Africa south of the Sahara


Ramaphosa’s Land Lie

The brutal truth of South Africa’s tribal past uncovered

Africa Got Everything for Free-And Blew It

A Blunt Tale of Hype, History, and a Colonial Trainwreck

How the Woke Broke Africa

From 100 million to a billion: liberals’ promise of a bridge to progress proved to be a tightrope of peril for Africans.

Zimbabwe

South Africa’s mirror: Rhodesia’s spectacular rise and the tragic fall of Zimbabwe.

When Skill-Based Immigration Built a Nation: Southern Rhodesia

A tiny group of skilled immigrants transformed Southern Rhodesia from bushland to a modern nation. Their strict entry requirements for proven expertise created rapid development,

Africa: Needed – More King Rats

A prisoner-of-war camp’s black market entrepreneur spotlights Africa’s failure. The uncomfortable truths about progress delayed 75 years.

Jabulile’s House

In 1954 in a Bulawayo (Southern Rhodesia) backyard, three worlds collided.

Jabulile’s Home

I was a boy whom Ngwenya—the crocodile—bid, “Sleep well. If you want to help Africa, wake up a man. We don’t need pansies.”

Expropriation: Trump, the IRR’s Terence Corrigan, and BizNewsTV Don’t Get It

In ancient societies the King owns all

Banking on Community Shaped Human Progress

From promoting community wealth to enriching the few, trapping the majority

Showpiece to Failure: The ANC’s Reality Check

A harsh truth: when biological reality collides with political ideology, dysfunction results–but there’s a path forward.

Gender-based Violence? No! ANC Failure – YES!

Gender-based violence isn’t just a social issue, it’s economic. The ANC’s failure to create jobs is the real culprit behind South Africa’s crisis.

Identity Theft and Violence

The hidden truth about South Africa’s failed transition challenges everything you thought you knew.

Cadre Incompetence: South Africa Drowns in Friends

Only humans elevate friendship to a virtue. When severed from reality, virtue toxifies as those it is supposed to help putrefy

SANNA: South Africa’s New National Army

Turn a dollar a day spent into a dollar a day contributed.

USA, the frightful bully

Isn’t it great to see a president asking about the cracks.

HIV-AIDS: Was Dr. Beetroot Almost Right?

Trump’s threat to cut off HIV aid might be the wake-up call we need.

Honest Elephants and Pigs, Immoral Humans: Nature’s Business Hijacked

The Savannah’s silent war comes home: how armchair humans added TNT

Burglary Without Violence

Recruiting, training, and licencing professional criminals might just be the sanest solution South Africa hasn’t tried yet.

From Hunter to Handout: The Truth About African Agriculture

Taking farms is like handing out 747s and expecting cronies fly on behalf of SAA.

Water: South Africa’s Dice with Death

Trump’s tariffs might be the needed wake-up call: stop exporting our lifeblood in grapes, avos, and maize.

Colonial Africa: No Maturation Time

Too much, too quick for a culture change.

Strike the Problem, Make Opportunities

Votes are worthless—strikes work.

South Africa’s Wasting Malema

Numbers don’t lie: South Africa’s crisis isn’t about race. A devastating brain drain leaves millions without economic leadership

Millions of struggling citizens

Without immediate community initiatives, SA will descend into modern-day tribal warfare—fought in concrete townships instead of open savannah.

Tough Love

Don’t tie shoelaces. Show how—train specific skills.

Colonialism made Africa’s Poor

The Luxury of the Poor: How Surplus Changed Humanity

Springboks and Squatter Camps

A Springbok jersey can’t cover a broken country.

The Racist 

A toothbrush request refused exposes South Africa’s misplaced priorities.

I’m a Grandfather

My Grandfather’s Fireside Tales emerge from a lifetime of learning and unlearning. In an age where adults often remain stuck at superficial understanding, and follow a preset political agenda, these stories challenge young people to think deeper, question assumptions, and look beyond convenient narratives. They’re for minds still open to take fresh perspectives, lay them on the table before their elders and ask, “so what about this?”