THERE is, as the American critic Paul Fussell once said, nothing more depressing than optimism. It's something we're well aware of here at the Mahogany Ridge where, to our eternal regret, the glass is only for the briefest moment either half-full or half-empty but thereafter -- and for quite some time, I hasten to add -- rather forlorn and empty.
The bartender's appalling service aside, what set us all pondering on the lunacy of maintaining that all is tops when, in fact, it's quite the opposite, was the reaction from certain quarters to the "pessimistic" cover story on South Africa and the scathing assessment of the country's prospects in last week's issue of The Economist.
The Presidency's Mac Maharaj was first out of the blocks -- and hard at it, too, claiming the magazine was misleading its readers into thinking we were all basket-casing here at an unseemly clip. Predictably, he maintained the opposite was the case. The country, Maharaj said, was moving towards prosperity "under the very able leadership" of President Jacob Zuma and his government.
This was despite a downgrade from a couple of ratings agencies, which in the grand scheme of things -- what with all that nasty economic upheaval in the world at large -- was nothing really but the merest of mere trifles and as inconsequential as the flatus of a fruit fly in a thunderstorm.
"We will," he said, "face hiccups here and there, and now and then because of existing inequalities and poverty and the economic climate globally, but we remain firmly focused on building a united, non-racial, non-sexist democratic and prosperous South Africa."
Was Maharaj being serious? He was. And so was the Finance minister, Pravin Gordhan, when he told reporters, before delivering his medium-term budget speech, that pessimism about the country's political future ahead of the ruling party's elective confererence in Mangaung in December was "misplaced".