Watch: "Why SA Is Falling Apart: No Trust, No Rules, No Social Compact — Here’s the Fix"...

South Africa isn’t short of talent. It’s short of alignment.

In this Weekly Update, we break down the one agreement we’re missing.

The Social Compact.

Why its collapse explains everything we’re living through: low growth, brutal unemployment, broken municipalities, crime, protests, and investors refusing to commit.
What a social compact actually is (and what it isn’t)
The 3 questions every functioning country answers:
  • What are we trying to achieve?
  • Who is responsible for what?
  • What are we willing to give up?
Why SA has “Tick Tick Tick” failure across trust, investment, labour militancy, and fragmentation
  • Why policy becomes erratic when there’s no shared agreement (property, rule of law, contradictions).
  • The real cost: not just economic — social and psychological (cynicism + survival mode).
  • The danger: populism + instability when people stop believing the system works.
  • The rebuild: what government, business, labour and citizens must do next.
Don’t just complain, get involved. Please share this conversation.

Watch the video and make up your own mind - Chris Wilkinson

Watch "Inside Iran’s collapse - and what it means for SA: Iraj Abedian on war, chaos, and geopolitics"...

Economist Iraj Abedian delivers a stark, insider view of Iran’s deepening crisis.

Economic collapse, internal power struggles, and rising global tensions.

As conflict reshapes alliances, he warns of unpredictable fallout and missed opportunities.

With sharp insight, Abedian connects the dots to South Africa, urging urgent policy reset to navigate risk, seize investment potential, and stay grounded in national interest.

Watch the video and decide for yourself - Chris Wilkinson.

Thank you for Sharing. Every Vote DOES count.

We may (or may not) run out of money, but we WILL run out of Time...

We spend much of our lives worrying about money.

How to earn more of it. How to save it. How to stretch it a little further.

We measure success in Dollars, Rands, and cents. 

And we often judge our progress by what sits in our bank accounts.

But there is a deeper truth. 

One that shapes every decision we make:

We may run out of money… but we will run out of time.

We can always earn more money.

Lost fortunes have been rebuilt. Careers restarted. Businesses reborn.

A person can go from nothing to something more than once in a lifetime.

Money, for all its importance, is renewable.

Time is not.

Once a day is gone, it is gone forever.

Once a year passes, we can't recycle it.

There is no savings account for time, no investment that brings it back with interest.

Every moment spent is a moment spent for good.

And yet, we often treat time as if it were limitless, while treating money as if it were scarce.

We delay the things that matter most. We postpone conversations. We put off experiences.

We say, “I’ll do it later". As if later is a guarantee.

We sacrifice hours, days, and years chasing more money.

Sometimes, at the cost of living the very life that money was meant to support.

This is not to say that money doesn’t matter. It does.

It provides security, opportunity, and freedom.

But money is a tool, not the goal. Time is the true currency of life.

The real question is not, “How much money do I have?” but “How am I spending my time?”

Are we investing our time in things that matter? In people who matter?

In work that's meaningful? In moments that bring joy, growth, and connection?

Or are we trading our time too cheaply?

Giving it away to stress, distraction, or pursuits that leave us feeling empty?

There is a quiet wisdom in recognising the difference.

When we understand that time is finite, our priorities begin to shift.

We become more deliberate. More present. More aware of what truly matters.

We begin to choose differently. Not just based on what pays the most, but on what gives the most back to our lives.

You start to see that a simple moment shared with someone you care about may be worth more than any financial gain.

That taking a chance, trying something new, or enjoying where you are right now has value.

Because in the end, it is not the amount of money we accumulated that defines our lives.

It is how we spent our time.

So yes, manage your money wisely.

Earn it, save it, use it well. But guard your time even more carefully.

Spend it with intention. Spend it on what matters.

Because while we may run out of money and find a way to recover…

We will run out of time.

And there are no second chances to spend it again.

With very best wishes,

Chris Wilkinson - Messenger of Hope.

PS. If you enjoyed this article, please Share it with a few friends.

Watch "The ANC Is Incentivized to Keep You Poor. Here’s How the System Really Works!"...

 South Africa’s democracy is producing a war zone.

Crime, 50% unemployment, and collapsing metros. And the same political class keeps returning to power. That’s not “bad luck.” It’s incentives.

In this Weekly Update on the State of the Nation Podcast, we unpack the uncomfortable theory: the ANC’s easiest path to staying powerful is to keep the middle class from growing.

Because the middle class votes for better governance.

Then we look at the “loop”: weak education → no mobility → no growth → dependency + race scapegoating → repeat. We also interrogate the electoral system itself.

Proportional representation was designed to weaken a dominant ANC.

But in 2026, it’s empowering political entrepreneurs and one-seat parties that can hold metros hostage.

Watch the video and make your own choices - Chris Wilkinson.

Watch "Weekly Wrap 24 Apr: Ramaphosa, Masemola, Madlanga, Mnisi, Eskom, SIU, ANC vs SACP, Joburg Crisis"...

 A big week for accountability in South Africa.

Cyril Ramaphosa suspends Fannie Masemola over a major SAPS tender scandal, while questions grow around consistent consequence management. The Madlanga Commission ramps up pressure on figures like Gareth Mnisi and Julius Mkhwanazi, exposing deep corruption networks. Undeclared luxury vehicle benefits linked to Sisi Tolashe and Maropene Ramokgopa spark outrage, while corruption at Eskom sees the Special Investigating Unit move to recover funds. Political tensions rise between the African National Congress and South African Communist Party, as governance failures deepen in City of Johannesburg.

