Chapter XII | The Risen Judah


Months passed. Governments fell. Borders shifted. A quiet, radiant order began to emerge — not centralized, but cellular, like roots beneath the soil. Communities organised themselves around new principles of stewardship, art, and spiritual governance.  



Months passed. Governments fell. Borders shifted. A quiet, radiant order began to emerge — not centralized, but cellular, like roots beneath the soil. Communities organised themselves around new principles of stewardship, art, and spiritual governance.  

Noluntu withdrew from the public eye. Rumors said she’d gone to the mountains of Lesotho, others that she’d vanished into the deserts of Namibia. But those who had known her said she hadn’t disappeared — she had expanded.

Her book was finally published — The Book of Fire and Memory. It read like scripture but moved like poetry. Each chapter ended with a prayer disguised as a riddle:  

“To build a kingdom, first recall the ruins. 
To heal a people, first see their ghosts.” 

Its final line simply read: “Judáh is not a nation. It is a consciousness.”



Years later, a child in Alexandria, Egypt, opened a digital archive and found a recording titled Voice of Noluntu. In it, her tone was serene, eternal.  

“I am; 

in the wind that carries the drums,  
in the data that remembers freedom,  
in the hearts that dream of Africa awake. 

Rise, Judáh.  
Rise, and remember.”  

The transmission spread through the net like dawn. In Lagos, Nairobi, Kigali, and Cape Town, people paused and looked east. The sun rose blood-red, fierce, alive.  

And for the first time in millennia, the continent breathed as one.



Epilogue


Centuries later, scholars would debate whether The Rising of Judáh was history, myth, or prophecy. But among the villages, they still sang the Song of Noluntu — the one who remembered for them all.

And on certain mornings, when the mist hung low over the mountains, people swore they saw it: Two suns rising side by side.


Author’s Note



To Quench the Fire and Falling for Sadé are two suns rising from the same horizon of my life — one born of vision, the other of memory. Orbiting the same heart.

Similarly, the story of Asher and Noluntu is a meditation on counterparts who have met and remembered each other across ages, drawn together not for possession but for awakening. To Quench the Fire carries the echo of that love through prophecy and revelation, while Falling for Sadé lingers in its quieter chambers — in the pulse of devotion, and in the holy ordinary of love made flesh.

Together, they tell the same story in different tongues: of fire that refines, and love that endures beyond the worlds that burn.


Feeding the Flame

This collection of writings and recipes traces the arc of a love deeply lived and gently released. Each piece captures a moment, like polaroids on a kitchen table, paired with a recipe from my former co-conspirator, his way of telling our story through food.

Together, we form a diary in flavour and feeling, for anyone who has cooked, cried, laughed, left, and remembered.


Oleleshrooms

(Mushroom and Spinach Ragout on Fusilli)

“I tell you what,” he said jokingly as he wiped his lip. “In my next life, I’m gonna be a cook.”

– To the Cook

Ingredients:

  • Fusilli pasta, pre-cooked al dente, drizzled with olive oil and set aside
  • Mixed wild mushrooms (any available; include Chinese tree mushrooms if possible)
  • Baby spinach leaves, washed, dried, and torn into smaller pieces
  • Onions, finely chopped
  • Garlic, finely chopped
  • 1 glass dry red wine
  • Brown sauce mix
  • Hungarian spice mix
  • Salt and pepper (to taste)
  • Parmesan cheese
  • Sour cream
  • Fresh parsley (for garnish)
  • Freshly ground black pepper (for serving)
Oleleshrooms (Mushroom and Spinach Ragout on Fusilli)

Instructions:

  1. Pre-cook fusilli until al dente, drizzle with olive oil, and set aside.
  2. Sauté onions and garlic in a pan until golden brown.
  3. Add the mushrooms and spinach; stir thoroughly.
  4. Pour in the red wine, then add brown sauce mix, Hungarian spice mix, salt, and pepper.
  5. Cook until the sauce thickens.
  6. Stir in parmesan cheese and sour cream. Sprinkle parsley on top.
  7. Place the fusilli in a pasta dish and spoon the ragout over it.
  8. Offer freshly ground black pepper at the table.

From Lion’s Gate, With Love

(Pizza)

“In the hush between lifetimes,
I found you. By finding myself.

Thirty-five years ahead
and somehow, we arrived together.”

