Saturday, July 11, 2026

Not Evil Enough: Why the ANC’s Fatal Flaw is Leniency, Not Tyranny



South Africans are famously vocal about their grievances. On any given day, social media, news broadcasts, and dinner table conversations are dominated by relentless complaints about the African National Congress (ANC). From corruption scandals and municipal collapse to infrastructure decay, the ruling party is routinely pilloried as a unique disaster.

Yet, step across any of South Africa's northern borders, and the geopolitical perspective shifts dramatically. When compared to the brutal, monolithic regimes that dominate much of the African continent, the ANC is not the existential monster its citizens claim it to be. In fact, compared to the likes of ZANU-PF in Zimbabwe, the ANC looks less like an African liberation kleptocracy and more like a model of Westminster accountability or Nordic social democracy.
The fundamental problem with the ANC is not that it is evil; the problem is that it is simply not ruthless enough. By maintaining an almost idealistic devotion to human rights, pan-Africanism, and constitutional tolerance, the party has allowed the country to stretch itself to the breaking point. 

1. The Institutional Comparison: ZANU-PF vs. The ANC
To understand the immense civil liberties South Africans enjoy, one only needs to compare the ANC to its neighbor, Zimbabwe's ZANU-PF.
FeatureThe African National Congress (ANC)Zimbabwe's ZANU-PF
Power DynamicsPresidents serve constitutional terms and willingly step down (Mandela, Mbeki, Zuma, Ramaphosa).Leaders rule for decades via military backing, coups, or heavily rigged elections.
Freedom of SpeechAbsolute. Citizens, comedians, and journalists openly mock the President with zero fear of state reprisal.Severe repression. Dissidents, activists, and journalists face sudden abduction, torture, or treason charges.
Military VisibilityThe military is completely confined to the barracks; the average citizen has no idea who the generals are.The military is the de facto backbone of the state, directly influencing civilian politics and cabinet positions.
First LadiesEntirely low-profile, focused on private life or quiet charitable foundations.Highly politicized, often positioning themselves to seize state power or controlling vast economic cartels.
The ANC’s adherence to the separation of powers means South Africa remains a vibrant constitutional democracy. Power changes hands peacefully within the party, the courts routinely rule against the state, and the military answers entirely to civilian leadership. 

2. A Fortress of Tolerance: Social Grants and Cultural Freedom
While critics focus entirely on economic mismanagement, they overlook the massive, unprecedented social safety net the ANC constructed to maintain stability. 
  • The Social Welfare Machine: The ANC administers one of the largest social grant systems in the developing world, providing direct financial lifelines to over 18 million vulnerable citizens. 
  • Respect for Tradition and Crowns: The ANC formally recognizes, protects, and directly finances traditional indigenous kingships—including the Zulu, Xhosa, and Venda monarchies—integrating ancient African authority into a modern constitutional framework. 
  • Masterful National Holidays: Instead of imposing a rigid, monolithic cultural identity, the state designed inclusive national holidays like Heritage Day and the Day of Reconciliation, actively encouraging a diverse population to celebrate their unique roots. 
The Ultimate Paradox: The Existence of Orania
Nowhere is the ANC's structural tolerance more evident than in its handling of Orania. In any other post-colonial African state, a self-declared, culturally exclusive, white Afrikaner enclave would have been flattened by government bulldozers within a week. Yet, the ANC has respected the constitutional avenues of self-determination, allowing Orania to peacefully exist, govern itself, manage its own economy, and rapidly expand without military interference. [1, 2, 3]

3. The Unsung Beneficiaries: Whites, Landowners, and Millions of Migrants
If honesty prevails in historical analysis, several groups in South Africa owe the ANC an unspoken debt of gratitude.
  • White Citizens and Corporate Elites: For three decades, white South Africans, commercial farmers, and industrialists have retained the overwhelming majority of their private properties, generational wealth, farms, and manufacturing factories. Despite radical rhetoric from populist opposition parties, the ANC has consistently defended property rights and resisted catastrophic, uncompensated Zimbabwe-style land seizures. 
  • The Continental Migrant Population: South Africa serves as a sanctuary for millions of undocumented and documented immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers fleeing economic collapse and political tyranny across Africa and Asia. The ANC’s pan-African ideology has kept borders porous and allowed foreign nationals to freely build businesses, access healthcare, and send billions in remittances back to their homelands. 

