@Beautifulesta_@ThatoNow@Sneak0o Yeah, your thick. This is 2019 and like the guy just proved this was debunked. Jay Z was never at the Epstein home. He kept a black book of all visitors. This was thrown out. It was in 2019 after the arrests, anonymous looney called.
Some of these anti-immigration voices aren’t fixing your situation, they’re using it. Turning real economic frustration into a platform to build influence, money, and name recognition.
Your struggle isn’t caused by immigrants, it’s about access, skills, and productivity in a competitive economy. The real fight is getting equipped, upskilled, and included so you can compete and win.
When considering the speed and scale at which the Zimbabwean government could establish these IT centres, one must ask whether it can realistically match the expertise, capital, and global standards that a company like Google could bring, benefits that would extend beyond Zimbabwe to the wider SADC region.
This presents a unique opportunity to accelerate progress and build infrastructure that meets international benchmarks. While the principle of self-reliance in Africa is both admirable and necessary, empirical studies consistently show that private sector investment often delivers greater efficiency, innovation, and long term value than slow, bureaucratic government initiatives.
Relying solely on public funding would not only strain government resources but also risk inefficiency. A smarter approach would be for the government to establish robust policies and regulatory frameworks that empower private sector participation in developing data centres. This would ensure public benefit, stimulate local growth, and attract regional investment, creating a mutually beneficial ecosystem.
Strong economies are built on the foundation of a dynamic private sector. Nationalisation, while sometimes well-intentioned, is not always the optimal route. One only needs to recall the decline of the National Railways of Zimbabwe (NRZ) once a model of excellence in Southern Africa, to see the long-term pitfalls of excessive state control.