Privatisation of Universities

 

The article below appeared in yesterday's Johannesburg "Star" newspaper. It
is by Douglas Gibson, the former deputy leader of the DA under Tony Leon. 

 

When Gibson refers to "taxpayers", he is referring to white taxpayers. It is
part of the white propaganda that claims that whites pay all the taxes in
South Africa. The article carries a threat from Gibson's white friends, and
a suggestion to other whites, of withdrawing their children from public
universities and sending them to the private universities that are
mushrooming in the country.

 

This article is part of the World Bank agenda that dictates privatisation of
education everywhere and at all levels. This is not only so as to make
profit, but even more so for control of what children may learn.

 

VC

 

Star2.jpg

 

 

Will university education have to be privatised?

 

 

Douglas Gibson, The Star, Johannesburg, 18 October 2016

 

Those South Africans who pay the overwhelming bulk of income tax receive
little back from the government.

 

They have had to privatise their security, paying for electric fences,
burglar bars, sirens and security company contracts.

 

They have had to privatise their children's primary and secondary education,
paying significant fees to state schools to maintain standards or sending
their children to private schools.

 

Because they do not receive acceptable medical treatment at state hospitals,
they pay thousands each month to buy medical aid cover.

 

Public transport generally is inadequate and sometimes non-existent, so
people must own cars with all the consequential expense.

 

Tertiary education is expensive and taxpayers generally pay university fees
for their children. Up to now, that has seemed like a sound investment.

 

[White?] Taxpayers

 

Taxpayers carry the burden, mostly willingly, of funding our social welfare
state giving more benefits to the poor than any other developing country.

 

Now it seems the same people must reconsider university education for their
children. If the anarchy at our universities continues for much longer,
people will pay whatever is required to fund university education at private
or foreign universities.

 

As a grandparent of a boy and a girl now aged 22 months, can I look forward
to Wits and UCT being worth attending in the year 2033? Will my children
have to send their children to a foreign university where the university
authorities, and not a minority of students, are in control?

 

Will taxpayers be funding their own family studying overseas or privately,
while paying for other people's children to enjoy free education at
institutions still styling themselves as universities?

 

I have sympathy for students struggling to pay fees. No academically fit
person should be denied an education because his or her parents cannot pay.
However, given all the other spending priorities there ought to be a
repayment when the student qualifies and earns a decent salary. The 49
percent who fail, after being financially assisted, ought also to pay back
the money.

 

In a developing country like ours where we have abysmal physical conditions
in many of our primary and secondary schools in the rural areas but also in
many townships, there is no justification for providing free tertiary
education to already advantaged young people if they can pay. Those who can
pay, or whose families can pay, should pay.

 

Why should they have free university education when the parents of many
schoolchildren have to scrimp and save to pay school fees? Or when millions
of unemployed young people receive no help? Or when granny's pension is so
small that she can barely subsist? Or when many of our state hospitals are
in a shockingly neglected condition? All of these have to compete for funds
from the national budget.

 

The #FeesMustFall campaign initially enjoyed a good deal of public support.
That has disappeared as the agenda changed to one of violent thuggery and
lawlessness aimed at bringing universities like Wits, despite the best
efforts of Adam Habib, to their knees.

 

Misguided clerics

 

The burning of close on R1 billion worth of assets, the looting, the assault
of policemen and women, the attempted murders and the petrol bombs may have
the support of some misguided clerics who want the police and security
personnel to be withdrawn.

 

Other more sensible people realise that the issue now goes far beyond a
question of fees. This is a power thing and no longer a fees issue.

 

The destroyed assets were paid for not by the criminals who burnt buildings
down, but by taxpayers like me. They will have to be replaced and paid for
by us, not by these criminals, none of whom have been charged and brought
before the court.

 

Another huge negative has been the undemocratic and ruthless attitude of
largely self-appointed "leaders". Only their view is valid. Others who want
to study and complete the year are colonialist sell-outs or worse and they
are there to be intimidated into silence.

 

The liberal response to violence and lawlessness is certainly not to say:
"There, there, your cause is just." The proper liberal response is to insist
on the restoration of order, if necessary by force, followed by rational
dialogue if this is possible.

 

Parliamentary democracy

 

In our parliamentary democracy, we are all equal and we all have rights and
responsibilities. Other people's rights are as important as our own and
those who deprive other people of their rights deserve to be arrested,
charged and tried, and if convicted, to be punished appropriately. Someone
who burns down a building needs a few years in jail to contemplate what
democracy is about.

 

The calibre of at least some of the leaders fills one with apprehension. No
doubt, there are sincere, decent young people among them, but when students
look up to the likes of Mcebo Dlamini, there is something seriously wrong.
Dlamini is the person who said: "I love Adolf Hitler." He also said: "In
every white person, there's an element of Adolf Hitler."

 

He has now declared himself the vice-chancellor of Wits. He is in need of
psychological counselling instead of enjoying clout as a "leader".

 

It's time students, their parents, clerics, and the community woke up to the
consequences of lawlessness and anarchy. Ruining our universities and
wrecking this academic year are outrageously destructive.

 

The universities will not decide the fee issue. If students want to
demonstrate, a peaceful vigil outside Luthuli House and the Union Buildings
would spook the government that sparked the crisis by reducing university
funding. But the universities must reopen and complete the year. If force
has to be used then, unhappily, so be it.

 

 

From:
http://www.iol.co.za/the-star/will-university-education-have-to-be-privatise
d-2081232

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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