@tilangati@ThipenThwa Wow, extraordinary stuff!..quick question: To be that good in math.. is it something one is born with (like talent), or is it through practice & discipline?
So now you understand the feeling of being expected to suddenly come up with money for something you never planned or budgeted for. You can't even raise a once off fund to assist with the repatriation of your own citizens, yet South Africans are expected to somehow find the resources year after year to accommodate the costs associated with large numbers of illegal aliens. Then, when taxpayers question the strain on public services and finances, they're branded xenophobic. Financial realities suddenly become important when the bill lands on your doorstep, but when South Africans raise the same concerns, they're told to stop complaining and carry on paying.
The anomaly in South Africa is not just high taxes - it’s paying nearly 50% of your income to the state and still having to fund your own healthcare, education, transport, housing, and security. Citizens are paying twice: once through taxes, and again for the services those taxes should provide.
So guys we completed the PAIA(South Africa’s Promotion of Access to information Act) form 2 requesting access to records relating to the administration,allocation and expenditure of the 500 million Spaza Shop support funds .
@Stellarated you will account to the 500 million whether you like it or not Ausi shame .
We emailed @DSBD_SA@GovernmentZA
This is just peer pressure talking. You know very well no one is gonna bother you. Namibians don't even have a stereotype. We don't know if they steal jobs, cars, husbands, buildings. We don't know if they sell anything. A lot of South Africans have never even seen a Namibian.
Rejecting your own citizens for lacking the proper documentation, while calling others xenophobic for insisting that people should have the correct papers to enter and remain in a country legally, seems quite ironic to me.