You will all be relieved to hear that I have decided to turn over a new leaf. After the enormous response to last week's column (159 comments at last count and not a sign of the ubiquitous Lyndall Beddy) I now realise the error of my ways. Instead of constantly carping about this beautiful land and offering no solutions I have resolved this week to concentrate on the positives. Rather like Admiral Lord Nelson I shall put the telescope to my blind eye and announce loudly "I see no shits".
I can't guarantee that I will be able to keep this pretence up for long but I am less than a month off my 60th birthday and at this grand age I am told (by fellow sexagenerians like JG) we should be mellow and past caring. After all, we've done our best to make the world a better place and now it's up to you youngsters. We old codgers just want a comfortable rocking chair, the odd boozy lunch and time with our memories.
We realise that anything we have to say has absolutely no value coming, as it does, from decades of experience, the remembrance of which is dimmed by a lifetime's consumption of alcohol, fatty foods and recreational drug usage. We are, after all, the cream of the baby boomer generation.
So let's cut straight to the chase and talk about corruption. Yes, it's true that billions of rands which could have gone to uplift the poor have found their way into the bank accounts of a few opportunistic struggle heroes. So what? As Pravin Gordhan recently pointed out, there are still many billions that haven't yet been stolen and will be put to good use creating new jobs within the civil service.
Besides, have you ever known the poor to use money wisely? Of course you haven't which is precisely why they are poor. If those billions of rands hadn't moved in unusual directions and been used to fuel the recovery of the luxury car market they would almost certainly have been squandered on things like food and cheap housing.
Our banking system is one of the finest in the world and while other countries flounder about looking for handouts and printing money we are in the happy position of not having to even look up the word austerity. Money is both plentiful and cheap here on the southern tip and the good news is that there's a lot more where that came from.