We pay through our noses to live, while leaders play power games

While South Africans battle to stay afloat, politicians use our inability to engage with more than one complex topic at a time to distract us.


Well, it looks like that house and car you’re paying off just got a bit more expensive and will likely get even more expensive, yet again, very soon.

But not to worry. Our president will soon return from the UK to fight others within his party, to keep his place, while our official opposition keeps no-confidencing their own people.

Not the Joburg ones… Those ones seem okay, and they’re taking on the ones in their own Western Cape castle.

Also Read: City of Joburg mayor, Mpho Phalatse wants motion of no confidence rule reviewed

Oh, and the EFF is dancing on Hani’s grave while Twitter is ablaze with newly minted lawyers with no legal background being critical of the parole system.

All that is not going to make your house and car much cheaper.

When Mkhize criticised the prez for being out of touch, he may have had a point.

But that’s their fight, and you know what? It’s not going to make my house and car any cheaper.

The whole system appears to be out of touch. Frankly, I couldn’t give a damn whether president Mbeki himself was on the floor of my living room. I just want to see things getting done. So far, it seems that all the political energy of the country is being expended on the politricking of the country.

Other than getting lockdown undone, I can’t seem to put a finger on anything that’s really gotten done this year.

Yay! A couple of arrests and woohoo for uhmm, let me think of something… errr… Oh, yeah! The completion of the Zondo report.

That’s all very nice, but still the things which matter seem to be the things that are slipping us.

These are important things, no doubt. They are just not the exclusively important things.

A dude convicted of murder and being let out on parole deserves our attention, certainly. Does the attention it deserves deserve to blind us from everything else happening around us? No!

I’m not sure why the South African psyche believes it is important to only consider one thing at a time. It has resulted in being able to apply a second thing just to argue against the one thing at a time.

You know the drill – You start complaining about the tyre you burst in Winnie Mandela Road and say that things must be done about the potholes, only to be met with “but people are starving”, as if it’s a put down.

Also Read: Ramaphosa says Janusz Waluś release on parole is ‘very disappointing’ and unfortunate

Weirdly, after all that, the pothole still exists and those same people are starving. But the argument clearly had one winner. That’s what matters, isn’t it?

This is why it’s hardly a surprise that so little works here anymore. It’s not important that Eskom functions when we have more important things to deal with, like who runs the ANC. It’s not important how clean the water in the taps is when we’re dealing with who the Speaker of the Western Cape is.

How important is it that the army has no money when Hani’s killer is out on parole.

Also Read: Could Waluś sue for unlawful incarceration? Maybe, but he just wants to get on with life

We like to brag about our complex legal system and our progressive constitution, but in order to use it, we need to be able to deal with complexities. And let’s be honest. We really can’t.

It’s pretty frustrating that we find ourselves paying the costs of political infighting for little return.

The return is mostly in the hands of the people we’re paying to run the country so it would be marvellous if they could sway some attention to that.

Sure, that’s wishful thinking, but 20 years ago, so were South African class action suits and perhaps now is the time, that as a class of citizens, we use this complex legal system to force some people into actually doing something other than fighting among themselves.