Daddy’s Girl

Ingredients:

  • 1 pizza base
    • Base sauce:
      • Tomato purée
      • Salt
      • Pepper
      • Chopped garlic
      • Crushed dried chillies
      • Italian spice mix
      • Dash of Habanero sauce
    • Fresh mushrooms, sliced
    • Onion, sliced
    • ½ avocado, sliced
    • 1 packet shredded mozzarella cheese
    • 18 Calamata olives
    • Baby spinach leaves, washed, dried, and chopped

Preparation:

  1. Precook the mushrooms, drain excess liquid, and set aside.
  2. Prepare the base sauce by mixing tomato purée, salt, pepper, chopped garlic, crushed dried chillies, Italian spice mix, and a dash of Habanero sauce in a small dish. Set aside.
  3. Slice fresh mushrooms and onions, and half an avocado.
From Lion’s Gate, With Love (Pizza)

Instructions:

  1. Spread the prepared sauce evenly over the pizza base.
  2. Layer mushrooms, spinach, and onions over the sauce.
  3. Cover with shredded mozzarella cheese, then evenly place avocado slices and olives on top.
  4. Bake in the oven at 200°C for about 20 minutes, or until the cheese is molten and medium brown.
  5. Transfer to a flat pizza plate and cut into eight equal slices with a roller cutter.
  6. Offer freshly ground black pepper at the table.

Orgasmic

(Fresh, warm liquid eggs from the tap)

“Small rituals of belonging to you.

One. No perfume.”

– Devotion

Ingredients:

  • Trust
  • Patience
  • Tenderness
  • Presence

Instructions:

  1. Offer without hesitation.
  2. Let it flow freely.
  3. Savour with open senses and an open heart.
  4. No utensils or seasoning needed.

Daddy’s Rice

(Spicy Rice and a Medley of Veggies)

“And then, that smile that always comes before your honesty:


“I don’t believe in God — But I’ve borrowed my father’s truth:
Help yourself, so help you God.” “

Who Tends To The Gardener?

Ingredients:

  • Long-grain rice, cooked until al dente and set aside
  • Onions, finely chopped
  • Garlic, finely chopped
  • Crispy pre-fried onions
  • Fresh vegetables (any available, similar to stir-fry vegetables), sliced
  • Butter (for sautéing vegetables)
  • Vegetable oil
  • Hot curry powder
  • Cayenne pepper
  • Salt
  • White pepper
  • Vegetable stock powder
  • Habanero sauce (to taste)
  • Freshly ground black pepper (for serving)

Preparation:

  1. Cook the rice until al dente and set aside.
  2. Finely chop onions and garlic.
  3. Slice fresh vegetables of your choice (similar to stir-fry vegetables), sauté them in butter, keep warm, and set aside.
Daddy’s Rice (Spicy Rice and a Medley of Veggies)

Instructions:

  1. In a pan, heat vegetable oil and add both the raw and crispy pre-fried onions along with garlic. Fry until the onions start to brown.
  2. Add the cooked rice and mix with the onion mixture.
  3. Season with hot curry powder, cayenne pepper, salt, white pepper, vegetable stock powder, and Habanero sauce to taste.
  4. Mix thoroughly, then plate the rice on a flat dish.
  5. Arrange the sautéed vegetables on top and offer freshly ground black pepper.

Between the Buns

(Burger)

“I surrendered — arching, trembling, gripping, dissolving.

Room became sky, and I — Ocean.”

Vanilla

Ingredients:

  • Mayonnaise
  • Lemon juice
  • Creamed horseradish
  • Ketchup
  • Salt
  • Cayenne pepper
  • Dill
  • Large sesame burger bun (halved)
  • Tomatoes, thinly sliced
  • Pickled gherkins, thinly sliced
  • Onions, thinly sliced
  • Crispy lettuce leaves, washed and dried
  • 1 hard-boiled egg, sliced
  • 2 slices Emmenthaler cheese
  • Mushrooms, sliced
  • Red wine (a few dashes)
  • Hot water (small amount)
  • Brown sauce (or a stock cube dissolved in water)
  • Tabasco Sriracha sauce
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Preparation:

  1. Mix mayonnaise with lemon juice, creamed horseradish, ketchup, salt, cayenne pepper, and dill. Set aside.
  2. Lightly toast both halves of the sesame burger bun and set aside.
  3. Prepare the toppings: slice tomatoes, pickled gherkins, onions, and the hard-boiled egg. Set aside the lettuce leaves and Emmenthaler cheese slices.
  4. In a small pan, cook sliced mushrooms with a few dashes of red wine. Add a little hot water and stir in brown sauce (or a dissolved stock cube). Season with salt and pepper, and cook until the sauce thickens.
Between the Buns (Burger)

Instructions:

  1. Spread the prepared pink sauce over each toasted bun half.
  2. Layer with lettuce, tomato, gherkin, onion, and egg slices.
  3. Spoon over the thickened mushroom sauce, then place the cheese slices on top.
  4. Air-fry both halves at 200°C for about 1 minute, or until the cheese begins to melt.
  5. Finish with red dots of Tabasco Sriracha and offer freshly ground black pepper.

