Those who were asking about our T-shirtsโฆ (Zizhippo and crew)
It was made in memory of those who have lost their lives due to illegal immigrants in our country, killed for running a Spaza shop by foreigners running Spaza shops under the pretence of beingโrefugeesโ, killed by food from their Tuckshops, Killed while touring the country and investing in the economy, as well as killed by Zama Zamaโsโฆ they are not our โfundersโ as you claim, we know all you desperately want to find fault and our so called funders!! May their souls RIP ๐๐ปโค๏ธ๐ฏ๏ธ
The next time somebody on social media gets upset about illegal foreigners being escorted to police vans today, show them this newspaper cover. Did these South African children receive the same media coverage and sympathy?
Egypt forgot how to build the pyramids.
Rome forgot how to build the aqueducts. Some still carry water today. What they built still stands. Neither civilization remembers how they did it.
Musk: โYou look at great civilizations like ancient Egypt, and they were able to make the pyramids, and they forgot how to do that.โ
Musk: โAnd the Romans, they built these incredible aqueducts. They forgot how to do it.โ
No army invaded them. The knowledge just stopped getting used, and the moment it did, it was gone.
Same collapse. Compressed into fifty years instead of a thousand.
Musk: โIn 1969, we were able to send somebody to the moonโฆ Then the space shuttle retired, and the United States could take no one to orbit.โ
Musk: โPeople are mistaken when they think that technology just automatically improvesโฆ it will, by itself, degrade.โ
Capability doesnโt sit in a vault. It only exists inside the people doing the work right now.
The second they stop, it doesnโt pause.
It disappears.
That should not scare you. It should focus you.
Nobody loses a civilization to war. They lose it the moment they stop building.
Nobody is owed the future. It belongs to whoever keeps building it.
I have served long enough in leadership to recognise a troubling pattern. Too many among South Africaโs elite - black and white - appear to believe the rules that govern the rest of us do not apply to them.
As chairman of an SOE, I am regularly approached by business leaders asking me to intervene in operational or procurement matters. When I explain that my role is governance and oversight, not management, they say they understand. Yet the requests continue. This reveals a belief that exceptions exist for the connected few.
It was therefore striking to see Business Leadership South Africa and BUSA, organisations that have been vocal against state capture and political interference in state-owned enterprises, actively advocate for political intervention to transfer transmission assets to the Transmission System Operator. These are the same bodies that insist on corporate governance and board independence. Where, then, is the role of the SOE board? What exactly do they believe in?
Equally concerning are recent allegations involving former Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon. Senior figures within his own party, including John Steenhuisen and Dion George, have raised issues that appear to involve conflicts of interest and undue influence. This from a voice that has long lectured on ethical standards and clean governance. Do these rules apply to everyone, or only when politically convenient? Selective morality is not morality at all.
When those who position themselves as guardians of good governance apply different standards to themselves, public trust erodes. But South Africans are watching. We see the inconsistencies. We now know where people stand.
The path forward requires courage. We must expose wrongdoing wherever it occurs without fear or favour. We must demand that those who preach accountability live it consistently. We must insist that rules bind the powerful as they bind ordinary citizens. And we must model the ethical society we want to build.
South Africa does not lack good people. What we need is the collective will to insist that principle applies to all. Let us find that courage. Let us call out double standards and build a nation where no one is above the law. That is the South Africa worth fighting for. #ProudlySA
Long term stability will happen once @SAPS, & @HomeAffairsSA deport illegal immigrants out of South Africa, & uphold the laws of SA. No one wants to invest where the rule of law is not applied. Let law and order take place instead of illegal immigration, investors will be happy.
The R600m security-related costs to counter anti-migrant marches in #Southafrica hides the greater costs of brand damage to SA not just from Africa but from international investors who demand stability in order to invest. Job creation wonโt happen with this happening.
A Malawian illegal foreigner says that other Africans tell each other South Africa's laws are lax, which is why most of them come here, they get to do whatever they want. He says he's been caught at the border many times, yet he's still a free man. ๐ณ๐ณ๐ณ
Just reshare๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐๐
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WATCH | Tensions escalated during an anti-illegal immigration march in Johannesburg after residents in nearby flats allegedly threw stones and bottles at marchers heading towards the Kwa Mai Mai meeting point. Police intervened to restore order.
This is a developing story.
As more than a thousand residents of Tzaneen we are saying that we are NOT going to leave the CBD until the Mayor Odas Ngobeni accepts our memorandum to take away the Business Permits that they have given to illegal immigrates. Thobela Ke Yona โ๐พ