Fears and thoughts in South Africa

  • Dave Scott
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Re: Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#854556
My depression continues

I heard on the radio of these horrendous crimes again being postponed to next year ......
Why do our Judges not slam the table and say no more shit appeals and this soft approach to people that don't deserve human rights 🤬

The reason for car radio 📻 ?

My morning started with the school run with no power due to load shedding and traffic a night mare .6 to 8 in school area .

We were then scheduled 8 to 10 at house.
I have been to joburg and now home but still no power, not load shedding but some other problems with station trip ?
We are scheduled for official power outages in another couple of hours ?
Chances are if power does get fixed they will still throw the switch 🤬🤬

Plus Cyril continues to borrow millions to pretend all is well and just to carry on without a care in the world .😭

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  • Dave Scott
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Re: Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#854867
Power now reaching Critical levels

We have 7 and a half hour power outages scheduled and it might even worse 😪😎

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  • Muhtiman
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Re: Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#854870
......and as bad as power cuts is the unregulated price of diesel.....a local Shell garage who I stopped supporting as they have been fuel skimming for years....some pumps calibrated to 750ml instead of a litre(reported them way back and they were fined).....then reported them 2 years ago as they were at it again and nothing happened..... yesterday I walked to the shops and popped in at their convenience store to get a voucher....some oke was bitching that they had charged him R27-45/l of 500ppm sulphur(supposed to be cheaper than 50ppm) and they had put 33l in his 25l jerry can....:ohmy:

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  • Mac
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#854872
For those without auxiliary power: some dumb basic stuff -

You need to know when you will be loadshedded. If you don’t have an app like EskomSePush then you bloody well need to download one. (I have a buddy who refuses to download one but complains when he is surprised when lights go out).

Ensure your mobile phone is charged before loadshedding. If you can’t hold a charge of at least two hours (a normal time football match) then it’s time for a new phone.

You should by now know the performance of your service provider during loadshedding in your area. In my area I know CellC cuts out the moment load shedding kicks in and, I know, (from my work laptop) that Vodacom continues regardless of load shedding. This week I have teleported to Vodacom.

If you haven’t done so then download the DSTv app onto your phone.

If load shedding becomes more frequent to critical levels then everybody will be down with the internet regardless if you have invertors or generators.

Good luck.


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  • Dave Scott
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#854874
Thanks Mac

In manufacturing for many years we were always taught to fix the main cause or source of the problem to ensure it did not happen again .

If we continue to ignore the "route" cause we will always find softer or alternative solutions.........

Good luck 👍
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  • Muhtiman
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago - 2 years 6 months ago
#854876
.....and to add to the loadshedding advice.....if you have more recently damaged electrical devices like microwave ovens , air fryers, electrical pressure cookers/crock pots one pots etc....when replacing them....rather opt for cheaper non-digital timer/timing devices and seek out lower wattage units....the power surges when the power is switched back on tends to more frequently blow out the circuits on these digital timers....going for lower wattage electrical devices is better for those that have some form of limited back up and able to extend the battery charge....most of these must have air fryers pull more wattage than heaters and most geysers....I have had great results with a non digital slow cooker that remains switched on during a power cut and then continues cooking when the power is restored....but have blown the electrical pressure cooker with digital timer and more recently the microwave oven....:S
.....so if you still have digital timer devices still working....rather switch them off and/or unplug them before the power is cut to avoid damage when power surges back on....also some geyser thermostats may also be prone to power surges and also should be turned off at the circuit breaker board....:unsure:
.....
Last edit: 2 years 6 months ago by Muhtiman. Reason: bored

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  • Lionel
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#855072
The Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) has unanimously confirmed that the medical parole granted to former president Jacob Zuma by then-prison boss Arthur Fraser was unlawful – and it ruled he should return to jail.
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  • Sylvester
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#855084
Feedback from Evening Peak 20/11/2022, 19:34
Total demand: 27 675 MW
Loadshedding: 3 420MW
Renewable Gen: 1 223MW (Wind 785MW, CSP 361MW, PV 77MW)
Available Generation Capacity: 27 036MW

They/We are in big big trouble.
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  • mikesack
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#855733
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SA politics in turmoil as panel says President Ramaphosa must face impeachment
Story by Marianne Merten • 30 Nov 2022
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has an impeachment case to answer over serious violations of the Constitution for exposing himself to a conflict of interest, doing outside paid work and contravening the Prevention of Corrupt Activities Act, according to the Section 89 independent panel report.

SA politics in turmoil as panel says President Ramaphosa must face impeachment
SA politics in turmoil as panel says President Ramaphosa must face impeachment
© Copyright (c) Daily Maverick , All Rights Reserved
The carefully phrased 72-word recommendation at the end of the 82-page report came 10 hours after the official, ceremonial handover of the report to Parliament.


Those findings will throw the ANC, already wracked by jockeying ahead of its Nasrec elective conference, into disarray — just at a time when Ramaphosa seemed secure as the frontrunner in the party’s presidential contest.

It now remains to be seen how the ANC parliamentary caucus, which previously stepped up to defend its president, will respond. The Section 89 independent assessment panel report must be adopted by the House to come into force — and lead to the next step, the establishment of an impeachment committee.

If the ANC decides to oppose this, it will blow up in an already tense political terrain and raise further questions about accountability, transparency and responsiveness in South Africa’s constitutional democracy.

The Section 89 report raises questions over explanations over the source of the US dollars stolen from Ramaphosa’s Phala Phala game farm, and how the theft was investigated — and finds: “There was a deliberate intention not to investigate the commission of the crimes committed at Phala Phala openly.

“The request to the Namibian Police to ‘handle the matter with discretion’ confirms this intention.

