It looks as though the political rallying cry for Mangaung and very probably for the next election is the rather vague "economic freedom in our lifetime". Popularised by former ANCYL leader Julius Malema, it's an obvious derivative of Nelson Mandela's "Freedom in our Lifetime" from way back in the mid 1950's following the adoption of the Freedom Charter.
By tacking the word "economic" onto the original phrase the ANCYL evidently hope to exploit the frustrations of the poor and unemployed. It's a cynical ploy because I have yet to meet somebody who can explain succinctly what the phrase "economic freedom" means. For Julius Malema it clearly means the right to make as much money as possible by any means possible without the interference of the Hawks or the Receiver of Revenue.
I suspect that Malema's typical audience interpret economic freedom as meaning they would have access to as much money as they want, whenever they want and without all that nonsense of having to pay interest or repay the money. And why would the ANC disabuse them of that interpretation if it means guaranteeing votes at the next election?
After all, the gullible electorate have fallen for all sorts of promises before so there's absolutely no reason to believe that they won't go into the next election believing that the ruling party are about to hand out free money.
Of course if the ANC decided, for once, to play their cards straight with their voters they really could offer hope of economic freedom but probably not in this lifetime. But to do that they would need to face up to economic reality; something they have been reluctant to do these past 18 years.
I've always been amused at the quaint idea that a job is a human right. It isn't and it never has been. You only have to look at the growing number of unemployed in countries like Spain to realise that jobs are totally dependent on the state of the economy. If tens of thousands of Brits want to buy a holiday home in southern Spain then the building industry will do well which will mean that industries that feed the building industry will also do well.