Le-love-le

(Mixed Salad)

“But when he looked at her in that boyish way, full of humour and mischief, she could not resist. Her face shone as she shook her head and laughed generously. It was a warm laughter that took over her whole body.”

Mine

Dressing (prepare in advance):

  • Balsamic vinegar
  • Salt
  • White pepper
  • White sugar
  • Dash of water
  • Olive oil
  • Parmesan cheese
  • Crushed garlic

Salad Ingredients:

  • Tomatoes, sliced
  • Cucumber, sliced
  • Freshly boiled egg, sliced
  • Onions, sliced
  • Coleslaw (generous portion)
  • Optional: crispy lettuce, cubed spanspek melon (refreshing in summer), Emmenthaler cheese
Le-love-le (Mixed Salad)

Instructions:

  1. Prepare the dressing in advance and set aside.
  2. Slice the salad ingredients and combine them in the dressing.
  3. Toss gently to coat, then serve in a deep bowl.
  4. Offer freshly ground black pepper at the table.

Lelelicious

(Stir-fry)

“The landscape below stretched open in worship. Sunlight rested tenderly over the Creation of a Holy God. On the wall above the bed, a singular Chinese fan opened like a celestial wing – part shade, part sentinel, part grace.

Life breathed into the room, slow and sacred. The space had a mythic stillness, as if time bent slightly around it.”

Swords

Ingredients:

  • Penne (or spaghetti), pre-cooked and set aside
  • Mushrooms, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Onions, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Red peppers, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Yellow peppers, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Fresh red chillies, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Baby marrows, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Petit pans, sliced (slightly chunky)
  • Baby spinach leaves, washed and dried

Spices & Sauces:

  • Green Kikkoman soy sauce
  • Conimex Ketjap Manis
  • Hot curry powder
  • Habanero sauce
  • Chopped garlic
  • Salt
Lelelicious (Stir-fry)

Instructions:

  1. Preheat vegetable oil in a wok to 200°C.
  2. Add onions, garlic, and mushrooms; sauté briefly.
  3. Add spinach and stir until softened.
  4. Add remaining vegetables.
  5. Season with the spices and sauces to taste, then add the penne.
  6. Stir thoroughly for about 5 minutes, keeping the vegetables and pasta al dente.
  7. Serve in a large bowl and offer freshly ground black pepper.

SpagMex

(Spaghetti topped with a Mexican Delight)

“Love is rhythm. A remembering.

I watched you remember every day—

In how you fed the animals,

spoke to the flame, answered your mother’s voice.

In how you held the past without flinching.”

– Duty

Ingredients:

  • Spaghetti
  • Olive oil
  • Tomato purée
  • Onions, chopped
  • Garlic, chopped
  • Fresh red chillies, chopped
  • Yellow and red peppers, sliced
  • White wine (a dash)
  • Brown sauce powder
  • Mexican spice mix
  • Salt
  • Parmesan cheese
  • Freshly ground black pepper

Preparation:

  • Pre-cook spaghetti until al dente.
  • Toss with olive oil to prevent sticking and set aside.
  • In a pot, combine tomato purée, chopped onions, garlic, fresh red chillies, sliced yellow and red peppers, a dash of white wine, brown sauce powder, Mexican spice mix, and salt.
SpagMex (Spaghetti topped with a Mexican Delight)

Instructions:

  1. Cook the sauce in the pot until thickened.
  2. Place the spaghetti in a pasta bowl and reheat briefly in the microwave.
  3. Top with the thickened sauce and finish with a sprinkle of parmesan cheese.
  4. Offer freshly ground black pepper at the table.

Eggs on a “Sdick”

(Fried Eggs on Pretzel Stick for Breakfast)

“They sat in a deliberate silence at the table as the flames of six candles danced in mock romance, illuminating the tension beneath the surface of the air around them. She spoke first.”

– Goose & Gander

Ingredients:

  • Salted pretzel stick
  • Garlic and chili butter
  • 2 large eggs
  • Hot curry powder
  • Fresh parsley

Preparation:

  • Air-fry the pretzel stick until soft inside and slightly crispy outside.
  • Spread garlic and chili butter evenly on each half of the pretzel stick.
Eggs on a “Sdick” (Fried Eggs on Pretzel Stick for Breakfast)

Instructions:

  1. Fry two large eggs, cooking the whites fully while keeping the yolks runny.
  2. Place the fried eggs on top of the buttered pretzel halves.
  3. Sprinkle hot curry powder and fresh parsley on top before serving.

Bubbles and Berries

“Use my name when you tell the story.”

