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posted ago by purkiss80 ago by purkiss80 +34 / -0

"The question is what happens when decline becomes permanent.

For more than thirty years we have adapted to failure.

When electricity failed, we adapted.

When policing failed, we adapted.

When municipalities failed, we adapted.

When water systems failed, we adapted.

When roads deteriorated, we adapted.

When corruption was exposed, we adapted.

Every crisis became another inconvenience to work around.

Every failure became another expense.

Every expense became another sacrifice.

What we call resilience today would have been considered unacceptable twenty years ago.

The danger is not the collapse of institutions.

The danger is the collapse of expectations.

South Africans no longer expect functioning municipalities.

South Africans no longer expect reliable electricity.

South Africans no longer expect effective policing.

South Africans no longer expect government accountability.

We expect failure and then congratulate ourselves for surviving it.

That is not resilience.

That is surrender disguised as resilience.

The average South African is now paying to replace functions that government was created to provide.

Private security.

Solar systems.

Generators.

Water tanks.

Boreholes.

Medical aid.

Private education.

Armed response.

Tracking systems.

Insurance products designed around government failure.

Every year more responsibility moves to the citizen.

Every year more authority remains with the state.

That is the imbalance nobody is discussing.

A citizen who spends most of his income defending himself from decline is not building a future.

He is preserving the present.

His children inherit the same burden.

Then their children inherit it again.

Eventually an entire generation grows up believing this is simply how a country operates.

That is the true danger.

Not that South Africa collapses tomorrow.

Not that there is some dramatic event on the horizon.

But that decline becomes institutionalised.

Permanent.

Accepted.

Normal.

History shows that societies rarely lose their freedoms all at once.

They lose them gradually as independence becomes more expensive and dependence becomes more necessary.

The question South Africans should be asking is not whether the country is getting worse.

The evidence already answers that.

The question is this:

At what point does survival stop being resilience and start becoming acceptance?

Because once a nation accepts deterioration as normal, the battle is no longer against corruption, crime, failing infrastructure or incompetent governance.

The battle is against the belief that nothing better is possible.

And that is the moment decline stops being temporary and becomes a way of life."

Written by Shaun Schutte 14 June 2026”