Starting this year 2024 Go to groove drink your alcohol. Leave women alone. Don’t buy them drinks, don’t hit on them, don’t offer them a ride home even if they’re stranded. Don’t pay their bill. Drink your alcohol, & go home & masturbate if you want, just leave women alone.
🔴THREE BEST OF ALL TIME PLAYERS IN MY CLUB🔴
Dr Kaizer Dr Irvin
Motaung. Khoza
⬇️. ⬇️
1. Teenage Dladla. King Kaizer
Matatazela
2. Itumeleng Chippa
Khune Moloi
3. Lucas Chincha
Radebe Guluva
The Black
Prince
* Dr Motaung ofcoz wasn't allowed to count Ace Ntsoeleng & Himself.
Quite surprising that Dr Khumalo, Madida, Khuse, Tovey, Marks don't make it in the Top 3. Khune does. 🤔
#SowetoDerby
OPFC ☠ vs A.C.Milan🇮🇹 Never in my Widest dream did I ever think we would play The Great Milan under Fabio Capello🙌was impressed with #16 Aubrey Lekoane, #13 Bashing Mahlangu, #10 Djento Kampala and yours truly#8 ☠☠
[BREAKING] Former Chief Justice Of S Africa, Mogoeng Mogoeng, Vindicating Former Public Protector Adv. Mkhwebane: Ramaphosa and His Team Were Not Honest With Public Protector @AdvBMkhwebane Re #CR17 Campaign, Frustrated Process; Years Since Those Accused Of Corruption and Removed From Eskom — Same Group That Actually Ended Loadshedding — Are Gone, But Loadshedding and Ineptness Continue; Corrupt Politicians, Unchecked Private Sector Power and The Cartel; Election Funding; and More 🧵
President Undermining Public Protector:
“What the president self-evidently did, was to undermine and to frustrate the efforts of that (Public Protector) office to fulfil its constitutional obligations, by not just withholding the truth, but deliberately asserting the opposite of it… Lest we forget, we are not dealing here with an average citizen, but with the bearer of specific and frighteningly weighty constitutional responsibilities; who is expected and required to lead by example and be above reproach; his office demands him to be the lighthouse, the pathfinder, and the embodiment of and the vessel for the enforcement of high ethical standards, particularly the constitutional values of our democratic state. Like all of us, he has rights, but unlike all of us, he does have special obligations not imposed by the courts, but by the constitution and legislation. It is the president, the number one citizen of the country (who) we are talking about here. His is a distinctive and supreme office.”
Bought, Compromised Politicians, Corruption, and Changing Political Funding System:
“For the biting truth is, that there is no free lunch in this world. Private funding of individuals in political parties, and of political parties themselves is, in my view, an investment that is expected to yield very handsome returns. As soon as beneficiaries thereof rise to positions of sufficient authority to deal out favours and tenders — and this is a well researched reality by maturer democracies like the USA. Unfortunately, a compromised leader is most likely to compromise others, as well; the objective being, to disarm and immobilize those who could have ordinarily insisted on constitutionalism, the rule of law, and accountability. [And] that is how the moral fabric of a constitutional dispensation could be eroded. What follows, was an attempt, by a lone voice (@AdvBMkhwebane) in the wilderness to awaken us all to this potentially devastating possibility.”
“Is it not time that we develop a public funding model that would ensure that government and political parties owe their allegiance to the taxpayer, rather than the private funders? Isn’t it a price worth paying, to avoid a democratic order that potentially or, in reality, produces a government of the rich, by the rich, for the rich?”
Private Sector Corruption + Media Protection/Looking Away, Very Soft On Cartels:
“The focus in this country, when we talk about corruption, is on government officials. What’s going on in the private sector? Why is it we hardly, ever have a story running from January to December, about corruption in the private sector? It is in the private sector, we are being told about, to address pay disparities; when people earn hundreds of millions of rands and their employees are earning a pittance. Do we talk about that? I was talking to one of the SAfm people — I was that, ey, you people hardly attempt to expose corruption in the private sector. I suppose that it is for the purpose of commercial breaks — because they will not advertise in your media stations, if you are going to be exposing them. And we are very soft on the cartels and the collusions that are damaging our country… Look at the punishment that is often meted out to those who are damaging the economy. Whether they collude about bread or whatever else. They are not exposed. There are always people available to come to their defence; to water down the effect of the corruption that is happening in the private sector…