The events in Parliament at the State of the Nation was nothing short of appalling. Much time will be spent analysing how this could have happened; what we do now; and, what this means for the future of our democracy.
That is good and timely. Parliament has been decaying since its democratic rebirth, hollowed out with each term our people's representatives grew fat on the backs of the people. As it became incrementally more moribund, South Africans chose to ignore that place rather than react to its consistent, though gradual, decline.
Unsurprisingly, the arrival of the EFF - and the chaos they have unleashed - has changed that. And not for the better. Though we now monitor what our legislators do more carefully, that their sizzle rather than their substance commands our attention is deeply disturbing. It creates the perverse incentive that the EFF seems only happy to take up: the more outlandishly they behave, the more likely we are to listen. It is a dangerous precedent.
And, equally dangerous, is the heavy-handed way in which the ANC is responding. The party has, over time, blurred the distinction between itself and the state. Government may have diluted its commitment to Marxism but it has not reneged its Leninist organisational discipline. However, whereas it previously pretended that such distinctions do exist and, on occasion, even respected them, the signal jamming in the Chamber, the presence of armed police on the floor, and the Speaker's partisan deference to the Executive, all speaks to something more malicious.
The ANC is no longer interested in pretending that it cares. And as the party starts to increasingly lose power - threatening the patronage network upon built - it will get more aggressive as it tries to hold onto power. The use of the loaded-term cockroach, long linked with genocides, is not coincidental.
Our politics is polarising even more than it has been previously. And as it does, the ability for rational discourse diminishes. Nuance is being snuffed out for the sake of simplistic, and thus dangerous, responses.