– Any Woman

Ingredients:

  • Bottle of sparkling wine
  • Raspberries
  • Blueberries

Preparation:

  • Pre-chill the bottle of sparkling wine.
  • Wash and prepare raspberries and blueberries.
Bubbles and Berries

Instructions:

  1. Serve the sparkling wine in a Champagne flute.
  2. Enjoy alongside fresh raspberries and blueberries, especially refreshing in summer.

9.8.25

S v Legality

Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.com

This account will contend that the rule of law in South Africa is more than a relic of colonialism. The thrust of this argument is that post-colonial constitutions intentionally and necessarily reconceptualize the role of the rule of law. As such, the post-colonial rule of law assumes a different character and effect than that which it had under colonial rule.

In substantiation, I will first consider the rule of law during apartheid South Africa. This consideration will reveal that the rule of law was compromised under parliamentary sovereignty. Then, to demonstrate the difference of the post-colonial perspective on the rule of law, I will assess South Africa’s effort to reconceptualize the legal principle in the post-apartheid dispensation. This portion of the essay will contrast liberal post-apartheid constitutionalism and transformative constitutionalism. In doing so, I will hold that the former is more persuasive and appropriate in the South African context and democratic constitutionalism.

Legality in the Colony

During apartheid, the legislature enjoyed supremacy above the executive and judiciary. Parliament, as the sovereign legal authority, could create and abolish any law concerning any issue. Legislation passed by parliament could not be invalidated by the courts. The judiciary simply did not have the jurisdiction to challenge legislation. This allowed the racially discriminatory apartheid laws to go unchecked because the legislature governed with absolute discretion. In this way, the governance structure of the apartheid regime severely compromised the principle of the rule of law. Consequently, parliamentary sovereignty grossly undermined justice.      

On the other hand, constitutionalism attempts to avert arbitrary government such as exercised by the apartheid regime. Constitutionalism proposes government by the constitution. Thus, constitutionalism, as an instrument to curb arbitrary government, aligns with the inner morality of law[1]. According to this understanding, laws must be (inter alia) publicly promulgated, clear, and equally enforced.

Additionally, the function of democracy in constitutionalism is key. Democracy legitimises constitutional rule because the legislature is constituted by democratically elected representatives of the voting populace. The duly elected parliament represents the diverse interests, experiences, and ambitions of a variety of constituencies. As such, the laws passed by an elected legislature are a reflection (albeit imperfect) of the needs, values and will of the people. Therefore, constitutionalism in a democratic framework not only facilitates but also protects the notion of popular self-government.

Democratic constitutionalism then, relies heavily on the rule of law. This ‘rule’ refers to the principle that no person or institution is above the law. In a democracy, this principle is paramount.

Post-apartheid Constitutionalism

The rule of law in terms of the post-apartheid constitutions is more than a legacy of colonialism. In this, I agree with Upendra Baxi[2]. Colonialism is part of the history of the rule of law in former colonies and thus influences post-colonial constitutions. However, it is also more complex than that. Post-apartheid constitutions are responsive documents. They are unapologetically written as tools for the achievement of a desired end. This end is typically informed by several factors, including the country’s socio-political history as a colony, its current reality, its vision for the future, and place among the global community of nations.

In South Africa the rule of law is a crucial founding tenet of the Republic. It is provided for in the very first section of the Constitution – s1(c). The authors of the Constitution placed the rule of law among important founding values including human dignity s1(a), non-racialism s1(b), and constitutional supremacy s1(c). The provision entrenching the rule of law appears immediately alongside constitutional sovereignty. It is no coincidence that the principle of legality enjoys a prominent position. Not only does this indicate the lawmakers’ esteemed view of the principle of the rule of law and its centrality in characterising the Republic. It also communicates a clear intention to bind South Africa to this principle fundamentally.

The primacy of the rule of law in the Constitution is perspicuous and uncontroversial. The rule of law as adumbrated in the Constitution is part of the very definition of South Africa. For this reason, understanding the prevailing judicial perception of the rule of law is paramount. It informs the application and operation of the principle of the rule of law in post-apartheid South African courts. Here, the main contending conceptions of the rule of law in South Africa are transformative constitutionalism, and liberal post-apartheid constitutionalism.

Considering the Postcolonial Conflict

The rule of law as envisaged by the drafters of the Constitution differs radically from that of the preceding founding national documents (of 1909, 1961, 1983) in conception and application. The rule of law under Apartheid was used to meet the political ends of the totalitarian regime. The sovereign legislature of the time weaponised the rule of law by passing overtly racist legislation. This discriminatory legislation was potent because the judiciary was 1) not able to challenge policy and declare legislation invalid, and 2) able to use the rule of law as a makeshift shield to avoid deliberating on the substance and validity of apartheid legislation. Rather than conscientiously adjudicatory, the role of the judiciary was administrative. Judges were discouraged from independent adjudication. Under parliamentary sovereignty, the court could not declare laws to be invalid. All laws validly passed by parliament were enforceable. Thus, judges were able to cite the principle of the rule of law in adjudication to uphold and enforce apartheid legislation.

