Video games aren’t Hollywood – but they should be
I’m sure almost everyone reading this article is fairly familiar with the Oscars. Maybe you haven’t watched an entire screening, but you’ve heard about who
Busi Mavuso’s challenge to the ANC
Last week, Busi Mavuso, an Eskom non-executive director and head of the country’s most prominent business body, may have thrown down a bigger challenge to
Trust in government has never been lower
KwaZulu-Natal is teaching its residents, and the country, that government cannot be relied upon, and true help comes from the private sector. It is a
The anti-semitic origins of diversity and racial “representation”
Writing recently on Politicsweb, James Myburgh described how a German think-tank put out a report in 1936 highlighting the “dangerous” over-representation of Jews in high
Why can’t the ANC wreck the Gautrain?
Like many fellow Capetonians, I find much wrong with Johannesburg. The traffic lights don’t work; the people put ice in their red wine; electricity fails
Nature confounds hubris
Quite by accident I came across a review of a book about an historic event which, I confess, I’d never heard about before. The title
Rail reform in name only?
For all the talk and idealism from government promoting Localisation Master Plans as the solution to South Africa’s manufacturing decline, politicians and bureaucrats may be
Coalition Government – Hedging Against Catastrophe
“Hope, it is the only thing stronger than fear. A little hope is effective, a lot of hope is dangerous.” Suzanne Collins. Whilst a handful
What is the liberal prognosis for South Africa’s future?
What is the liberal prognosis for South Africa’s future? This is an important question, and not just for self-described liberals. The liberal tradition has given
Chernobyl: AP stirs up baseless nuclear terror
In the frenzy for clicks, likes and shares, even the Associated Press quotes rabid anti-nuclear activist in attempt to sensationalise apocalyptic fears. The occupation of