when they misuse public resources. That is not just the stance of the Police, the Anti-Corruption Commission, or one political party, but our collective stance as Namibians. We care deeply about our country and what could happen if we become careless.
We challenge wrongdoing in Parliament, on radio stations, in taxis, in newspapers, in offices, in WhatsApp groups, at police stations, in courts, etc. We speak up because we value accountability. That culture is not to be compromised to accommodate skin colour.
Not to say there's zero corruption here, but there is a strong public expectation that leaders must be accountable. We care how the public feels. Even within the ruling party, many people genuinely want progress and national development rather than theft and self-enrichment.
We speak out when public resources are misused that even something as simple as a politician’s child posing on an official government vehicle paid for by taxpayers becomes a national conversation. That level of scrutiny protects our standards unlike I'm other countries where children of the corrupt openly flex with designer clothes and stacks of money.
My concern? If we allow people who ran down their own countries to come here and repeat the same patterns, we risk damaging what we have built. I don't want a Namibia where our children are exposed to more drugs, prostitution, organized crime, or corruption networks because of blind loyalty to a race.
Foreign nationals who come to South Africa should respect the laws of that country. Be there legally, contribute positively, do not come to add to crime, corruption, or instability. Every country already has enough internal challenges to solve.
To me, that is basic respect when you are a visitor in another country. You contribute positively to the house you enter, not negatively, because when things deteriorate, some people can always return home but citizens remain to deal with the consequences.
I stand with the principle that countries have a right to protect opportunities for their own people while still caring lawful, respectful visitors fairly, but not as a priority. I cannot imagine a day where Namibians are made to feel guilty for wanting their children to have priority access to opportunities in their own country.
I have seen situations in sectors like engineering, valuation, land surveying, architecture, health, and other professions where locals struggled to enter industries that foreign professionals were accommodated in. That reality has frustrated many young Namibians trying to build careers because they were being sabotaged, purposely failed in exams even at varsity.
I know we're being gaslighted to believe we can also go and compete for opportunities in those countries. If you're running away from there when it's your home, how stupid am I to believe there's something for me there?
I cannot be tricked out of Namibia.
Our country is beautiful, built through discipline, and we should never fall for labels being put on South Africans for trying to protect what they've built.
Can’t believe they are actually celebrating this? Zama Zamas have displaced families, raped women and girls and killed innocent people but just because they are threatening us they are now heroes?
REAL PRESIDENT PHAKELA NDABANDABA ALREADY ADDRESSED THE NATION🇿🇦.
Listen to Phakel'umthakathi NOT Ramaphosa.
Follow Phakel'umthakathi NOT Ramaphosa.
Defend Phakel'umthakathi NOT Ramaphosa.
AKA was a passionate patriot who used his massive platform to advocate for social justice. While he didn't fight in physical wars, he championed his country on global stages & fought for socio-political causes that affected South Africa.
He was fiercely patriotic in his art, prioritizing his SAn identify rather than conforming to US hip hop standards, & was flying the national flag 🇿🇦 global stages.
He was also politically active, engaging in national debates, actively encouraging the youth to vote, & consistently keeping the socioeconomic struggles of his generation at the forefront of his music.
#AKAFridays
🔗https://t.co/lNVOWz49dp
#LongLiveSupaMega
No one is insulting education. We are insulting stupid Intellectuals who use their degrees to protect criminals and attack South Africans.
There is a difference between knowledge and stupid intelligence .. as Mcebo Dlamini put it. You're an good example of that.
You can have a PhD and still be completely disconnected from the reality of a South African mother whose child is trafficked by illegal foreigners. You can be a professor and still defend the indefensible..,; because your ideology matters more than our pain.
No one is proud of being ignorant. But we are proud of being honest.
We don't need a lecture about "education hating" from people who have never stepped foot in the townships they claim to love. You sit in your university offices, tweeting about Pan-Africanism, while our children live in squalor.
We hate hypocrisy disguised as intellect.
And the arrogance of those who think a degree makes them better than the unemployed South African who sees the truth with their own eyes.
We will keep calling out the stupid intellectuals who have sold their souls to foreign NGOs and UN agendas.
If that offends you – good. You were meant to be offended.
Education should teach you to think, not to parrot.
Unfortunately I am not a Big account I’d share my story here on but no one will see it…how I travelled to Zim in 2018 and all of a sudden I can’t travel anywhere because my passport was forged in a single stamp…SA Border control
Is Corrupt Af!