If you loot institutions, you will miss them when they’re gone

Opinions

The media and social media have been alive with pictures that convey a sense of the sheer normality of looting and destruction in South Africa.

The 2021 explosion: South Africa’s post-1994 turning point

Opinions

The spate of rioting and looting that began at the weekend has to be a turning point. Never before in our post-1994 history has there

Our next faltering steps …

Opinions

After a 24-hour orgy of violence, I sit alone in my whale-watching room and reflect as I read the many messages that have been sent

Violent anarchy: just what we’ve been warning SA to expect – Frans Cronje

Opinions

‘Very high levels of economic exclusion, failing schools, unchecked corruption, racial nationalist rhetoric from the government, inept and poorly motivated security forces led by people

Observations on South Africa’s descent into anarchy

Opinions

Amid the chaos that has descended upon the country in the wake of Jacob Zuma’s incarceration, South Africa’s leaders have a lot to answer for.

Letter: By recanting, Zuma can unlock the door of his cell

Opinions

Dear Editor Everyone is saying that Mr Zuma will be eligible for parole after serving a quarter of the fifteen month sentence imposed on him

Zuma: the end of the beginning?

Opinions

After the British and their many allies had defeated Erwin Rommel at the second Battle of Alamein in October and November 1942, Winston Churchill famously

When small successes deceive

Opinions

Where is the evidence that the ANC’s goals have changed? To party elders, Zuma’s unforgivable sin was his electoral toxicity. Echoing past injustices, systemic patronage

Why I maintain that the IRR has crossed an unforgivable line

Opinions

Roger Southall Martin van Staden reacted to my letter in Business Day by penning a diatribe, describing me inter alia as a ‘transformationist’ and a

An evolving American language – inclusive, gender neutral, racialised

Opinions

In his 1946 essay, ‘Politics and the English Language’, George Orwell lamented the decay in English usage that he believed was corrupting thinking itself. He