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About 'used cars for sale south africa'|WORLD VEHICLE SALES WILL BOOM FOR AT LEAST ANOTHER 100 YEARS, BUT BUILT WHERE ; BEST-SELLING CARS AND TRUCKS IN AMERICA








               DURBAN,               SOUTH               AFRICA:               I               got               into               South               Africa               before               I               got               there.
               I               did               so               through               meeting               a               young               woman               whose               given               name               was               Pony               in               the               tradition               of               South               Africans               who               call               their               daughters,               "Beautiful"               or               "Truth"               or               some               other               creative               appellation.
               She               was               on               her               way               home               to               a               small               country               town,               after               a               year               spent               in               Cuba               where               she               is               in               a               course               teaching               scientific               sport.

She               was               one               of               a               number               of               scholarship               students               traveling               on               the               plane               with               me               from               Madrid.

Cuba               had               adopted               the               systematic               training               system               or               Sports               institutes               used               in               East               Germany               and               put               it               to               good               advantage               in               its               award               winning               State               backed               athletic               program.

Now               they               are               sharing               their               knowledge               with               other               Third               World               countries
               Pony,               in               her               late               teens,               was               one               of               a               large               number               of               foreign               students               attracted               to               the               idea,               and               was               selected               by               the               Cuban               Embassy               in               Pretoria               for               the               five               year               opportunity               beginning               with               a               immersive               Spanish               language               course.

She               now               speaks               Spanish               pretty               well,               and               knows               all               the               Cuban               revolutionary               songs               and               slogans               like               "Patria               O'               Muerte,               Veneceremos,"               ("Fatherland               or               Death,               We               Will               Win")               that               tens               of               thousands               of               Cubans               echo               at               huge               rallies.

She               laughed               when               I               chanted               one               at               her               as               we               unexpectedly               sat               next               to               each               other               on               the               large               Iberia               jet.
               As               it               turned               out,               I               knew               more               about               Cuba's               role               in               supporting               South               Africa's               liberation               struggle,               a               gesture               of               solidarity               that               led               to               Fidel               Castro               being               cheered               the               loudest               of               all               foreign               heads               of               State               who               attended               Nelson               Mandela's               inauguration               as               the               first               President               of               a               Democratic               South               Africa.

I               covered               the               scene               in               a               film,               Countdown               To               Freedom               that               I               made               about               the               historic               l994               election.
               Cuba's               foreign               policy               has               put               a               premium               of               backing               revolutionary               movements               since               1960               and               was               the               only               country               in               the               world               to               openly               help               South               Africa               militarily               by               sending               its               own               troops---"internationalist               volunteers"               to               Angola               where               they               defeated               the               apartheid               army               in               a               crucial               battle               that               accelerated               the               process               of               political               change               in               Southern               Africa.

Many               Cubans               died               alongside               Angolan               soldiers               and               South               African               liberation               fighters               in               a               war               that               has               been               largely               forgotten.
               Cuba               has,               in               the               years               since,               mellowed               in               its               revolutionary               ardor               and               is               in               the               process               of               reforming               its               top-down               Socialist               economy.
               After               19               years               of               "freedom,"               post               apartheid               South               Africa               has               also               cooled               its               commitment               to               "struggle               politics"               and               has               become               more               of               a               "normal"               African               state,               albeit               an               advanced               one               economically.

It               is               now               battling               corruption               within               the               ranks               of               its               government               and               the               ruling               African               National               Congress               (ANC)               while               coping               with               enormous               challenges               to               create               a               new               society               so               that               youngsters               like               Pony               who               are               very               ambitious               and               eager               to               learn               will               have               a               future.
               She               admitted               to               me               she               doesn't               know               as               much               about               politics               or               her               own               history               as               she               would               like,               and               says               that's               true               of               many               in               her               generation.

That's               in               part               because               the               real               history               is               not               taught               in               any               detail               the               schools               or               shown               with               any               regularity               on               South               African               TV               stations               that               are               more               into               selling               than               telling               by               pumping               out               sports               and               popular               culture.
               Kids               know               more               abut               Mandela               than               the               movement               he               led,               an               expression               of               the               celebrity               worship               that               dominates               youth               culture.

On               TV               here,               Oprah               is               better               known               than               such               lionesses               of               the               freedom               fight               as               Albertina               Sisulu,               revered               by               many               as               the               Mother               of               the               Nation,               who               died               a               month               ago.
               When               I               asked               a               young               white               South               African               girl               who               the               ANC               leader               and               Mandela               law               partner               Oliver               Tambo               was,               she               said,               "you               mean               the               airport               guy?"               Johannesburg's               principal               airport               was               renamed               for               Tambo               after               years               of               honoring               Afrikaner               leaders.