Watch the video and make up your own mind - Chris Wilkinson.

From Complaining to Contributing...

Complaining is easy. We all do it.

We talk about what’s broken, what’s not working, and who’s to blame.

For a moment, it feels good. Like we’ve done something.

But nothing changes.

Complaints highlight problems, but they don’t solve them.

And when complaining becomes a habit, it slowly turns into something more damaging.

Cynicism.

We begin to believe that nothing will improve. So we settle into frustration instead of action.

There is another option: Contributing.

Contributing starts with a simple shift in thinking.

Instead of asking, “Why doesn’t someone fix this?” we ask, “What can I do?”

That question moves us from passive observers to active participants.

Contribution doesn’t require power or status.

  • It starts small. 
  • Staying informed. 
  • Voting. 
  • Speaking up. 
  • Supporting what works. 
  • Challenging what doesn’t. 
  • Taking responsibility, not just demanding it from others.

It also means setting an example.

When people see action instead of complaints, it changes the tone.

It encourages others to step forward.

Progress rarely comes from noise. It comes from effort.

This doesn’t mean ignoring problems.

It means facing them with the intention to improve, not just criticise.

Because in the end, nothing improves when everyone complains and no one contributes.

But when even a few people choose to act, things begin to move.

The choice is always there: add to the noise, or add to the solution.

With very best wishes,

Chris Wilkinson - Messenger of Hope.

PS. If you enjoyed this article, please Share it with a few friends.


What Happens When We Don’t Pay Attention...

Nothing dramatic happens at first.

There’s no sudden collapse, no clear moment where everything goes wrong.

Instead, it happens quietly.

  • We stop paying attention to politics. 
  • We switch off the news. 
  • We decide it’s not worth the effort. 
  • Life carries on.

But beneath the surface, things begin to change.

When we don’t pay attention, accountability weakens.

Decisions are made with less scrutiny.

Standards begin to slip. Not all at once, but gradually.

Small issues are ignored, small failures overlooked.

Until they become bigger problems that are harder to fix.

Power doesn’t disappear when people disengage. It concentrates.

Fewer voices are heard, and those who remain involved gain more influence.

When the majority steps back, the direction of a country is shaped by a smaller and smaller group.

And then we start to feel it.

  • Services don’t work as they should. 
  • Costs increase. 
  • Frustrations grow. 
  • We complain more.
  • But with less impact. 
  • Because we have removed ourselves from the process that creates change.

Communities also lose their voice. 

  • Local issues are neglected. 
  • The gap between decision-makers and ordinary people widens. 
  • Trust begins to erode. 
  • Replaced by frustration and, eventually, apathy.

Perhaps the most lasting effect is cultural.

When disengagement becomes normal, the next generation learns to do the same.

Politics becomes something to ignore rather than something to shape.

And with that, the belief that things can improve starts to fade.

This happens not because people made the wrong choices.

But because too many stopped making any choices at all.

The truth is simple: when we don’t take an interest, we don’t escape the consequences, we invite them.

What we ignore does not go away.

It grows, slowly and steadily, until it affects us whether we like it or not.

And by then, it is much harder to change.

With very best wishes,

Chris Wilkinson - Messenger of Hope.

PS. If you enjoyed this article, please Share it with a few friends.

Watch "Elon Musk vs BEE: The explosive debate that could change South Africa forever"...

 From Elon Musk’s Pretoria beginnings to global dominance, this conversation dives into power, policy, and South Africa’s economic crossroads.

Solidarity’s Dirk Hermann unpacks the growing backlash against BEE, arguing it stifles jobs, fuels elite enrichment, and deters investment.

With pressure mounting from markets, citizens, and international players, is reform inevitable?

A sharp, thought-provoking look at race, economics, and the battle over South Africa’s future direction.

Watch the video and decide for yourself - Chris Wilkinson.

Watch "MAGNUS HEYSTEK & ROB HERSOV: How to Protect your Offshore Money from the South African Government"...

South Africans are being told everything is fine. The numbers say the opposite.

Magnus Heystek breaks down the uncomfortable truth about wealth destruction, capital flight, and why smart money moved early.

In this hard-hitting conversation with Rob Hersov, Heystek exposes how the rand’s long-term decline, failing infrastructure, and policy missteps have quietly eroded generational wealth.

From collapsing property values to rising debt and shrinking tax bases, this is the reality few are willing to say out loud. More importantly, he explains what investors can actually do about it.

From offshore diversification to structuring wealth for long-term protection. This is not theory. This is what has already happened. If you care about your financial future in South Africa, you need to hear this.

Watch "Geordin Hill-Lewis Acceptance Speech as DA Federal Leader : Strong Enough to Win"...

The newly elected DA Federal Leader, Geordin Hill-Lewis, delivers his acceptance speech with a powerful pledge: Getting South Africa Working.

We are building a stronger DA for a stronger South Africa. A new chapter starts now.

Watch the video and make up your own mind - Chris Wilkinson

https://www.chriswilko.com/2025/06/hope-is-more-than-just-four-letter-word.html

The Third Generation: A South Africa Ready to Blossom...

I have lived long enough to witness two very different South Africas. I have survived 30 years of Apartheid and another 30 years of what we ...