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Joined February 2009
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Bridget__buz retweeted
Here’s another reason why South Africa is going nowhere: Sentech is threatening to cut off the SABC over a billion rand debt, potentially cutting off public broadcasting services to millions of South Africans. This situation is another textbook example of the state’s stubborn adherence to an absurd economic ideology. It’s almost comical if it weren’t so destructive. The ridiculousness of this situation lies in how the state has created various “state-owned entities” (SOEs) and arms-length corporations, such as SABC, SENTECH, and Eskom, and then forces them to operate as if they are independent, profit-seeking corporations in a market. This is a fundamental fiction. The SABC is not a private media company. It is a public broadcaster with a constitutional mandate to inform the nation. Similarly, SENTECH is not a private signal distributor. It is a state-owned signal distributor. The fact that one SOE is threatening to cut off the signal to another SOE over a debt is a theatrical performance of a market transaction that is, in reality, an internal accounting problem. The entire drama is a consequence of the state’s refusal to acknowledge that it is one entity ultimately responsible for funding its own public entities, using money it creates. Basically, the public broadcaster, which is the main vehicle for information for millions, is held hostage to accounting fictions. This is even worse than the Gauteng government and SANRAL charade I wrote about here x.com/SizweLo/status/1939573… Like I said then, the real issue isn’t money, it’s ideology. Just like with Gauteng paying SANRAL’s e-toll debt, the “discipline” here is performative. It’s about enforcing cost recovery and “market realism” inside the state itself, even when it undermines essential services. The most ludicrous part of this is that the “debt” is denominated in rands, while the sole shareholder of both the SABC and SENTECH is the South African public, represented by the government, and the creator of the rand is the South African Reserve Bank, which is also a public institution. For SENTECH to cut the SABC’s signal over this “debt” would be like your right hand refusing to write because your left hand hasn’t paid for the paper. It’s a farce that only makes sense within the arbitrary rules the brain (National Treasury) has imposed on the body. While the state engages in this internal accounting drama, the consequences are devastatingly real for the public, as millions of South Africans, especially the poor and elderly who rely on the SABC for news, weather, and emergency alerts, would be plunged into an information blackout. But even more appallingly, the state would be actively facilitating the collapse of an institution meant to be a pillar of democracy, all to uphold the fiction of corporate separateness. And here’s the thing: the rules that force SABC and SENTECH to roleplay as businesses are the same rules that force the state to borrow its own currency from bond markets instead of issuing it directly. The result is that instead of simply funding public broadcasting as a public good, the government perpetually sets up its own institutions to fail, then borrows, with interest, from private investors to “rescue” them. The beneficiaries are bondholders, who earn risk-free profits from the state’s refusal to use its monetary sovereignty. The entire focus of this circus is on the illusion of fiscal discipline (“SENTECH must balance its books!”) rather than the reality of public service. It is a pretence of discipline in the service of profit extraction and control, not development. Just like the Gauteng–SANRAL charade, the SABC–SENTECH crisis reveals the real logic of South Africa’s economic policy: to preserve the flow of interest payments to financial institutions at all costs, even if it means undermining democracy itself. The ideology of “discipline” is not about efficiency; it’s all about ensuring that banks and asset managers always get paid first, while the public is told there is “no money.” This is not a market governance failure but a funding failure. The state has failed to adequately fund its own public institutions to fulfil their mandates. What should happen is that Parliament, through the National Treasury, must provide the SABC with a direct appropriation (a grant) to settle its operational debts, including what it “owes” SENTECH. This is the same as funding the police or the health department. By doing this, money will have been moved from one state account to another via the banking system. The state’s net financial asset position would be unchanged, and the crisis would be averted without enriching a single private bondholder. Instead, what will likely happen is a last-minute “bailout” framed as a necessary evil, accompanied by stern warnings about the SABC’s “financial sustainability,” further entrenching the narrative of scarcity and the need for austerity, exactly the ideology that caused the problem in the first place. This saga is just the state, in a room, arguing with itself over pieces of paper it can create at will, while threatening to shoot its own foot to prove a point. It is, as I said, weapons-grade stupidity. In the end, this is not technical mismanagement. It’s a political choice to prioritise bondholders over citizens, accounting fictions over democratic obligations, and austerity over development. Until South Africa breaks away from this ideology, it will remain trapped in a cycle of self-sabotage and funding scarcity in a land of monetary sovereignty.

