@PatrioticNews24 Not really. It should but sometimes it doesn't. Systems are often rigid and contested in courts because the want one thing but get something else.
Dictatorships and many failed or declined states are a result of unjust manipulation of the leadership system.
@M_Jay94 The issue with Zim goes beyond economics and number.
It's social rooted in TRUST, PERCEPTION and SENTIMENT.
Social and moral capital cannot easily be measured, they are just felt and often defy numbers.
@DGaybba@RyanCoetzee Context and Practitioner matter in the case of SA.
If it was purely about the law, then it's simple, the law must be done. Anything "illegal" is damnable.
But the SA situation is layered with complexity from history and the global order for humanity.
So it can't be a yes or no
@DGaybba@RyanCoetzee There are Xenophobes and there are Afrophobes. Either way, it's riddled with disdain.
Depending on the practitioners, it has an element of self disgust.
@kiveit@SizweLo Between who & who, for what?
Now imagine the $ sent to the Middle East for energy imports being domesticated.
Imagine the revenues going overseas being kept in the region coz SA finance and capital is allowed to flow without restrictions or competition from overseas
Meet Zimbabwean engineer July Ndlovu, the CEO of Thungela Resources.
Reportedly the third highest-paid CEO in South Africa, he earned an astonishing R129 million in 2022 โ thatโs roughly R354,000 every single day.
His journey began at the University of Zimbabwe, where he obtained a BSc (Honours) in Engineering.
African talent can lead some of the continentโs biggest companiesโฆ ๐๐ฝ
@Moros_kuanos@stats_wire Well, would you prefer Chinese corps or SA corporates doing that... Use African resources to make billionaires overseas or keep the billions circulating in the region?
@Moros_kuanos@stats_wire They can still do that even now. The bigger thing would be all the capital from SA moving into the region without overseas competition for mining, farming and infrastructure.