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Richer or poor – people will vote ANC |
Door to door Reflections by Lazola
It is Saturday (04/04/2009). The sun is unforgivably hot. Probably it is the absence of an umbrella on my part. How could I? None of the ANC volunteers can afford an umbrella; it would be rude and unfair of me to have one covering my head alone, while others were left at the mercy of the sun, so I decided not to buy or carry one with me.
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AIDC warns: NGP? Do not repeat the tragedy of GEAR as a farce! |
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 Glimpses of clear sunlight in a long winter only indicate that summer is possible, but are not summer itself (not even spring). The Alternative Information Development Centre ( AIDC) welcomes that the government’s New Growth Path (NGP) document recognizes the hard facts about mass joblessness, poverty and inequality in South Africa. A new economic policy is indeed necessary and the NGP document correctly points to how the global crisis has opened up “new policy space” for a country like South Africa to “go beyond conventional policy prescriptions”. This acknowledgment must be strongly commended. Not least, because it encourages the questioning of what follows in the document itself. The NGP document suffers heavily from a balancing act within the government between neoliberals, Keynesians and some who even describe themselves as Marxists.
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Syria: Militarization, Military Intervention and the Absence of Strategy | by Gilbert Achcar |
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I was able to attend the meeting of the Syrian opposition that was held on October 8-9 in Sweden, near the capital Stockholm. A number of male and female activists operating in Syria and abroad joined with prominent figures from the Syrian Coordination Committee (SNC - who had come from Syria for the event) in the presence of the most prominent member of the Syrian National Council – its president, Burhan Ghalioun.
The organizers of the conference had invited me to speak on the subject of foreign military intervention in the current situation in Syria. My talk was met with interest and I was asked to write it down (I had delivered it verbally relying only on bullet points). I promised to do so, but a busy schedule prevented me from making good on that promise until now.
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Will South Africa finally make progress towards a universal health system? | by Di McIntyre |
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South Africa has long faced considerable health system equity challenges. In particular, 43% of total health care expenditure is attributable to private health insurance schemes, which only cover 16% of the population. General tax funding allocated to the health sector also accounts for about 43% of expenditure, and is used to provide services for most of the rest of the population. Out-of-pocket payments account for the remainder of expenditure, most of which relates to co-payments by private insurance scheme members but also includes direct payments to private primary care providers by some of those not covered by private insurance.
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On Occupy Wall Street | by David Harvey |
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The Party of Wall Street has ruled unchallenged in the United States for far too long. It has totally (as opposed to partially) dominated the policies of Presidents over at least four decades (if not longer), no matter whether individual Presidents have been its willing agents or not. It has legally corrupted Congress via the craven dependency of politicians in both parties upon its raw money power and access to the mainstream media that it controls. Thanks to the appointments made and approved by Presidents and Congress, the Party of Wall Street dominates much of the state apparatus as well as the judiciary, in particular the Supreme Court, whose partisan judgments increasingly favor venal money interests, in spheres as diverse as electoral, labor, environmental and contract law.
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