“The president abused his position as Head of State to have the matter investigated and seeking the assistance of the Namibian President to apprehend a suspect.

“There was more foreign currency concealed in the sofa than the amount reflected in the acknowledgement of receipt. This raises the source of the additional currency.”

At Wednesday morning’s ceremonial handover of the report, National Assembly Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula said this marked “one of the indicative milestones in South Africa’s maturing constitutional democracy”. Hours later, the extent of that comment became clear when the actual panel report was released publicly.

Ramaphosa ‘giving consideration to report’
The Presidency, in an almost immediate response, said in a statement that Ramaphosa was “giving consideration to the report and an announcement will be made in due course”.

The Thursday morning briefing by presidential spokesperson Vincent Magwenya was cancelled, another Presidency statement added.

The “enduring questions” remained the source of the stolen money, why the theft at the President’s home was not reported properly, or to any other police officer than the head of the presidential protection detail, and why the SAPS requested their Nambian counterparts to handle the matter “with discretion”.

The findings came as earlier speculation mooted the African Transformation Movement (ATM) motion’s narrow focus on Section 96 of the Constitution that bans Cabinet members from paid outside work, or from situations that risk conflicts of interests.

And that was effectively met by Ramaphosa explaining he had disclosed his business interests at Phala Phala, that the company is registered and tax compliant, and operations were left to farm managers, leaving him with no active participation. Neither does he earn an income from the farm.

Those presidential responses arose from his statement to the Section 89 independent assessment panel leaked earlier on Wednesday in what clearly was an effort to control the news day’s narrative.

While it’s definitely not the end of the political road for either Ramaphosa or the ANC, things have just become much, much more complicated.

For the past six months, Ramaphosa’s CR22 campaign for a second term as ANC president has unfolded amid the Phala Phala saga. It began in early June when the former spy boss, Arthur Fraser, opened a case with police that $4-million had been stolen from sofa cushions at the president’s Phala Phala farm.

Opposition parties are making political hay.

Phala Phala was Ramaphosa’s Nkandla, said DA leader John Steenhuisen as the EFF promised renewed “Pay back the money” protests in reference to the controversy over taxpayer-funded upgrades at ex-president Jacob Zuma’s rural homestead.

Throughout, Ramaphosa invoked “due process”, and when he did finally speak in Parliament in the late September Q&A slot, he said that the forex on the farm was not money laundering, but from the sale of animals.

Meanwhile, the ANC in Parliament moved to protect the President by divorcing Ramaphosa the President from Ramaphosa the businessman, arguing Phala Phala was a separate business entity entirely.

In June, the ATM submitted a motion in terms of Section 89 of the Constitution that allows the National Assembly to remove a president from office for a serious violation of the Constitution or the law, serious misconduct, or inability to perform the functions of office.

The motion was rejected, but the ATM was allowed to resubmit a complaint motion in what’s the first step of the two-stage process of impeaching a president that was adopted in November 2018.

The appointment of the independent panel to assess whether a case exists for Ramaphosa to be impeached took place after some wrangling over academic, author and commentator Richard Calland, who after dismissing claims of bias also withdrew to ensure the integrity of the process.

That, and the panel’s report and recommendation, were the next steps.

However, as Parliament owns this process, the National Assembly has to adopt the report. That is scheduled for 6 December and is set to be a raucous debate and vote.

DA Chief Whip Siviwe Gwarube has written to the Speaker to ask for voting to be done by roll call so that everyone’s name and vote is recorded, rather than the usual streamlined numerical indications of support or objection stated by the party chief whip.

Given the huge public interest and the “precedent-setting nature of the [panel’s] work”, it was imperative to cast votes manually in a roll call.

“Parliament has been criticised heavily on several occasions in the past for failing in its constitutional duties of holding members of the executive accountable for the exercise of their powers and the performance of their functions. We are elected to represent the interests of the public and to guard against the abuse of power and resources by the state and members of the Executive,” wrote Gwarube in a letter dated 30 November.

Whether that will happen on the day remains to be seen.

It’s the day the House rises for the end-of-year recess, and it’s almost a given that there will be a heated debate.

But, on Wednesday night, South Africa’s constitutional democracy and its founding values of transparency, accountability and responsiveness were the true winners. DM














I
Daily News
Daily News
Ramaphosa explains how $580 000 got to Phala Phala on Christmas 2019

Ramaphosa explains how $580 000 got to Phala Phala on Christmas 2019







The Star
The Star
ATM says they are fulfilling their parliamentary obligation as they push for impeachment
African Transformation Movement (ATM) president Vuyo Zungula says that it is the duty of Parliament to hold the executive accountable.



Daily News
Daily News
National Assembly to consider Phala Phala report and determine way forward
Ramaphosa is expected to appear before the National Council of Provinces on Thursday where he is expected to face a barrage of questions regarding the Phala Phala matter
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  • Dave Scott
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#855736
Thanks Mike

I am trying to keep away from politics and watch racing and football instead of the news.

Mrs S say it's not good for my blood pressure but she has no idea the stress I was under watching Argentina trying to score in the first half.

However this is major breaking news but will Cyril step aside is another story.
ANC continue to find itself in major turmoil but will probably continue on its merry ways to further destroy SA 😢

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  • Muhtiman
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Re: Re:Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#855739
......well now this is a bit surprising as many thought Ramasofa would be able to dodge here again....yet this is now going to cause major problems for all..... this just shows that there is finitely never been any GOOD in the ANC...... Cyril is shown up as just as BAD of the rest of that pilfering mob and it is now left up to the real UGLY to continue to totally destroy what is left of the country....:ohmy: .

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  • Haupie
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Re: Fears and thoughts in South Africa

2 years 6 months ago
#855779
i reckon he will be gone by the weekend

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