Vader
New member
ChefDJ@TheFanatics said:Vader said:At what point does the proverbial light bulb come on...
It won't... Eskom :thinking:
Talk about hitting the nail on the head :thumb:
ChefDJ@TheFanatics said:Vader said:At what point does the proverbial light bulb come on...
It won't... Eskom :thinking:
Vader said:Ofentse said:ChefDJ@TheFanatics said:Ofentse said:Chef for one to qualify for funding, then one should be able demonstrate the ability to pay. How will you repay banks if you do not work, and your father is paid R2500 in Marikana and your mother is a domestic worker earning R1500?
I went out and I made sure I could study. My parents did not help me. My friends/family did not help me. During studies I worked part time, over time and weekends to fund my needs, at a DVD store in Centurion. When my studies were completed, only then did I start paying off the capital of the student loan, which is the basis of a student loan. I still am paying it off. Having a poor family is no excuse to demand everything for free. I come from a poor family and I could still fund my own studies.
These students don't want to study. They want free education for a degree they don't want to earn because they feel they are entitled to it and won't listen to the option of part-time work because why must they? Their government will give it to them because their government said so... Apparently.
Not everyone is likely to tell a similar story Chef, you made a choice to get your education pursuing that avenue, and i respect that.
Truth of the matter is that we cannot reduce this issue to personal anecdotes, and simply assume that everyone should follow suit. The reality is that majority of the people in this country need help, and it should be provided.
We are all paying heavy taxes, and it will go a long way if our money is spent on more worthy causes by OUR government, particularly education.
But when will these people in need realize that OUR current government doesn't believe in spending money on worthy causes because they too busy shoving it into their own pockets.
Guess what the people in need will do, they will vote them in again and again and then protest their unhappiness when the same promises are not delivered on over and over again.
At what point does the proverbial light bulb come on...
ChefDJ@TheFanatics said:Vader said:At what point does the proverbial light bulb come on...
It won't... Eskom :thinking:
Ofentse said:Free education should not, and must never be limited to primary schools and high schools in this country.
Education is the only essential tool that will empower historically disadvantaged groups. It will open doors for young people that are roaming the streets in rural areas, and help them to turn their lives around.
In my view, SA should have prioritised free education in all levels of learning institutions before anything else (including fee housing, water and electricity)
That way, SA will move away from being a state dependent nation to self sustaining nation. The need to empower the people of this country through education can only yield positive results for this country in a long run...
Ofentse said:These students know exactly what they are doing and why. NSFAS is not free education but a loan.
A government committee has been set up to deal with their concerns, let’s see what they come up with…
Meanwhile, we can only hope that no lives will be lost in their cause, which i support 100%...
NtandoN said:ChefDJ@TheFanatics said:Free education should be for primary and high schools, especially the government funded ones.
Tertiary education is a privilege, not a right. If you want it free, make sure you excel so as to earn yourself a bursary.
Your point is valid but the devil's advocate in me has to say this. It is difficult to get a job when you only have matric and the best way to increase your chances of employment is to get tertiary education - but even that does not guarantee it. If tertiary education is a privilege then it means the poor cannot be uplifted because they are not privileged enough to afford tertiary education. They will perpetually be a victim of their circumstance. Having said that, there are funding methods for low income/poor people eg. NSFAS, low income focussed bursaries & scholarships; but these methods will never be enough to fund all the poor that are eligible for tertiary education. What do we do with those that fall through the cracks? What about those that get in to university and get financially excluded in the middle of their degree?
I do not support the violence at all. I feel there is merit in the fight for free tertiary education but it cannot be expected that the country should be able to afford it now, maybe in future under a different government but not with Nkandla still fresh in our memories.
RAArmstrong@TheFanatics said:Everyone just wants everything handed to them on a platter. And that's bull. Even in first world countries tertiary education is not free. If you want something enough. You'll work your ass off to make it happen.
In all honesty I see these protests now as a means to avoid exams and cause havoc. Lock all those bastards up and let the ones that actually care about their education finish their academic years off in peace.
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Ofentse said:The money is definitely available, but allocated to wrong causes...
I work in the telecoms sector and will tell you which money should rather be allocated to student tuition fees in this specific sector...
1. SA Connect Project: The government has allocated billions of Rands to this specific project to roll-out broadband, this is rather unnecessary given that the private sector is doing a sterling job to achieve this end. I mean, MTN will be spending 12billion Rands to roll-out infrastructure this year alone, why bother trying to compete with these operators? In any case, municipalities such as Tshwane are already working with companies like Neotel to connect low income earning communities via initiatives such as Project Isizwe. All the government has to do here is finalise and implement policies such Rapid Deployment and Local Loop Unbundling to foster competition and increase broadband penetration in this country.
2. ICASA: Time and time this entity has been sending money that was allocated to them back to Treasury because of apparent lack of capacity. Icasa can also generate its own money from license fees paid by operators and penalties imposed for non compliance, frankly the government has no business allocating huge amounts of money to this entity and should be spent elsewhere...
3. DTPS and DoC split: Here the government is spending double and unnecessary amounts of money for salaries in these two departments. You have the DTPS creating the so called spectrum policy in one hand, and DoC driving DTT Migration policy as an ecxample. Just one department is quiet capable of handling the telecoms sector. The splitting of the former DoC only created slow progress in this sector with ministers Faith and Siyabonga sometimes not knowing who should execute what...
4. Broadband Infraco: The less said about this entity the better, it has been relying on government hand-outs for years and for what? As indicated earlier, the likes of DFA, Vumatel, Neotel, Frogfoot, Mitsol, TT Telecoms are doing a commendable job connecting this country. They government should cut their losses, sell this entity and run...
I can go on to point out where money is wasted in other sectors, i am sure there is money sitting somewhere doing nothing that can be redirected to education...