4. The Pitfalls of Modern Leniency: Is the ANC Too Soft?
Ironically, the core failures of modern South Africa do not stem from a tyrannical government, but from an overly soft, deeply permissive state apparatus.
By completely abolishing the death penalty and transforming correctional facilities into low-intensity rehabilitation centers, the state has inadvertently allowed violent criminals to operate with impunity. Concurrently, the lack of ironclad border enforcement has strained the country's public healthcare, infrastructure, and labor markets to the brink of collapse, fueling domestic xenophobia and social friction. 
The global political landscape is shifting, and the ANC faces severe electoral pressure from both the left and the right. To guarantee long-term national survival and protect the very democratic institutions it built, the ANC may soon have to abandon its gentle, idealistic post-1994 posture. 
To maintain power and restore domestic trust, the party will likely have to adopt a necessary streak of pragmatism: executing aggressive deportation strategies for illegal immigration, hardening penal laws against violent syndicates, and deploying decisive security measures to reclaim control of the streets. 

Conclusion: A Lesson in Perspective
It is easy to hate the government when your electricity blinks out or your municipal water fails. Those failures are real, frustrating, and worthy of robust democratic protest.
But true geopolitical maturity requires perspective. The ANC is undeniably corrupt, but in the history of global politics, virtually every government carries that stain. What separates the ANC is that its corruption is checked by a free press, balanced by an independent judiciary, and softened by a genuine commitment to human rights. South Africans enjoy a level of liberty, wealth retention, and expression that billions of people across the globe can only dream of. The ANC may not be perfect, but compared to the alternatives on the continent, it remains a remarkably stable custodian of a very complex nation.

Fighting Ghosts in the Matopos : Why ZANU-PF Has Nothing to Fear from King Mzilikazi



In the landscape of Zimbabwean politics, history is frequently weaponised, and cultural identity remains a volatile fault line. For decades, the ruling ZANU-PF government has maintained a heavily centralised narrative of national heritage, often prioritising political triumphs over regional cultural recognition.

However, as the nation navigates a complex era of economic stagnation and unresolved historical trauma, a compelling case can be made for a radical policy shift: ZANU-PF should formally declare King Mzilikazi Day a public holiday. Whether implemented as a nationwide celebration or a regional public holiday in Matabeleland, honoring the founder of the Ndebele Kingdom is not just a culturally just move—it is an exceptionally astute piece of realpolitik.
Far from threatening the state, embracing King Mzilikazi offers a blueprint for national unity, political capital, and economic opportunity. The King is long dead and will not resurrect; it is time for the living to leverage his legacy for a better future.

1. A Strategic Masterclass in Gaining Support and Votes
In politics, gestures of recognition are the ultimate form of low-cost, high-reward currency. ZANU-PF has traditionally struggled to capture a dominant, organic voter base in Bulawayo and the wider Matabeleland provinces. By formally gazetting Mzilikazi Day, the ruling party could achieve an instant political breakthrough.
Instead of being viewed through a lens of suspicion, ZANU-PF could position itself as a progressive patron of Ndebele heritage. This singular legislative act would disarm opposition narratives that accuse the central government of marginalising Western Zimbabwe. It is a pragmatic, peaceful mechanism to win hearts, minds, and critical votes in regions historically alienated from the capital.

2. Transmuting Monoliths into Unity: The Heritage Day Model
Zimbabwe can look directly across the Limpopo River for a highly successful precedent. In South Africa, September 24th was originally celebrated in KwaZulu-Natal as Shaka Day, honoring the legendary Zulu King. Instead of banning the holiday out of fear of Zulu nationalism, the post-apartheid South African government brilliantly transformed it into Heritage Day
[Shaka Day / Mzilikazi Day] ──(State Integration)──> [National Heritage Day] ──> Civilisational Unity
By expanding the holiday's scope, South Africa allowed every ethnic group to celebrate their unique roots under a single, unified national banner. Transforming Mzilikazi Day into an official Zimbabwean Heritage Day would achieve the same result. It shifts the national conversation from competitive tribalism to mutual cultural respect. [1]

3. Soothing the Bleeding Wounds of Gukurahundi
The unresolved trauma of the Gukurahundi massacres of the 1980s remains an open wound in the Zimbabwean psyche. While current state initiatives like the Gukurahundi Community Engagement Programme focus on village-level hearings, true transitional justice requires highly visible symbolic reparations.
Allowing the open, state-sanctioned celebration of King Mzilikazi would serve as a powerful psychological balm. It sends an unmistakable signal to the people of Matabeleland that their history is valued, their identity is protected, and their foundational monarch is respected by the state. This cultural validation would do more to soothe generational grievances than decades of managed political rhetoric.

