Where are you getting this?IcePick88 wrote:He is suspended for two years, but that suspension was then suspended for three years.
What a farce.
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Where are you getting this?IcePick88 wrote:He is suspended for two years, but that suspension was then suspended for three years.
What a farce.
One guy in our office retorted he should call it the after partyKALSTER wrote:I have a feeling he is going to start his own political party.
SykomantiS wrote:One guy in our office retorted he should call it the after partyKALSTER wrote:I have a feeling he is going to start his own political party.
Which suddenly has me rooting for his new party! The DA will then have some serious clout.Tribblarone wrote:It would really hurt the ANC more than his suspension will. It will literally split the party.
Yea, his followers will most definitely be the unthinking, uncritical and unwashed masses.....SykomantiS wrote:So will his new party- the followers of which will be both blind and stupid.
Which is a good thing. This might give the DA a chance because the ANC and jujus morons will be too busy fighting and the ANC's majority will be splitTribble wrote:He has millions - and followers - and supporters in the ANC But I think they would do everything they can to dissuade him from doing that. It would really hurt the ANC more than his suspension will. It will literally split the party.
Dex wrote: Hit the road Julius and don't you come back no more no more no more no more
Looks like Malema is not going to his home town anytime soon...Malema's hometown celebrates suspension
2011-11-11 08:48
Johannesburg - Axed ANC Youth League president Julius Malema's home town of Seshego in Limpopo celebrated the news of his five-year suspension, the TimesLive reported on Friday.
According to the website large convoys of cars noisily drove through the streets of the township, outside Polokwane, with people hanging out of windows.
"It's over with Malema. There will be peace in South Africa," sang a group of residents.
A community member, who did not want to be named, said: "We have had enough of Malema and his group, who had been looking at their own interests rather than those of the masses who voted them into power.
"He should have known that what goes around comes around."
Provoked division
Another said: "We want Sello Moloto back to lead Limpopo because there is a leadership vacuum," in apparent criticism of Limpopo premier Cassel Mathale's leadership style.
The ANC's national disciplinary committee suspended Malema for an effective five years on Thursday and ordered him to vacate his position.
He was found guilty of provoking division within the ruling party and of bringing the organisation into disrepute.
This was after Malema said earlier this year that the ANCYL would send a team to Botswana to consolidate local opposition parties and help bring about regime change there.
Malema later apologised for the remarks, but they were widely believed to have caused serious diplomatic embarrassment for the ANC.
- SAPA
Poor =/= foolish.Tribble wrote:I am stunned - I never knew there were poor people who opposed him
IOL wrote: ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema. Julius Malema’s ANCYL membership has been suspended for five years.
What will he do with his time now?
IOL’s Top 5 has a few ideas…
1 Write “I will not embarrass the ANC” on the blackboard a million times.
2 Attend a Swiss finishing school to learn manners and self-discipline.
3 Read “How to Win Friends and Influence People”.
4 Have tea with the DA’s Lindiwe Mazibuko. Better yet, make her tea.
5 Open a Run/Walk For Life franchise - the Joburg to Pretoria branch.
Well I knew that he does not have the support amongst the populous that he claimed. First of all I don't think anyone has as little brains as he does to actually expect what he proposes to benefit anyone financially.Tribble wrote:I am stunned - I never knew there were poor people who opposed him
I got you, I mean that being poor doesn't automatically make you economically illiterate. I guess you are right though, there is strong motivation for poor people to want to believe him.Tribble wrote:Nope - poor as in arm - without money - jobs and a decent standard of living.
More quotes from JuliusMalema wrote:South Africa is not a banana republic.