A full procedural revolution is described as involving the rejection and removal of an established government and the successful establishment of a new order. This traditional conception of a revolution requires the use of extra-constitutional means to revolt against the establishment. In this way, a ‘legal revolution’ is a contradiction in terms. As a founding provision of the Republic in the Constitution, the rule of law is not extra-constitutional. Inherently, it is not revolutionary arsenal. The rule of law alone as contemplated in the Constitution does not facilitate revolt and cannot revolutionise South Africa.

Moreover, this is preferrable. Not only is the rule of law, as a legal principle, technically unable to revolutionise South Africa. It is also best that it cannot, and indeed does not, overthrow the South African order. South Africa [needs] reform rather than revolution. The country is a young post-colonial democracy and is susceptible to the pitfalls similarly faced by countries which emerge as democratic post-colonies. The challenges faced by India’s post-colonial constitutionality and cited by Baxi are but one example. Judicial constraints are crucial in post-colonies. To avoid the abuse of power in an already vulnerable society, South Africa’s approach to the principle of legality ought to rely more on time-tested structures and processes rather than intervention. Thus, the prudence of liberal-conservative post-apartheid constitutionalism is more appropriate.

Post-apartheid constitutionalism requires prudence, not despite South Africa’s history but because of it. We ought to be prudent and ‘constrained’ particularly considering previous abuses of the law and judicial power in South Africa. The ‘constrained vision’[3] contemplated by economist and social theorist Dr Thomas Sowell refers broadly to a view of the world which is guided by the principle of prudence, and belief in checks and balances.

The constrained vision is reflected in South Africa’s legal culture as liberal-conservative post-apartheid constitutionalism. This liberal-conservative view is often misconstrued as ineffective, archaic, and inflexible. This is an inaccurate representation of liberal-conservatism. The liberal-conservative constitutionalist is not opposed to change, or conscientious adjudication.

Instead, the liberal-conservative constitutionalist is guided by the principles of precedence and prescription. He believes, as Burke did, that “the individual is foolish, the species is wise.” As such, the liberal-conservative constitutionalist adheres to custom, convention, and continuity. He understands that permanence and change are equally crucial to the development of South Africa’s postcolonial constitutional democracy. Thus, both permanence and change must be acknowledged and reconciled in a vibrant society[4].

The ‘unconstrained vision’[5] is reflected in South Africa as transformative constitutionalism. Although transformative constitutionalism is characteristically amorphous, it is broadly predicated on the vision espoused in the epilogue of the Interim Constitution[6]. This vision imagines a new South African society based on substantive equality. Transformative constitutionalism, then, is an outcomes-based approach. It is concerned with transformation which has been described by former Chief Justice Pius Langa as “a social and economic revolution”. This consequentialist application of the Constitution fundamentally seeks ‘transformative’ ends and substantive equality[7] – also referred to as ‘equality of outcome’.

Notably, the post-apartheid legal order must be based on persuasion, rather than coercion. To this end, South Africa’s post-apartheid legal culture has gradually become a culture of judicial justification. A culture of judicial justification refers to the notion that legitimate leadership and governance is assessed through the merit of the case argued in defence of its pronouncements. On the other hand, the culture of judicial authority during the apartheid era legitimated leadership through fear entrenched by the force of its command.

This compelling shift to judicial justification is most compatible with liberal-conservative constitutionalism rather than transformative constitutionalism. The liberal-conservative constitutionalist perceives the need for prudent restraints on power and human passions, regardless of good intentions. As such, he is beholden to a stricter standard of justification which maintains “a healthy tension between the claims of authority and the claims of liberty[8].”

On the other hand, transformative constitutionalism presents the counter-majoritarian dilemma. This dilemma refers to a tension caused by the influence which unelected judges have on the effect of legislation passed by a duly elected legislature. The dilemma is concerned with the extent to which judges play a role in ‘making law’. Although adjudication presents a legitimate and necessary opportunity to develop law and policy. The counter-majoritarian dilemma sees a potential redundancy in the democratic election of lawmakers where judges are also allowed the discretion to prescribe certain policy outcomes according to the interests of certain groups.

As mentioned earlier, transformative constitutionalism is a judicial approach which is primarily concerned with specific (transformative) outcomes of legislation. The ‘transformative’ and even ‘revolutionary’ adjudication contemplated by this view stands to undermine the democratic process as a legitimate expression of the will of the people. As Sowell argues, even judges are not immune to the influence of power and therefore cannot legitimately act as “surrogate decision-makers” in a society where the popular vote already elects representatives to make policy decisions. This exposes the potentially perilous nature of transformative constitutionalism in South Africa’s judiciary.