4. Universal Cultural Celebration: Mutapa, Rozvi, and Beyond
A National Heritage Day framework ensures that no one is left behind. It would not merely be an Ndebele holiday; it would provide a dedicated annual space for all Zimbabweans to honor their distinct histories:
  • The Shona Majority could use the day to celebrate the sophisticated legacy of the Mutapa and Rozvi Empires, mapping out cultural festivals from Great Zimbabwe to Khami Ruins.
  • The White and Minority Communities could openly celebrate their unique contributions to the country’s agricultural, industrial, and architectural landscapes.
  • Other Minority Groups, including the Venda, Tonga, Shangani, and Kalanga, would gain an equitable platform to showcase their traditions, ensuring a rich, multi-faceted national identity.

5. The Heritage Cup and Concert: A Lucrative Revenue Engine
Beyond politics and psychology, a heritage holiday is an open invitation for economic innovation. Cultural tourism and sports entertainment are highly profitable, self-sustaining industries.
[Public Holiday] ──> [High-Stakes Heritage Cup Match] + [Music Festival] ──> Massive Economic Injection
  • The Heritage Cup: The government could sponsor an annual high-stakes football tournament featuring the country’s two oldest and most supported clubs, Highlanders FC (representing Bulawayo and Ndebele heritage) and Dynamos FC (representing Harare). A showpiece match on this day would pack stadiums, generate massive broadcasting revenue, and stimulate local hospitality industries.
  • The Heritage Concert: Following the sports matches, state-backed cultural concerts featuring top Shona, Ndebele, and international artists would drive ticket sales, corporate sponsorships, and tourism, turning a day of remembrance into a vibrant, money-making festival.

Conclusion: Nothing to Fear from the Past
The primary reason governments ban historical celebrations is fear—fear that an ancient symbol will ignite a modern secessionist fire. But ZANU-PF has nothing to fear from King Mzilikazi. The King rests peacefully in the Matobo Hills; his spears are long silent, and he poses no threat to the modern state apparatus.
By keeping Mzilikazi Day unofficial, the state inadvertently keeps it potent, transforming it into a symbol of quiet defiance. By legalising it, celebrating it, and funding it, ZANU-PF can defuse the tension, monetize the culture, and foster a genuine, high-trust Zimbabwean identity. True power lies not in suppressing the history of your people, but in having the confidence to celebrate it.

The Nostalgia Trap: Why "Remember When" Is the Lowest Form of Politics



Embedded deep within the Shona language of Zimbabwe is a vast repository of philosophical insights known as tsumo (proverbs). These short, punchy statements serve as cultural guardrails, offering timeless advice on human behavior, psychology, and survival. Among the most profound of these proverbs is a direct warning against the seductive trap of looking backward: 

"Matakadya kare hahanyaradze mwana."
Translated literally, it means: "The fine meals you ate in the past will not stop a child from crying today." 
The metaphorical meaning is simple yet devastatingly sharp: Past achievements cannot solve present problems. Your historical glory, your previous wealth, or the great feasts of yesterday mean absolutely nothing to the harsh, unfolding realities of the current moment. A starving child cannot digest memories. Yet, despite this ancient wisdom, modern global society is currently suffering from a collective, pathological addiction to historical nostalgia—a disease that turns thriving nations into stagnant museums while the future is stolen by those who look ahead.

