A broad disenchantment with South Africa's new society has been seeping into the national consciousness. That's not new. What is remarkable, however, is how pervasive this toxic seepage now is, and how it is poisoning the national mood.
Again and again, one is struck by the dismay of those who so recently greeted the rainbow nation with euphoria. Now they despair at the murky tide of corruption, avarice, graft and ineptitude that seems to have washed away all their great expectations.
My own attention was drawn to this, again, recently, when the following quote dropped into my email inbox:
"You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it."
In these words the late American evangelist Adrian Rogers distils the notion that national development is not a zero-sum game: you cannot improve the lot of the poor by that which you take away from the rich. Put another way: if you try to redistribute wealth without first creating new wealth to distribute, you're asking for trouble. History will still show this to be the ANC government's fatal error.
But the friend who sent me the email was making a point of a different kind. He meant to draw my attention to the fact that these were the kinds of thoughts now circulating among those people - many of them white and liberal-minded - who had, in various ways, agitated for the a new deal in South Africa ... who had welcomed its arrival ... and who had thrown themselves with gusto into making the new society work.