Instead, a liberal-conservative approach relies heavily on democratic constitutionalism in the legislature rather than transformative constitutionalism in the judiciary. It recognises that the two cannot coexist comfortably for long before grave tensions arise. This prudent approach does not only protect democracy by preferring constraints on judicial power. It is also concordant with the separation of powers, and the principle of the rule of law.

– Lele M

Bibliography

Baxi, Upendra. ‘Post-colonial Legality: A Postscript from India’. Warwick: Verfassung und Recht in Ubersee VRU 45, 2012.

Edwards, Pamela. ‘Permanence and Progression: The Statesman’s Science: History, Nature, and Law in the Political Thought of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. New York: Columbia University Press, 2004.

Kirk, Russell. ‘The Politics of Prudence’. Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2014.

Langa, Pius. ‘Transformative Constitutionalism’. Stellenbosch: 17 Stellenbosch L. Rev 351, 2006.

Sowell, Thomas. ‘A Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of Political Struggles’. New York: W. Morrow, 1987.


[1] Developed by Lon Fuller

[2] U Baxi ‘Chapter 28: Postcolonial legality’ in H Schwarz and S Ray (eds) A companion to postcolonial studies

[3] The constrained (tragic) vision relies on the belief that human nature is essentially unchanging and that man is naturally inherently self-interested, regardless of the best intentions. Those with a constrained vision prefer the systematic processes of the rule of law and experience of tradition. Compromise is essential because there are no ideal solutions, only trade-offs.

[4] Pamela Edwards in ‘Permanence and Progression’

[5] The unconstrained (utopian) vision relies on the belief that human nature is essentially good. Those with an unconstrained vision distrust decentralized processes and are impatient with large institutions and systemic processes that constrain human action. They believe there is an ideal solution to every problem, and that compromise is never acceptable.

[6] “a historic bridge between the past of a deeply divided society characterised by strife, conflict, untold suffering and injustice, and a future founded on the recognition of human rights, democracy and peaceful co-existence and development opportunities for all South Africans, irrespective of colour, race, class, belief or sex”.

[7] Pius Langa in ‘Transformative Constitutionalism’

[8] Russell Kirk in ‘Politics of Prudence’

Liberty to Lie?

Critical discussions of liberty are typically concerned with the extent to which individual liberty ought to be preserved and protected.

Photo by cottonbro on Pexels.com

Such a consideration often hangs on the foundation of the principle of individual liberty. John Stuart Mill presents a persuasive account for individual liberty subject to the harm principle. In his argument Mill explores the liberty of expression to indicate when state interference to restrict individual liberty may be justifiable.

This piece will discuss Mill’s proposition that the exercise of state authority over individuals against their will may be warranted in the case of freedom of expression in accordance with the harm principle – using a recent South African case study. It will examine Mill’s position that state protection of individual liberty is contingent upon consequentialist utilitarian principles.

In doing so, Mill demonstrates that there are indeed instances where state interference with individual liberty can be justifiable; including in the case of legislation which outlaws fake news.

In the first instance, Mill does not base the principle of individual liberty on fundamental rights but rather on its instrumental value. Its value in achieving a desired end. Mill appeals to the utility of individual liberty as the basis for its extensive protection, unlike the Rawlsian appeal to natural rights. Individual liberty of expression, Mill posits, is worth extensive protection because it facilitates and maintains a public good.

The liberty to express diverse views allows for a competition between views for a clearer perception of the truth. It allows for the exchange of error for truth as well as a more cogent understanding of the truth. When a truth is held without engagement with counterviews it goes unchallenged and therefore never requires defense. It is held as true, not by the merit of its argument, but by virtue of being uncontested. It is ‘true’ by default.

Whereas, the expression of diverse views initiates discourse. Through this, opposing views are able to engage in a challenge for the truth or share the truth between themselves. Alternative views may share the truth between them, Mill postulates, as a dissenting view is often necessary to provide the remaining facets of the truth. This exercise of engagement between competing views is valuable for numerous reasons.

Firstly, it illuminates the truth by ensuring that any prevailing truth is be able to withstand challenge as to its veracity. It is no longer enough for a view to merely be expressed as truth. It ought also to defend itself according to the merits of its case in the face of counterarguments. Moreover, the freedom to express alternative views makes sets a standard for truth. An objective truth threshold.

A poignant analogy is that of the marketplace of ideas. Here, shoppers in the marketplace behave like those in a grocery marketplace where shoppers scrutinize goods often picking them up to assess the weight, colour, and overall quality of the goods prior to making a purchase. They evaluate and scrutinize each idea that attracts their interests at the marketplace of ideas before consciously deciding to adopt it as truth.

