What is one to make of a trade union boss who argues that threatening to kill for political advantage is an acceptable tactic of democractic "contestation"?

How are we to understand the leaders of a party who feel compelled to undermine and discredit the legal system that their party's struggle ushered into being?

Or who aim their heavy rhetorical weaponry at the Human Rights Commission, which was set up to guard against the very iniquities their movement fought against?

What about the police and the intelligence services at war with the Scorpions and desperate to protect the hopelessly compromised police commissioner?

How are we to understand a man who expects to be president of the country and who is already president of this extraordinary, hegemonic party of the people? Why can he find nothing meaningful to say about any of it?

Are Jacob Zuma and his court simply bereft of political talent, or should we ascribe all their finely honed contradictions to the special logical apparatus of communists and other vanguard intellectuals?

That realm of abstraction is inaccessible to us, but we suspect it is not really as complicated as it seems.

Here's a handy guide -- stick it to your fridge if you think it will help.

  • ANC president Jacob Zuma is determined to move from Luthuli House to the Union Buildings. He is prepared to do just about anything to ensure that nothing stands in his way.
  • The real obstacles in his path, however, are so various, and his need for backing so overwhelming, that he won't speak out against even the most outrageous tactics employed in his support; alternatively he will offer "criticism" so lily-livered as to be meaningless.
  • Many leaders of the ANC and its left-wing allies are avid for the government jobs that will open up after next year's elections. They know their best bet is to put Zuma deeply in their debt and ensure that he becomes president of payback time.
  • To achieve this they must attack any person or institution that stands in his way and support any person or institution that strengthens him.

With this background in mind, understanding things is easier.

  • Judge John Hlophe stands accused of trying to subvert the ­Constitutional Court. But he is a Zuma ally, so he must be supported.
  • ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema undermines the rule of law, not to mention basic democratic norms, by calling for people to kill for Zuma. But he is a Zuma ally, so he must be supported.
  • The Human Rights Commission, a constitutionally protected body, demands that Malema apologise for his remarks. No apology must be given; indeed, the HRC must also be attacked.

So ours is really a simple story about ambitious careerists putting their interests above those of society. Sounds like classic bourgeois behaviour to us ...

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