listening to this just says one thing to me. change will jot come from those who are already at the top and have a lot to lose. it will come from the bottom. people with nothing to lose the unemployed masses.
its a bit deeper problem than that, mostly lack financial education so they will forever think about their pockets, on top of that they have to meet socio-economic stigmas
@@bakangmatabane711 true but we need to draw from our past. People sacrificed to secure political freedoms. They lost their lives and some went to jail for years. All this generation has to do is be vocal and strategic about our use of our newfound freedoms. So we have to sacrifice for economic parity.
Its gonna take more than government to break the Affrikaner Brother Bond. It will take more than transformation to economically liberate the masses of South Africa.
@wonder themba; it is more than the "Afrikaner Brother Bond". While we are looking at Afrikaans ppl as the enemy there is the silent enemy you associate with through language and who has stripped you off your identity so you continue fighting his battle with the so called Afrikaans. This is deeper than mere transformation of Corporate SA.
@@nellasquare2092 I take it you are reffering to Britain/Europe? Those people are not a problem , if you dount that go and read section two of your constitution and if that doesnt convince you, go research and find out what is ECOWAS. Finally, West African states are witdrawing their reserves from France's Reserved Bankand and we have the Africa Free Trade Agreement. That should also show you that, in as far as African liberation is concerned, the problem is domestic in the sense that political unwillingness and private sector investment is missing. Now lets bring that back to S.A. Your Presidents campaign was sponsored by the private sector which is white and over 78% of the economy is in white hands. Now tell me again, isn't the problem here resistance from the otherside?? Even the raiting agences said so. And your president has appointed a white man as the head of ESKOM (I have mixed feelings about this in light of the Springboks victory though💪👑🔥💯) FYI: I haven't associated with anyone through language. I use English because this is the international standard of communication, that's facts! Ohw and I'm still very much intact with my identity surprisingly. I am an Afro-centric male who follows African spirituality as opposed to Western religion. The masses are totally oblivious to the new economic and cultural war waged on us after the so-called "independence" I agree with you there.
The problem is the way they go about implementing/expressing it. There are many ways to fight this without being physically aggressive as they are. I'm sure no one disagrees with their agent but it's the way they go about it. And plus they are led by Julius who is corrupt so there's also that.
Nelso Mandela when he was śtîl Rolihlahla said "there's no point of responding with peace to a regime that is violent ". They are not physica, aggressive yes but not physical. The thing is, if they speak in a polite manner they will not be taken seriously plus the point they are trying to drive is urgent so there must be a sense of urgency and a sense of militancy to drive the point across. Here's the issue right, Malema has never been found by any court to be corrupt nor are there any charges against him. Until those who are crying foul play prove it then we can say something for now, you are unjustified to say that.
@@bonginkosiemanuel3851 Sir Malema was found guilty of fraud, money-laundering and racketeering. And in my eyes, corruption is a crime a cannot forget. Once corrupt always corrupt. And don't forget that Malema was fired from the ANC maybe that is the only reason we now have EFF he didn't leave voluntarily. Now, this is not to say I disagree with what EFF stands for I'm sure many South Africans do but the manner in which they do things is not supported by the general population. People would rather vote for that useless ANC, that should say something.