1. The Global Symphony of Nostalgia: Whining About Yesterday
Across the globe, collapsing empires and anxious populations comfort themselves with the empty echoes of their ancestors, treating the past as a psychological security blanket rather than a closed chapter.
  • The Ottoman Obsession: Modern Turkey continuously looks backward, unable to detach its national identity from the heights of the Ottoman Empire. Rather than focusing entirely on 21st-century economic realities, its political rhetoric often loops back to the triumphs of Suleiman the Magnificent, using historical grandeur to mask modern fiscal volatility.
  • The American 1950s Delusion: A massive segment of the United States remains trapped in a romanticized, black-and-white dream of the 1950s. They pine for an era of undisputed manufacturing dominance and simple social structures, failing to realize that the global macroeconomic conditions of the post-WWII world cannot be copy-pasted into a hyper-connected, automated digital age.
  • The British Empire Hangover: Decades after the formal dismantling of its global holdings, Britain remains culturally paralyzed by its imperial past. From political debates to media consumption, the UK frequently relies on the prestige of its historical empire to justify its contemporary global standing, spending vital energy managing a legacy rather than building an exit strategy from its current decline.
  • India's Ancient Golden Age Narrative: Contemporary Indian discourse is frequently dominated by a fierce desire to reclaim a thousands-of-years-old "glorious Vedic past." While celebrating heritage is natural, an over-fixation on ancient triumphs can distract from solving the immense, immediate infrastructural and social challenges of the present day.
  • Greek obsession with the Megali Idea—the century-old dream of retaking Constantinople (Istanbul) and reclaiming the Hagia Sophia cathedral. Rather than focusing their national energy on building a modern, world-class 21st-century metropolis or constructing an architectural wonder of their own in Athens, Greek irredentists remain spiritually shackled to ancient Byzantine ruins. They prefer to nurse multi-generational grievances over lost mosaics and minarets instead of engineering the future. This romanticized fixation perfectly embodies the trap of matakadya kare; it chooses to mourn a stolen heritage rather than invest in the bold creation of a new civilization. 

2. The Fundamentalist Trap: Recreating Ancient Centuries
As the renowned historian and philosopher Yuval Noah Harari notes, when humanity faces overwhelming technological change and existential anxiety, the instinctive reflex is a desperate desire to run backward. Instead of engineering new solutions, societies try to resurrect dead eras, believing that the blueprints of antiquity can solve the complexities of the future.
  • The Sixth-Century Blueprint: In Afghanistan, the Taliban’s primary ideological objective is not to build a modern state, but to forcibly recreate the social, legal, and cultural landscape of the 6th century AD.
  • The Theocratic Retrofit: Similarly, the ruling regime in Iran has spent decades trying to freeze its society inside a fundamentalist theological framework, burning through its nation’s immense intellectual and youthful potential to sustain a rigid, backward-looking system.
  • The Pagan Renaissance: Even in the secular West, a bizarre subculture has emerged among disaffected youth who want to reject modernity by returning to a pre-Christian, pagan past—talking seriously about worshipping Zeus, Odin, or Thor.
All of these movements are living proofs of matakadya kare. They are trying to feed the complex, starving digital world of today with the long-spoiled ingredients of yesterday.

3. The Winners of Tomorrow: Obsessed with the Future
While much of the world is busy digging up graves and fighting over statues, the absolute winners of the modern geopolitical arena are those who treat the past with polite indifference and focus entirely on the horizon. They understand that the future cannot be stopped, so it must be built.
Future-Focused EntityPrimary Strategic HorizonModern Reality
Elon Musk / SpaceXInterplanetary colonization; advanced artificial intelligence.Disregarded legacy aerospace to build the world's most dominant satellite and rocket networks.
ChinaGlobal infrastructure dominance; green tech manufacturing monopoly.Bypassed traditional industrial steps to aggressively corner the future of automated energy and logistics.
The UAEPost-oil AI economies; Mars exploration programs.Transformed from a desert landscape into a hyper-modern global tech hub by refusing to rely purely on oil history.
SingaporeHyper-efficient statecraft; biomechanical engineering.A tiny island nation with zero natural resources that became a global powerhouse through forward-looking fiscal discipline.
These entities do not spend their time crying over lost empires or singing songs about 1950s factories. They are building autonomous grids, launching reusable rockets, and coding the algorithms that will run the next century. They know that the future belongs to those who show up for it, not those who try to vote it away.

Conclusion: Stop Chewing the Echoes
The Shona elders who coined matakadya kare hahanyaradze mwana understood a brutal law of nature: time moves in only one direction. Nostalgia is a political sedative; it feels warm and comfortable, but it leaves you entirely unprepared for the incoming storm.
Whether you are a nation mourning a lost empire, a community pining for a traditional century, or an individual romanticizing your personal "glory days," the reality remains ironclad. The meals you ate yesterday will not stop the hunger of today. The countries, leaders, and cultures that survive the coming upheavals will be the ones who have the courage to stop looking at the rear-view mirror, turn their heads around, and drive boldly into the future.

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Not Evil Enough: Why the ANC’s Fatal Flaw is Leniency, Not Tyranny

South Africans are famously vocal about their grievances. On any given day, social media, news broadcasts, and dinner table conversations ar...