SINCE they've been brought to our attention with such emphasis, I suppose we must comment on the ruling party's backsides.
It was, you'll recall, Water and Sanitation Minister Nomvula Mokonyane who did so last weekend at the launch of a reticulation plant in Mpumalanga, when she promised that ANC members would use their booties to rally around a beleaguered President Jacob Zuma.
Or, as she put it, "The attack is not on Zuma, it is on the ANC. Re tlo thiba ka dibano [We will defend with our buttocks.]"
A number of commentators have since pointed out that Mokonyane was using a Sotho idiom in her address. No less an authority than Dr Rehabile Possa, of the School of Languages and Literatures at the University of Cape Town, was press-ganged into service to inform readers of The Star that the minister's comments were not to be taken literally. "This means: ‘We shall fight with everything. We will never give up.' It's not just a fight that people fight under normal circumstances, it's a very serious fight," she said.
So, nerves duly settled, etc. And here at the Mahogany Ridge we were grateful for the explanation because, shame, some of us really did believe that - forgive me - a massive rearguard action was in the offing.
There was an admittedly colourful discussion about the logistics and mechanics involved in such a deployment - the ars of it all, as the Latin scholars would say - before the regulars agreed that perhaps some of the more redoubtable ANC members could just sit on the President's detractors to shut them up. (No need for fat-shaming here; they know who they are.)