Jacinta's interview with that Nigerian journalist showed me I have ZERO patience..
😭😭😭😭😭
I hate explaining myself over and over again..
Ngabe sengimufake impama mina😭😭😭😭
Some men became great fathers because they had one. Others became great fathers because they refused to repeat what they lived through. And both deserve to be honoured.
1. Baloyi: The Destroyer. She surgically dismantles every weak argument.
2. Khumalo: Calm, polite, and lethal. He boxes you in before you even know it.
3. Madlanga: The Final Nail. He waits for the perfect moment to deliver the finishing blow.
This farmer treated foot-and-mouth disease in cattle using Thokoza, a traditional herb used for generations. Indigenous knowledge still showing up for our livestock 💚
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
The older you get, the more you realize luck is mostly exposure. If you sit in the same place, have the same routine, talking to the same people, nothing new really happens. You have to tackle the world to win. Travel more. Talk to people.
A Nigerian man was caught with a fraudulent identity card and was asked to write down and spell his South African name on the ID. He was unable to do that.
The funny part is he arrogantly continued to say he’s a South African.
Nigerians, where do you guys take the audacity from?