barbells.and.arrows
AH veteran
Sgt_zim: I don't know if you're directing your comments at me, but we're not talking about other African nations. The only two that would be relatively comparable would be Zimbabwe and Namibia. It was an interesting article. Definitely slanted to put more blame on whites than on the corrupt government. Mandela at least had a plan. After leaving office, the people who were to further those goals sought to line their pockets. Mandela knew that stripping whites of land ownership would do nothing but cause the economic downfall of South Africa. And he was right. We only have to look at Zimbabwe to see how well that worked out. The video accompanying the article was interesting. I've often wondered how much of the seized land in Zimbabwe was actually distributed to "the people" versus Mugabe's cronies. I doubt much.
To be clear, I agree with CAustin. Hard work will pay dividends. However, you can't give up. Just working hard will not guarantee prosperity. You have to be smart enough to make wise decisions. This brings up the topic of "generational poverty". Somewhere along the line, individual choice has to be blamed as opposed to society. I find it frustrating that our current Democrat contenders continue to feed the slanted version of reality to buy votes. "Free college", "free health care", "reparations", "economic security to even those unwilling to work".
The ANC has had 25 years to make improvements, but they have failed to do so. They could have but it would have gotten in the way of them profiting. A friend described their tactics of staying in power. Every election, the ANC promises, jobs, clean water, infrastructure improvements, etc and preach that a vote for another party is a step closer to a return to apartheid. The target audience votes en mass for the ANC. Predictably, nothing improves. Malema and the EFF are simply preying on people's despair and promising them things that they will never get. Does this sound familiar?
Several years ago, I read an article concerning younger people believing that they would not live as well as their parents. It mystified me. A generation that (should) know the value of education and/or skill and had the resources needed to succeed. My adult daughter shared something with me that I thought was interesting. In school, she and her age group were constantly told that they could be anything that they wanted to be. She thought that this was misleading. Her conclusion was that you could be anything that you worked HARD ENOUGH to be.
The poorest South Africans surely must come to the realization that their state of affairs is a direct result of corrupt government leaders who should have plowed every possible resource into education and infrastructure improvements over the last 25 years. Why didn’t they!? Because they lined their own pockets while at the same time mismanaging the rest of the capital at their disposal.
Still struggling to understand why great inequality is worse than universal poverty.
With respect, @sgt_zim, I don't agree with you about the "real question."A healthy civilization is not, and should not be, measured by what the wealthy have, nor by what the poor lack. In every civilization that has ever existed in man's history, there were Haves and Have-nots. "How large is the middle class, and what do they have relative to the wealthy?" is the real question. When the middle class is small, or even non-existent, you may know that larceny and murder are the rule.