Jacob ‘shower-head’ Zuma could face US investigation over $30 million deal with Gaddafi, you can run but you can’t hide

Cope says Cyril Ramaphosa and ministers must pay for fuel to feel our pain, so we can call for #Nofuelbudget, that will surely save South Africa some money

WHO really is in charge?…Ace is the “Secretary General”, but he has more power in the internal workings of the African National Congress (ANC) than Ramaphosa himself. New Dawn?

A new law could soon see South Africans jailed for lying on their CV, well I see less Politicians in the Parliament

Here are the obscure and the infamous Political Parties, the ‘shopping list’: All 48 parties contesting the 2019 Elections (video)

BREAKING NEWS:- Cyril Ramaphosa has to choose between South Africa and the ANC, what do you think will he choose?

President Ramaphosa says white land owners are no longer in a position to resist government’s land reform policies – ANC-regime to pick up the pace of land reform after election

SA President, Cyril Ramaphosa meets reality – delayed for hours after chaotic trip on Metrorail train- 50km journey took four hours to complete

Num and ANC bumped heads over the restructuring of Eskom, union threatening to shut down power supply

Well with dagga legalised in South Africa this man maybe had to much of it:- White man (trash) declaring support for ANC (video)

Maybe Jacques Pauw were right:- The State Security Agency of SA:- Zuma, Cwele, Mahlobo, Fraser should be ‘arrested for treason’

Why the ANC is so desperate to nationalise the Reserve Bank even though it will be catastrophic for South-Africa in light of the major blow last week when the Rand weakened drastically after Ramaphosa’s announcement

Typical African ignorance – SA President, Cyril Ramaphosa went totally whacko – declared that white people stole land from blacks during Jan van Riebeeck’s period

SARB Changes from Sacrosanct to Nationalization – Ramaphosa is Misleading the Country with a Double-Edged Tongue

SA’s struggling Rand is even further in abyss – Ramaphosa may be weaker on economic grounds than its predecessor Zuma