Ideas adopted in this way are less likely to be dislodged because they undergo a process of critical inspection and challenge against alternative views and prevail based on their merits. Also, the shopper is making a conscious decision to adopt the view which is most persuasive because the process requires active critical engagement.  

In this way, the the standard is twofold. The prevailing view must be persuasive on its own merit, and defensible against counterviews.

The liberty to express diverse opinions is a public good which is facilitated by free expression. Therefore, it satisfies both consequentialist and utilitarian principles because it is an instrument used to maintain a public good. The value of this public good, Mill posits, is such that it necessitates the invention of dissenting views when none exist.

There are, however, instances when the state may be justified to legally restrict free expression. These instances are those in which the harm principle applies. The harm principle provides simply that the only time the state may be justified to interfere with the individual liberty of expression is to ensure the safety of others who may otherwise come to harm.

This aligns with the pluralist view to which Mill subscribes. The harm principle is concerned with restricting individual liberty only in the case of protecting others from harm. Also understood as other-regarding actions. Self-regarding actions are in the private sphere of activity where state inference is not usually permissible.

Two issues immediately arise. First, the distinction between self- and other-regarding actions is not always clear. Secondly, although the harm principle is a necessary condition for legal restrictions on individual liberty, it is not adequate in itself as a condition to justify state interference. Harm does not provide a fool-proof criterion for when individual expression may be curtailed.

However, offense is not a harm that justifies prevention. Offense is not a harm protected by the harm principle. Instead, expression is evaluated based on its use or harm which derive from its truth and falsehood respectively.

Mill exposes that a claim of harmful expression is itself a subjective evaluation and a matter of opinion. Moreover, sometimes opposing views share the truth between them. We ought to always be reluctant to interfere with free individual expression. Dissenting views are often valuable as they provide the remaining facets of the truth. This is when contesting views share the truth between them.

This is distinguishable from a pluralist position which rejects the existence of a single dominant metanarrative. This discussion informs the exploration which follows. It considers the decision of the National Coronavirus Command Council (NCCC) to legislate against fake news.

In response to the COVID-19 global pandemic, South Africa’s NCCC (empowered by the Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002) gazetted regulations which effectively outlawed participating in the creation and transfer of fake news relating to the Coronavirus pandemic.

Namely, the COVID-19 virus; the COVID-19 infection status of any person; and any measure taken by the government in addressing the COVID-19. This enquiry will consider Mill’s view on this legislation in accordance with the harm principle in a contemporary context.

At first glance, Mill would say that even fake news about COVID-19 is valuable to the extent that it gives significance and clarity to the truth about COVID-19 and the Coronavirus pandemic. In a way, it illuminates why the truth is true.

Secondly, the three categories of expression specified by the legislation are other-regarding actions. The regulations are concerned with the act of publishing a statement in any of the above three categories on social media and any medium with the intention to deceive another person. The provision required the intention by one person to deceive another about the COVID-19 virus. This is a prohibition of a specific other-regarding action. It is thus within the realm of justifiable interference. Depending, of course, on utilitarian consequentialist principles – to which I now turn.

As a utilitarian consequentialist, Mill would consider keenly the justifications offered by the NCCC for the legislation against fake news. The Council argues that viral misinformation and fake news pose ‘the biggest’ risk for the spread of the Coronavirus in South Africa.

The Council holds that a solid strategy is necessary with regard to the socio-political and economic discourse around the Coronavirus and the global pandemic. The publishing of fake news and deliberate misinformation about COVID-19, the NCCC says, will lead to the deaths of many.

The NCCC is submitting utilitarian grounds for the restriction of free individual expression. South Africa is considered a developing country. It also exists in the context of a global pandemic.

Moreover, the history of spatial planning in South Africa means that areas which are densely populated are usually also peri-urban areas which lack access to information. These high risk areas are townships which are populated by middle to low income earners who are lack resources to verify information, or lack exposure to credible news sources altogether.

It is vital that discourse around the COVID-19 pandemic be controlled and limited to information verified as factual. This socio-econo-political context means the harm that may come from the intentional deception and viral misinformation about COVID-19 in South Africa could be fatal on a significant scale.

False expression, in this instance, is harmful to a greater extent than it is valuable to the discourse around the COVID-19 virus. The overall adverse consequences of intentionally deceiving others about the highly infectious Coronavirus during a global pandemic far outweigh the overall benefit of the publication of such expression . Having considered the above, Mill would consider South Africa’s fake news legislation a legitimate temporary interference with individual free speech. It is justifiable in accordance with the harm principle.