Here’s another wild example of the weapons-grade stupidity of the South African government. The Gauteng provincial government will today make a second payment of R3.37 billion towards the now defunct e-toll’s debt. Just to be clear, the Gauteng Department is paying this debt to SANRAL, a state-owned entity. SANRAL, in turn, pays banks, asset managers, and institutional investors. So, while the debt is “intragovernmental” (Gauteng to SANRAL), the real beneficiaries are financial institutions extracting interest payments from the public. Even as we set aside the fact that they’re paying for a failed project, this isn’t the worst part. The craziest thing is that the debt is denominated in rands. This is the heart of the issue: South Africa is a currency-issuing state. It has full control over the creation of the rand through its central bank. Yet instead of using this power to finance public investment directly, the state borrows, with interest, as if it were a household or a business. Why? The reasons are self-imposed. The Public Finance Management Act and National Treasury rules prohibit direct financing from the SARB. Instead, the government must “borrow” rands that it can create. If you were to ask the suits at the National Treasury and SARB why this is, I can guarantee they have no idea, only that this is how it’s always been done. They will say the guidelines say so. What they won’t and can’t articulate is why these rules say so. For over four decades now, the South African government has internalised austerity economics. Debt is treated as dangerous despite overwhelming evidence that a sovereign state can never “run out” of its own currency. So, by borrowing from bond markets instead of using SARB-issued money, the government signals obedience to investor expectations. This prioritises the maintenance of South Africa’s credit rating over the material needs of its citizens. The failed e-toll system is a consequence of this market-first mentality. South African policymakers boast about fiscal discipline as if it were a moral good in itself, balancing budgets, limiting deficits, and avoiding inflation. But not all discipline is virtuous. Imagine a man disciplined enough to pay his loan shark every week for a mountain of gambling debt, even if it means ignoring his children’s needs or selling his last possessions. The loan shark respects him. The man has a high credit rating in the underworld. But his life is falling apart. He’s enslaved by a system designed to extract and control. This is what South Africa has become. The public is told the country must borrow rands, the very currency the central bank issues, from private investors. The public is further told that the people must “live within their means” even when millions go hungry and infrastructure collapses. The ideology is that trust from ratings agencies matters more than the lives of citizens. But just like the man in debt to a loan shark, this “discipline” only ensures the country’s permanent underdevelopment. South Africa has the means to construct roads without burdening future generations with debt. The country could have issued SARB-backed infrastructure bonds to itself, a practice commonly employed by nations like Japan and the US to upgrade the highways. Alternatively, it could have funded SANRAL directly through Parliament-approved Treasury appropriations, recognising that all government spending is ultimately settled by central bank keystrokes. Instead, it chose debt. And now Gauteng is paying billions to clean up a mess created not by public-private corruption alone but by a systemic refusal to exercise the full power of the public purse. Now, this isn’t advocating for unlimited money creation. I am simply pointing out the absurdity of a specific situation: South Africa borrowing its own currency, with interest, to pay for infrastructure that could have been funded directly by the central bank without those interest payments going to financial institutions. Why enrich private financial institutions with interest payments for creating money that the central bank could create directly? The highways would have been built either way, and the same amount of spending would have entered the economy, but one method involves ongoing wealth transfers to bondholders while the other doesn’t. That’s why. In summation, foregoing monetary sovereignty is a choice, and the e-toll collapse was never just about bad tolling policy. It revealed the deep flaws of South Africa’s fiscal ideology, which sacrifices monetary sovereignty at the altar of market legitimacy. South Africa does not lack money. It lacks the vision and courage to assert democratic control over finance and fund public investment without enriching banksters along the way.
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20 Sep 2025
RT @mehdirhasan: “You can’t bomb the truth away” My full speech at Wembley Arena tonight, in London, to 12,000 people at the Together for…
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Bridget__buz retweeted
The interviewer was clumsy and amateurish, and patently professionally inadequate. But far more important was the cogency of Dr Ramphele’s argument; it was truly good to hear her moral clarity and powerful voice again @MamphelaR
Since you won’t name her and she remains FACELESS to many… I’ll do them a favour, here’s the Interview. This is the supposed “one of SABC’s reporters”… nanko…
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Bridget__buz retweeted
17 Jul 2025
Catch Ruth Ely on Views and News with Clarence Ford. Tune in to CapeTalk (567 AM) on your radio. Friday, 18 July 2025 at 11:30. #67Blankets #secretscarves #secretscarvesshh #SSSS #JoinTheConversation #capetalk @Carolyn_Steyn @CapeTalk
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16 Jun 2024
Well said
I can appreciate the DA's clean governance and commitment to the constitution & SA while still critiquing their dismal internal transformation and diversity, and other issues. I can appreciate the ANC'S enormous maturity and leadership in this moment, and that they offer the best president by a country mile, while holding them to account for corruption and poor service delivery. I can commend the EFF's commitment to become more politically mature, and other things they get right, while not excusing what they've gotten wrong: violence, corruption, etc. The ability to hold competing and difficult truths together is the hallmark of maturity. But Twitter rewards us to devolve into simplistic black and white, hero and villain thinking, and to attack anyone who tries to see the nuance. It's a pitiful state of affairs. And one I refuse to buy into.
