He he he! Awaiting your response
Lesetja Diphoko                                                                 
                                                 "Sent via my BlackBerry"       
                                                                                
   

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 2 Nov 2011 09:16:42 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [YCLSA Discussion] BusinessDay - STEVEN FRIEDMAN: Avarice
 masquerading as the voice of the poor

Friedman had nothing better to do.

I shall respond 
Sent via my BlackBerry from Vodacom - let your email find you!

-----Original Message-----
From: "Setja Diphoko" <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 2 Nov 2011 07:57:50 
To: CU-LJ<[email protected]>; <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] BusinessDay - STEVEN FRIEDMAN: Avarice
 masquerading as the voice of the poor

IF ANY evidence were still needed that those involved in our national debate 
have no idea what goes on in the minds and lives of 70% of the people, last 
week’s African National Congress Youth League-induced frenzy provided it.

About 5000 people are said to have joined the league’s "economic freedom" 
march. This is less than half the number of people who last year joined a march 
in support of a campaign for libraries in schools. It is at most a quarter of 
those who joined protests organised by the Treatment Action Campaign to demand 
a comprehensive government response to AIDS. Trade unions regularly organise 
larger marches. 

And yet none of these events attracted the media coverage or commentary that 
was lavished on the youth league march. And none attracted the same hyped-up 
rhetoric and breathless sensationalism.

If we consider that marchers were bused in from all over the country and that 
weeks of planning went into the event, this was not a show of popular support, 
it was a demonstration of its absence. This was not evidence that the l eague 
and its president, Julius Malema, had far greater support on the ground than we 
thought. It was further evidence that their presumed support among the poor and 
the jobless is largely a myth.

That neither the media nor much of our public commentary understood this is not 
surprising. As this column has pointed out before, the poor and weak in this 
society are talked about — they do not speak. And those who talk about them are 
far more interested in them as an abstract support for pet theories and 
political projects than as real human beings. Which is why there is much 
enthusiasm for talking about the poor but no eagerness to talk to, or listen 
to, them.

The youth league march was clearly a gathering of the politically connected, 
not of the excluded. And, for not the first time, our reporting and analysis 
cannot tell the difference, presumably because it has no idea of who the poor 
are or what they do.

That is why, at Polokwane, and at Jacob Zuma ’s court appearances, commentators 
confused the activists who had gathered with the poor. And it is why the 
league’s leaders and those whose bidding they do find it so easy to pass off 
their desire for power and wealth as the voice of the disadvantaged.

To point this out is not to deny that poverty in general and youth unemployment 
in particular are serious threats to the wellbeing of our society. Many young 
people do feel frustrated and alienated and they do take to the streets to 
demand that they be taken seriously. But they do not do this at the behest of 
or in support of Malema or the league. They have been doing it for some years 
now on the streets of many our townships and shack settlements. But their 
protests are seen not as important messages that need to be understood, but as 
inconveniences to be explained away by the catch-all slogan, "service delivery 
protests".

While much of this youth rebellion remains unorganised — or organised by 
ambitious local politicians seeking power — some of the poor and the unemployed 
do join organisations; social movements whose reach among the poor remains 
limited but who are more in touch with the poor than the league has ever been. 

But these are largely ignored by much of the national debate. It is far more 
convenient — and exciting — to pretend that ambitious insiders spouting slogans 
speak for those at the grassroots than to make the effort to find out how the 
other three-quarters really live.

The frenzy the youth league march provoked is an indictment of our national 
debate. It shows how little the talk of what is wrong with our society and what 
needs to be done to fix it are based on a concrete understanding of the lives 
of most of our citizens, and how prone we are to regard the world of the 
connected in which we move as the world in which everyone moves.

Nor is this problem restricted to the media and commentators. 

It affects much of the academic community too. It is reflected in our tendency 
to confuse what people at the last cocktail party or conference said in 
response to the party or talk shop before it as the truth about lived 
grassroots reality in this society. And in the extent to which we insist that 
the lives of most of our citizens can be understood through textbooks and 
theories rather than an attempt to learn and listen.

We cannot understand our society, let alone know how to address its many 
problems, unless we take life at its grassroots and those who live it far more 
seriously than we have done. 

We cannot do this as long as we confuse the connected with those on whose 
behalf they claim to speak. 

We cannot do it as long as academics, reporters and commentators see the poor 
not as fellow citizens to be understood but as convenient vehicles for our 
prejudices.

• Friedman is director of the Centre for the Study of Democracy.
Lesetja Diphoko                                                                 
                                                 "Sent via my BlackBerry"       
                                                                                
   

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