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16 DAYS: Please Help to Break the Chain

Once upon a time when I still had time to watch Oprah, she did a show on child pornography in America: she showed a map with one red dot representing the origin of one pornographic picture of a little girl and within 24 hours the map of America was a vivid red. Most – yes most – of the perpetrators were doing this to their own daughters. Others drugged their daughter’s friends on sleep overs. There are even instruction manuals that catered for all ages starting when they are months old. On these videos you can often hear the girls crying.

This is in America where they are very much aware of what is going on but don’t have the resources to follow all the leads they have, one can only imagine our situation. You know that women get traded like commodities right? I’m blond and thus I would apparently fetch about R 20 000 in Africa, at least I was told that once when I was twenty-one.  The idea is as absurd as it it is real. Women and child abuse in South Africa, if plotted, would paint our map blood red and to me the most frustrating part is the amount of women who either go back or unfailingly choose the same type of boyfriend. So what can you do when someone you know is abused?

Most cities have Domestic Violence Centres which offer a very radical remedy: an all prevailing principle in law is that both sides of a story must heard before a judgment may be taken. At DV, an interdict preventing contact with the victim simultaneously with a interim maintenance order can be made on the victim’s say-so alone by merely filling in a form – the victim never even sees the magistrate who makes the order. A return date is given where the accused may state his case.  Should he contravene the order he may be arrested immediately.

Obviously it’s not this simple: if he knows someone at the local police station, the police may refuse to arrest him, fucked-up but true. My favourite episode at the DV was when a Muslim man stormed in and started yelling at the councillor: how could they tell him not to hit his children when it was his right to discipline them? So he broke the kid’s collarbone – next  time he’ll listen to his father.

The Muslim man broke my stereo-type but many more exit: I live in a well-to-do neighbourhood and the stories that I can tell are just as dark, the shame even thicker. One woman who lived in a white palace with high walls nearby, was kicked down the stairs one too many times so she gassed herself in her car. Abuse is a psychological game that knows no discrimination – it’s everywhere. And that’s why it should be the community who stands up against those who perpetrate these crimes – we should not allow the purposeful isolation that perpetrators contrive to enable then to keep a psychological noose around the victim’s throat.

Please be aware and when you do see something amiss, don’t turn a blind eye – get involved because it is always your place. Another way to help is to support the 16 Days 16 Charities drive: they provide a wide variety of services and are an important stepping stone for those who have nowhere else to go and no-one to ask. Please check it out.

16 Days of activism

Peasants Raisng Their Own Taxes For The Sheriff?

It’s winter and so I’m more aware of beggars than usual. In Joburg they’re everywhere but have you ever considered them and their trade? Every so often most people give them money, an exchange happens, a transaction of sorts – that is after all the point of money; a tool facilitating bartering. What is it that we, the givers of money buy exactly? Do we buy absolution from illogical guilt? Do we buy self-esteem? Perhaps we buy our own little pat on the back because giving to the poor makes you a Good Person.

Whatever the trade, a ‘poor’ person selling his poverty and a ‘rich’ person buying it is at least reasonably logical. But what I find fascinating is ‘rich’ people who sell poverty to ‘poor’ or at least ‘poorer’ people – and they buy it! One such a man lives in a good neighbourhood, drives an expensive car and although he certainly doesn’t charter jets, anyone with one waking brain cell can see that the man is not in dire straights. Yet whenever he receives a service or goods are bought, he will complain to high heavens of all the bills he has to pay. Not all his debt mind you – never would he tarnish himself with the foul stuff, it’s his bills that become due and payable in due course which he laments to all within ear shot. And so he bargains, gets discount or leave to pay at a later stage interest free and this is obviously long after be had bargained down the original price already.

Smart man? Warren Buffet is probably the most famous example of such a man; he is forever evaluating value for money and only buys when he believes that he is getting a bargain. He’s certainly not doing so badly.

But there is a problem; a profound crisis of authenticity. If someone feels cheated – even when he agreed of his own free will – he is bound to compensate. He may refuse to work with the ‘rich’ person again or he may only deliver the quality or quantity of work he feels is truly justified by the tender received. So when the rich guy thinks he’s winning he shooting himself in the foot really.

Yet it happens every day; the rich selling poverty – quite fascinating in itself but that people actually buy it when they’re free to say no? I’m sure even Adam Smith would reconsider the rationality of consumers.