Great piece. I read it twice, as it is obviously intended to be read at two levels. On the first reading, I just chuckled; on the second reading I reflected on the many serious points she has raised and wants people to think about.
Why is it that SA is slowly going "the African Way"? Was this inevitable? Will a place like Botswana remain as the sole exception? What inspiration could other African countries have drawn from "South Africa done right"? Can SA reverse course? Dot, dot, dot.
One of the things I always find amazing whenever I am home is the extent to which everyone is hankering for the "good life" as seen of the West (TV, movies, etc.). In fact, it is the desire for such a life, and the implied material acquisitions, that drives the worst cases of corruption we see: the worst cases of stealing and grabbing are not by people whose survival depends on it. It is only in governance, especially when allowances are needed to get around theft from public coffers and the excesses of power, that we insist on an "African Way". And this goes all the way back to the period of independence:
The first thing that the new African leaders insisted on was that they didn't need "Western democracy", that they would come up with something that was more appropriate for Africa. What they overlooked is that the Western systems are the result of working past centuries of social evils and mayhem. So we had all sorts of abuses, crimes against humanity, presidents for life, coups, etc. Then---and Kenya is a good example---we started revising constitutions and the like to have the sorts of checks and balances that the West arrived at in painful ways. Nevertheless we continue in a similar path: when it comes to the "material enjoyment of life", we see no reason why we are not as "deserving" as those elsewhere and of goods produced in the elsewhere; but in matters of governance (especially in abuses of power or access to power), we insist that there is an "African Way" or that we, seemingly incapable of learning, must go through the same experiences that those we borrow from went through. And all the while our universities churn out graduates in law, public administration, etc. ... all based on the "Western System" and all of whom we insist are as capable as anyone else.
Dot, dot, dot.
The relationship between morality and governance comes up twice in the article. I am unable to understand why it should be a problem, but some exchanges here indicate that it is for some of us. There seems to be the idea that we can have endless misbehaviour at the top but that, somehow, those at the bottom will overlook that and lead upright lives.