Keywords results

Terence Corrigan reflects on events at UCT and the deeper history of racialism disincentivising reasonable disagreement
Terence Corrigan says ANC more devoted to an Africanist, rather than a civic-nationalist interpretation, of post-apartheid SA
Erica Emdon on the life of the journalist, father, husband, and white bull terrier lover
Terence Corrigan says commercial farmers – white, black or any other hue – are a necessity to provide for country, and will remain so
Jeremy Gordin writes on the parallels between the riotous London of 1780 and SA of today
John will be remembered as the CEO of the South African Institute of Race Relations and as a fierce and vocal defender of liberalism
Andrew Donaldson writes on statues to the great and not so good, and Carl Niehaus on a plinth
James Myburgh on coming to terms with the character of our liberation movement, post-Zondo
RW Johnson says understanding the widening wealth gap since 1994 requires understanding the ANC's project
Andrew Donaldson says President Ramaphosa could clean out his executive, but who'd he bring in?
Michael Cardo writes on the UCT SRC's call for the changing of the name of Smuts Hall
Hermann Giliomee on the Stellenbosch University management's ongoing efforts to downgrade Afrikaans at the institution
RW Johnson says the insatiable demands of local ANC political machines have sucked our towns and cities dry
Dave Steward says media, Anglican Church and SAHRC are still failing to stand up against EFF boer-baiting
David Bullard relates the terrifying stories he has been hearing over the past few months
RW Johnson says at a time of national crisis too many intellectuals are peddling racial diversions
Andrew Donaldson writes on the ANC SG's outrage over Covid-19 corruption
Andrew Donaldson on NDZ's plan to turn us into a nation of informers
John Kane-Berman writes on the surrender of Western elites to Woke iconoclasm
Paul Trewhela writes on academic freedom under threat in SA
Gareth van Onselen writes on how the ANC venerates, defends and rewrites history when it comes to its own
James Myburgh tells the story of how UCT handled the dispute between a student activist and one of its leading academics