LAST Sunday, President Jacob Zuma told guests at his official Pretoria residence that South Africans were lazy and immigrants seemed to work harder, and that there was basically no difference between public funds spent on his home at Nkandla and the George airport, which he claimed had been built to suit former president PW Botha.
These remarks were apparently made off-the-cuff. Zuma has been known to do this from time to time and some commentators have suggested that, for all their idiocy, these unscripted offerings nevertheless offer interesting insights into the President's thinking. Here at the Mahogany Ridge we regard that as an overly generous assessment of a situation in which the man has once again just blurted out the first thing that came to his head.
His audience in this case was a group of senior journalists, and the occasion was the commemoration of Black Wednesday - October 19, 1977 - when the apartheid government shut down The World and Weekend World newspapers.
Which is perhaps why, in another off-the-cuff guff, Zuma declared that if he were a reporter he would write to South Africans to say, "Wake up."
It was a baffling admission. Why should they wake up? Wouldn't they already be awake if they were reading the newspaper? What's happening? What are they missing? The coffee's ready? Time for work? The bed's on fire?
These are the sort of details that newspaper readers would expect in a report that urged them to wake up. Perhaps senior journalists don't like to work on Sundays, but I can't help feeling that they let the side down a bit by not pressing the big guy for wee bit more information.