Copeman

PAC and particularly its national leadership has dismally failed to make a
political case to attract many people namely the unemployed, poverty
stricken, youths, students and workers.

Secondly, the internal organisational environment is repulsive and less
attractive. Inwards and self destructive methods have placed the entire
party in a state of parallysis.

Thirdly, the entire party is radarless! absence if strategic leadership and
thinking! Where is the PAC heading to?

Fourthly, the entire party face lack and dearth of required organisational
capabilities.

Five, there is a disjuncture of the political structure from the
operational structure, actually the party has no operational structure and
strategy, with the strategic apex dwarfed and technostructure non-existing.

As, I argued the last time that COSATU, NACTU and FEDUSA joint membership
does not exceed 3 million employees, there are more than 10 million workers
not belonging to any trade union and majority of them are young workers
below the age of 45 check HSRC research report on trade union membership
and collective bargaining, also check the recent Census surveys. In actual
fact some researchers are arguing that both COSATU and NACTU are threaten
by workers seeking for alternative means and ways to advance and defend
their interests since the trade union movement has been hijacked and used
to serve interests of the labour aristocrat leadership which symphones
workers' subscriptions for acquisition of shares, as workers basic
workerplace daily and immediate issues are neglected by trade unions.
Political reality on NACTU is this trade union federation political
existence is insignificant its membership decline from 300 thousand to less
than 90 000.

PAC is passed by events daily and weekly from 34 Massacred Marikana
mineworkers leading to mineworkers industrial protests that involved more
than 80 thousands mineworkers to the recent death of SANDF soldiers in CAR
some were APLA cadres, Etoll, what has become a quartely Petrol hike,
electricity tarrifs increase, lenasia house demolitions, the rise of
financial exclusions at universities, the rising unemployment, limpopo text
books saga, collapse of governance in limpopo and eastern cape, rape and
abuse of women, there are many incidents that took place in the country but
the PAC across all structures has been vocally silent so on the eleventh
hour you expects votes or people to identify with PAC when the PAC and its
leadership has been nowhere when needed most by the masses!

Lastly, PAC has been reduced to a party that exists solely to commemorate
past events! It has lost its sense of purpose and direction, also its
incapable to attract and sustain a support as a result of its internal
weaknesses and most of its competent membership have abundon the PACsince
they have become tired of internal infightings which have become a
generational inheritence compounded by deceit and absence of both political
and organisational progress.

PAC must heal itself internally to regain lost membership density to enable
the PAC to attract the envisage support base. PAC members from branches and
regions must selflessly take leadership to drive this process of renewal.

shango lashu!

Mr. Raymond Mashilo Kgagudi
Cellphone: 0749226361
Email: [email protected]

On 2 Apr 2013 18:53, "Philip Copeman" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I suggest that for a while we leave ideological debates. Unbeleivably we
> both share the same goals of the PAC, it is the methods that differ. Mine
> is very quantitative. I know what a Gini coefficient of 54 means - it does
> not mean alleviation from poverty in Venezuela - that is an propogandist
> mythology, rather like the great Zimabwean Liberation.
>
> From a strategic point of view, it is just simply putting ones head in the
> sand to not see the simple reality facing us: 87% of the voters of South
> Africa vote for the ANC and their Western Cape Branch, the DA. These 87%
> favour continuation of racial classification, entrenchment of property
> rigths, upholding and maintenance of the constitution, xenophobic exclusion
> of northerners, corrupt socialism that favours taking from the rich and
> giving to the middle classes. In summary upholding the status quo. This is
> not me talking - this is 87% of our countrymen. Everyone else including
> people as disparate as the the Freedom Front and Azapo fit into the other
> 13%.
>
> Smell the thorns - Right now our fellow countrymen's wishes differ sharply
> from that of The PAC.
>
> What do we do?
>
> 1) As we can't even agree between ourselves and any attempt to move us
> forward is branded divisory and - I love this term - "neo liberal", it
> seems obvious to me that we need to simplify the message of the PAC. That
> is where I get to the idea that focusing exclusively on the unification of
> Africa sidelines the unsolvable debates that we have about income
> distribution.
>
> 2) We can simply chuck it all in and turn the PAC into a burial society,
> that only looks backwards to its past achievements and as our members die
> off we become less and less an less relevant until we too die. This is
> effectively what we are doing now. In each election our support has shrunk
> and we can expect, under the current message to lose even more, this time
> possibly losing all seats in parliament altogether. If we are gogitn to do
> thsi, then lests sign up for a decent funral policy and start negotiating a
> group discount.
>
> 3) We can look to reinvent ourselves, pick up the huge and proud history
> that is the PAC and turn that into something that carries the message of
> Pan Africanism forward. What that message is we should decide on quickly -
> more members will die before the week is out. Do I beleive that a
> reactionary ideology - "seizing the organs of state" from the 87% is going
> to succeed - no I don't.
>
> 4) We can dismiss our fellow Africans as fools and set out preaching a
> reeducation program to them. Here I caution you that you are likely to hit
> more resistance from them to the "Great Socialist Revoultion" Young people
> today don't respond to this type of talk, and thats not me talking - just
> ask them.
>
> 5) We could write South Africa off as a lost cause, skip it altogether and
> just focus on the rest of Africa. However I would caution  that this is
> also likely to lead to extinction. If we cannot formulate a coherent
> strategy here, we are less likely to be able to do it in areas where we
> have even less rescources.
>
> We have become a bitter disaprate group that can only criticise the work
> and decisions of others. We rarely put forward positive intiatives of our
> own. To see a great Speech - see Anwars acceptance speech of the road
> renaming on Sharpeville day - that is a direction worth following. The
> standing ovation that it recieved, not from The PAC, but from the genereal
> public, should give us a hint of what we have to do.
>
> One thing is certain. If we continue to do nothing to change, extinction
> is inevitable. The PAC needs to learn to start saying YES. It is YES or die.
>

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