(This               is               all               more               anecdotal               evidence               for               why               South               Africa               needs               its               own               History               Channel               of               the               kind               being               proposed               by               producer               Anant               Singh.)
               In               Durban,               where               streets               are               being               renamed               for               other               liberation               heroes               vandals               have               blacked               out               the               new               street               names               with               paint               to               protest               the               change.

I               was               told               that               people               are               pissed               off               because               it               screws               up               the               GPS's               in               their               cars.

(I               was               thrilled               to               see               a               highway               named               after               my               old               friend               and               London               School               of               Economics               colleague,               the               journalist               and               feminist               heroine               Ruth               First.)
               As               it               turns               out,               Pony               was               flying               home               on               June               16th,               the               annual               youth               day               holiday               marking               the               anniversary               of               the               Soweto               uprising               of               l976               where               kids               Pony's               age               and               younger               revolted               against               forced               instruction               in               Afrikaans.

(South               Africans               were               scandalized               when               an               iconic               picture               of               a               young               man               carrying               a               victim               of               that               police               massacre               was               mocked               on               Facebook.

In               the               new               one,               the               child               who               had               been               shot               in               the               original               was               smiling               and               carrying               a               bottle               of               beer,)
               At               least               Youth               Day               is               commemorated,               as               it               was               this               year               with               concerts               and               hip-hop               shows.

In               Soweto               this               time,               there               was               riot               when               local               kids               felt               excluded               and               fought               their               way               into               a               stadium               while               private               cops               maced               and               beat               them               to               the               horror               of               many               onlookers.

The               event               turned               into               chaos               when               all               many               kids               wanted               to               do               was               "krump."               the               latest               street               dance               craze.
               South               Africa's               President               Jacob               Zuma               hardly               made               the               ceremony               a               priority,               showing               up               three               hours               late               after               most               of               the               crowd               left               in               the               company               of               Julius               Malema,               the               controversial               head               of               the               ANC's               Youth               League.

Malema               claims               to               be               a               youth               leader               but               he               is               more               like               a               demagogic               politician               who               has               learned               that               the               more               outrageous               his               statements,               the               more               "militant"               his               pose,               the               more               publicity               he               gets.

Sadly               the               media               can't               get               enough               of               his               provocations.
               He               and               his               League               are               certainly               not               doing               much               of               a               practical               sort               to               improve               education               or               create               jobs               for               tens               of               thousands               of               unemployed               and               perhaps               unemployable               young               people               who               cheer               his               rhetoric               while               being               stuck               in               lives               of               crime               and               desperation.
               Here               in               Durban,               one               newspaper               says               "the               youth               today               mistake               nastiness,               name-calling.

crass               materialism               and               the               sale               of               political               office               to               the               highest               bidder               for               revolutionary               thought."               Some               of               those               demanding               more               youth               leadership               are               being               dismissed               as               "Gucci               revolutionaries."
               Their               demand               to               nationalize               the               mines               without               compensation,               a               demand               rejected               by               the               ANC,               is               seen               as               radical               to               some               but               analysts               think               it               is               a               ploy               to               shake               down               patronage               payments               out               of               worried               business               leaders,               some               of               whom               have               already               made               them.

A               bigger               problem               would               occur               if               this               demand               was               ever               realized               because               `the               government               has               a               poor               record               of               running               industries               in               the               so-called               "para-statals"               like               ESCOM,               the               electricity               monopoly               with               its               frequent               mishaps.
               A               new               book,               "Zuma's               Own               Goal,"               (Africa               World               Press)               picturing               the               president               playing               soccer               on               the               cover,               details               the               miserable               failures               of               the               ANC's               poverty               reduction               strategies               arguing               its               continuing               loyalty               to               neo-liberal               policies               are               responsible               for               a               still               widening               gap               between               rich               and               Poor
               South               Africa               was               rebranded               though               last               year's               World               Cup               that               brought               the               country               so               much               world               attention               and               its               people               so               much               good               cheer.
               But               now,               the               people               are               left               with               enormous               debts               to               pay               off               for               the               construction               of               fancy               stadiums               that               are               barely               used.

The               global               financial               crisis               has               now               hit               home               with               poverty               up               and               foreign               investments               down.
               The               "Rainbow               Nation,               the               hope               of               so               many               with               the               fall               of               apartheid,               faces               enormous               challenges               from               structural               economic               issues               that               are               increasingly               intractable,               even               as               protests               mount.
               My               new               friend               Pony               may               be               oblivious               to               this               swirl               of               contradictions               but               is               bound               to               be               affected               by               them.
               News               Dissector               Danny               Schechter               produced               a               South               Africa               Now               TV               series               and               directed               several               films               about               Nelson               Mandela.

The               link               to               his               weekly               PRN               radio               show               can               be               found               here.

Comments               to               dissector@mediachannel.org.

"Don't               Know               Much               About               History,"               is               a               line               from               an               R&B               classic               sung               by               Sam               Cooke.






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