*
Die geskiedenis in elke land op aarde, sluip die lewens-aar van elke volk en stam binne. Dit het ‘n manier om altyd te herhaal – wat was, is en sal weer wees. Al probeer die konkelaars, korruptes, misleiers en misdadigers hoe hard, volke en stamme sal bly voortbestaan. Yster en klein meng nie. Veelvolkigheid het nog nooit gewerk nie, dis geen demokrasie nie. Die omstandighede in Suid-Afrika is ernstig, dog geen rooikappie verhaal nie – wie ken nie die kinderverhaal van Wolf en Rooikappie nie? Rooikappie moes nooit na ou Wolf geluister het nie.

*
Volke, wat eerlik en opreg as volke identifiseer, sien deur veelvolkigheid en al hul leuens. Geduld is die antwoord. VOLKE het die reg tot voortbestaan om hulself in hul eie gebiede te regeer.
Die ware burgers, het ‘n manier om ‘n paar treë agteruit te staan en te wag vir geleenthede sodat die manipuleerders hulself in die voet skiet.
Manipuleerders en regeringsleiers, die SA Parlement en alle vlakke van regering het gefaal en belastingbetalers se geld wanbestuur. Dit is niks anders as verraad nie.
Moet net nie te lank wag en by ‘n toe deur staan as daar wel oop deure is wat alles ontbloot nie. Burgers is nie die spul se slawe nie.
Die wat tans in beheer van sake is, beheer die ekonomie en minerale van belangrikheid, oorlewing van hulself, juis om diegene wat hardwerkend was om ‘n land te bou, te vernietig. In die proses word volke vernietig en nooit die kans gegun om hulself op te werk soos wat hulle aanvanklik beplan nie.
Die massas word vals gebruik om die ‘demokratiese stembriewe’ te verbloem, want dit is geen demokrasie nie.
Protesaksies word aangewend vir plunder en brandstigtings, aanvalle en moorde, moontlike derdeparty versekerings.
‘n X word agter die skynheilige politici gemaak, wat nooit hul beloftes nakom nie. Verkiesings is volgens opinies slegs ‘n foefie, juis om die kloue van die duiwel te probeer beskerm.
Die eindproses: Die duiwel van ‘n een wêreldorde regering.
*
Sien vir wolfie raak, arme Rooikappie en Ouma.
quote
The Politics of Self-Destruction There comes a time in a nation’s life when even the educated must admit defeat — not because they have failed, but because the system rewards failure.
That dejected look on General Mkhwanazi’s face captured that exact moment — when competence meets political deployment, and logic meets the stupidity of power. Here is a man with a BTech in Policing, an MBA, an LLB, a National Diploma in Police Administration, and is an admitted attorney of the High Court — forced to answer questions from a Parliament that confuses noise for intellect.
What we saw in that room was not governance. It was a performance — a theater of mediocrity sponsored by the taxpayer. This is the crisis of South Africa — not lack of education, not lack of talent — but the deliberate exclusion of capable minds from positions of influence.
Political deployment has become the new apartheid — it separates the loyal from the qualified. It replaces thinkers with followers and silences those who still believe in merit. In such a country, education no longer inspires. It humiliates. Because the child in the township sees the truth: that the man who read all the books sits jobless, while the one who shouts the loudest slogan drives a government car.
When young people see that power is gained through party loyalty, not through knowledge, they lose faith in school. They drop out, not because they are lazy, but because the system has made ignorance profitable. How do you convince a young girl in Limpopo to finish matric when she sees her councillor can’t spell “governance” yet controls millions in municipal funds? How do you tell a boy in Mahikeng to study electrical engineering when the tender for electricity is awarded to a DJ? That is the economic collapse we refuse to measure — the destruction of faith in education. It’s not just corruption of money — it’s corruption of purpose.
The economy doesn’t collapse because of lack of minerals or investors. It collapses because of mental poverty — the kind that makes a leader think a slogan can build a road, or that a struggle song can replace sound fiscal management.
South Africa’s tragedy is not that we are poor. It’s that we are mismanaged. Illegals are millions in South Africa, Europe and other countries.
Is Africa empty then?
We export gold and import poverty. We have diamonds under our feet and debt over our heads. We send our best engineers abroad, while we appoint cousins to build bridges that collapse before the ribbon is cut.
Political deployment has turned public service into personal service. Institutions are no longer centers of excellence — they are shelters for the connected. That is why our schools fail, our hospitals die, and our police are demoralized. Because every appointment is political, not professional. And every professional who dares to challenge the system is pushed out — humiliated, or silenced.
General Mkhwanazi’s look of defeat was not personal. It was national. He carried on his face the disappointment of every competent South African trapped in an incompetent system.
Those in power, do not care.
And until we replace party loyalty with national loyalty, until we restore meritocracy over mediocrity, we will keep watching our brightest minds fade away in despair. The revolution South Africa needs today is not just political — it is intellectual. It is time to decolonize our thinking, not just our slogans. It is time to value results over rhetoric, books over boots, and skill over slogans. Because when mediocrity governs excellence, poverty becomes permanent. So, let the message be clear: We will no longer clap for stupidity. We will no longer elect the loudest voice — we will elect the most capable mind. We will no longer let our children believe that education is useless. Because the future of South Africa depends on the restoration of merit, discipline, and dignity.
By Seako Masibi
(Inspired by Wiseman Mbali
*
Contact Admin:
Admin kan gekontak word by
volksvryheid9@gmail.com
*
[…] Beplande ondergang – A failed country […]
LikeLike