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Bridget__buz retweeted
People who speak with authority don’t say a lot. They don’t need to.
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Bridget__buz retweeted
Tintswalo is unemployed Tintswalo owes university fees and can’t graduate. Tintswalo studies in the dark because of load-shedding. Cyril killed Tintswalo’s father in Marikana. Tintswalo is depressed. Tintswalo smokes drugs. Tintswalo drowned in a school pit toilet. #SONA24
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Bridget__buz retweeted
17 Jan 2024
FULL HOUSE Regrettably we have reached full capacity for our 10th birthday celebration and will be unable to accommodate additional guests. We look forward to welcoming you to our next event. #67Blankets #birthday #FullyBooked @Carolyn_Steyn
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Bridget__buz retweeted
26 Oct 2023
67 Blankets cause celebrated in new book - by @SimtembileMgidi. Thank you to The @HeraldNMB - Nelson Mandela Bay for your amazing blanket coverage. #67Blankets #67BlanketsBook #exclusivebooks #theherald @Carolyn_Steyn
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Bridget__buz retweeted
17 Sep 2023
🚨JOINT MEDIA STATEMENT🚨 Rand Water and Johannesburg Water urge consumers and citizens to use water sparingly as demand exceeds supply. @CityofJoburgZA @JHBWater #RandWater #RWWaterConservation #ReduceConsumption #RW120YearsofExcellence [NS]
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18 Sep 2023
And in suburbs like Westdene, Sophiatiwn, Westbury, Coronationville, Hurst Hill there is no water at all. can we understand why ? @JHBWater @702 @CityofJoburgZA
17 Sep 2023
🚨JOINT MEDIA STATEMENT🚨 Rand Water and Johannesburg Water urge consumers and citizens to use water sparingly as demand exceeds supply. @CityofJoburgZA @JHBWater #RandWater #RWWaterConservation #ReduceConsumption #RW120YearsofExcellence [NS]
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Bridget__buz retweeted
To celebrate 60 years since the publication of Can Themba’s acclaimed short story, The Suit, a star-studded musical version – The Suit Concer-tized – is being presented at the Joburg Theatre’s Mandela Theatre 🇿🇦 @CityofJoburgZA @joburgtheatre @buzpr #heritagemonth
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Bridget__buz retweeted
21 Aug 2023
ARE YOU READY CAPE TOWN? We are launching our @67Blankets for Nelson Mandela Day book, 'The knitting and Crochet Revolution' at @ExclusiveBooks in Cavendish Square. Come get your copy on the 22 August at 5:30pm. #67Blankets #theknittingandcrochetrevolution @Carolyn_Steyn
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12 Jul 2023
Really @AbsaSouthAfrica @Absa how many more months must I wait for you to resolve your non communication re FICA? Such appalling service and empty promises!
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Bridget__buz retweeted
The iconic, multi-award-winning South African play Saturday Night At The Palace will once again grace the Gauteng stage, 41 years after its explosive debut during apartheid in 1982. Opening at the Joburg Theatre on 28 July until 28 August, Saturday Night  At The Palace is bound to have just as poignant an impact as it did when it rose to acclaim in the 1980s, and was described as “shattering” and “political theatre at its best”. To book your tickets you visit: joburgtheatre.com/ Unfold Here : galoresa.online/2023/06/22/t… #UnfoldGSA #GaloreSAEntertainment
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Bridget__buz retweeted
13 Jun 2023
GQEBERHA – JUNE 15, 2023 Gqeberha, the last stop on the #LocalBlanketsIsLekka Road Show 2023. For more info, please get in touch with us at info@67blankets.co.za or at 67blankets.co.za @Carolyn_Steyn #67Blankets #localblanketsislekka #crochet
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13 Jun 2023
Is there anyone @AbsaSouthAfrica @Absa that understands about client service ?
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Bridget__buz retweeted
67 Blankets for Nelson Mandela Day happily received over 200 blankets from St Mary's DSG, Kloof. Read full article below. Thank you to the Highway Mail for you amazing blanket coverage. #67Blankets #localblanketsislekka #crochet #kzn @Carolyn_Steyn
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29 May 2023
The most unfriendly and unhelpful customer service provider must be @MTNza @MTNzaService . Trying to change a debit order from 1 account to another has taken over 5 months & still going & no they will not / cannot! With them since 1996 & it’s pulling teeth!
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