If the anti-illegal immigration movement wants to be taken seriously as a genuine political or civic movement, then its leadership must understand that public credibility is built through discipline, preparation and strategic conduct; especially in legal and institutional spaces.
If the movement wants longevity, then its leadership must evolve from activism driven by outrage into leadership driven by strategy, restraint and institutional competence.
Many frustrated South Africans are searching for alternatives outside traditional politics. They are looking for leadership that appears organised, competent and capable of governing, negotiating and defending its positions under pressure.
Movements rise when people believe:
“These people are disciplined.”
“These people are prepared.”
“These people can handle power responsibly.”
And movements collapse when leadership becomes reactive, theatrical or careless with public platforms.
When a leader appears unserious in court, unprepared, or reckless with public utterances, supporters may initially cheer the defiance — but institutions, undecided citizens, donors, professionals, media, and future allies begin to question whether the movement itself is capable of governing, negotiating, or protecting its people.
This is especially important in populist movements. Supporters often mirror the tone of the leader. If leadership normalises impulsiveness, confrontation without preparation, or disregard for legal processes, the movement itself begins to look unstable rather than visionary.
That is the transition many activist figures struggle to make: from influencer politics → to movement leadership. For Ngizwe, the real challenge now is understanding that visibility creates obligation.
Every public utterance now matters because opponents, media and the public are no longer listening to Ngizwe as just a personality. They are listening to him as a representative of a broader political sentiment.
See more: https://t.co/BzhlkDfBtK
@Nhlaka_mkhize@JacintaNgobese What do you mean this was a ploy? Who told Ngizwe to lie about Julius Malema?
You do know he wouldn't have had to apologize to anyone if he had just never said anything about Julius Malema right?
Coffee, conversations, and a shared love for our beloved Country🇿🇦
I left with more hope and determination than what i arrived with. That’s the power of talking with a patriotic South African 🇿🇦 Vusi Thembekwayo🙏
#MyCupIsRunningOver
Where did he spend the best part of his career??
We're like Americans in some ways, we know the whole world exists somewhere out there but we mostly just care about what happens in South Africa. No one cared about how good Dean Furman was in Europe until he came back home
In South Africa he’s been forgotten, the youngsters don’t even know who is he. In Copenhagen he’s hero worshipped. Hundreds of fans line up to get autograph. We can do better as a country.
Patriotism is not a debate, the way we go about our patriotism is the debate. At the core, we all want a safe and prosperous South Africa for our people. Question is who/what is stopping us from achieving that goal, is it the immigrant, or the cop extorting the immigrant?
Sometimes it's okay to admit that you're not well informed or experienced to have an opinion on certain things and just shut up hey.
One smoker can live up to 80 years of age, however, that doesn't mean smoking is good for your health
There's no tribalism in South Africa. If there was we all wouldn't be moving around freely working and studying in all 9 provinces. Stop allowing people who benefit from illegal immigrants to divide us. March and March is working for all South Africans, not certain groups!!!
@Noxy_Mahlalela It's a "no gender roles" household when dad also cooks and cleans the house while mom rests. When mom is expected to change her own tyre or move the fridge while dad rests it now becomes a "what kind of man sits around while his wife changes a tyre?" kind of household
@Noxy_Mahlalela That's how this whole "no gender roles" thing works. It's when men do chores that women are expected to do and not when women do chores that men are expected to do.
Every chore that my sister did, I did, but my sister has not done every chore that I did