The harm principle requires that state interference with individual liberty be in the interests of the safety of others, as well as adhere to utilitarian consequentialist principles. The South African case study above depicts a circumstance when it is indeed justifiable for government to pass laws against fake news. This restriction to the liberty of individual expression is warranted and is aligned with the harm principle.

Thus, Mill is likely to concur with the decision to legislate against false expression about the COVID-19 virus.


– Lele M

The Unconstrained Rainbow

Is the (radical) left likely to ever win an election?

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According to Thomas Sowell, in ‘A Conflict of Visions’, one of the two broad visions that underlie conflict in the world is the unconstrained vision. This vision sees human beings as capable of moral and social improvement.

Problems such as inequality and injustice are not permanent but can be overcome through reason, willpower, and transformative reform. Institutions and traditions are often seen as obstacles to progress. In South Africa, the popularity of the unconstrained vision is most evident in the growth and philosophy of political players such as the Economic Freedom Fighters, and Black First Land First.

How do the philosophies of these parties represent the unconstrained vision?

The unconstrained vision believes more in revolution than it does in reform. According to the unconstrained vision, current institutions and systems immanently problematic. They were designed that way. As a result, equal opportunity is not enough. Proponents of the unconstrained vision believe in such things as distributive justice – redistribution of wealth in the pursuit of ‘cosmic justice’ (Thomas Sowell).

The unconstrained vision sees the current sociopolitical and even economic systems as inherently flawed and proposes a solution which typically involves increased state capacity, state intervention, and state control of resources. As a result, the state in the unconstrained conception enjoys a more authoritarian role.

Why is leftist rhetoric attractive to South Africans?

Well, ideas on the far left of the economic spectrum tend to be utopian. South Africa has a population of over fifty million. As of 2016, the National Census reported 80.7% of people in South Africa were Black Africans, 8.7% were coloured, 8.1% were white, and 2.5 were Indian/Asian.

Meanwhile, the Marxist nature of the ideas on the South African left offer the vindication of naming and shaming the villain – the oppressor. The top five political parties according to the 2019 national election results were as follows. The African National Congress (ANC) enjoys first position at 57.5%, followed by the Democratic Alliance (DA) at 20.8%, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) at 10.8%, the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) at 3.4%, and at number five is the Freedom Front Plus (FF+) at 2.4%.

Do South African’s necessarily find the unconstrained vision to be more persuasive?

Distinctively, the provincial election results of the Western Cape provide a contrasting picture. The DA takes the prime spot at 55.5%, the ANC comes in second at 28.6%, followed by the EFF at 4%, the GOOD party at 3%, and the African Christian Democratic Party (ACDP) also at 3%.

The Western Cape is of particular interest to me because (although it accounts for 11.3% of the national populace) the population demographics depict an interesting contrast to the national picture. The Western Cape is home to the largest population of coloured (47.5%), and white (16%) South Africans, across all provinces. Meanwhile, compared to the rest of the provinces, the same province is home to the lowest population of black Africans (35.7%) in South Africa.

Differences in language, religion, class, orphanhood, and education make these questions more complex and all the more worthy of attention. I’m curious to learn about and understand the peoples of this country. Who are they really? How do they live? What do they want?

I learned that every political question begins with a map, or a census. So let’s talk about it. What do all these figures mean? How, if at all, do they represent a contention of visions?

These are the questions I explore in the conversation which continues on the podcast. Join me there!

– Lele M

Perfect Vision

Was blind, but now I see.

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A while ago, I wrote a piece about how the Bible dragged me, kicking and screaming, to the political and economic center. I titled it ‘Has Christianity Made Me More Conservative?’ because I set out to explore the transition of my econo-sociopolitical views. Particularly, the influence, if any, of my Christian faith in that respect. This piece will further that discussion.

In his book ‘A Conflict of Visions’ Thomas Sowell submits that an interest is distinguishable from a vision. A vision has to do with our perspective about the world and our place in it. It is concerned with what we believe about how the world works – the role of the individual and society. More importantly, visions are what we believe about how the world can, and indeed should, work.

To this end, Sowell observes and discusses two distinct visions under which many conflicts of conviction fall – the constrained vision, and the unconstrained vision.

Join me in exploring and understanding these competing visions over the next few weeks according to Sowell’s compelling account.

– Lele M

In the Middle of the Garden

The story of ‘The Fall’ has always captivated me.

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I have been contemplating Genesis 3:3 recently. Particularly, I’ve been reflecting on the prominent position of the tree of the forbidden fruit – the middle of the garden. In my view, the position it enjoyed suggests that Adam and Eve would have likely encountered this tree regularly, daily even.

This led me to consider the thing in my life which may be the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. The thing in my life which enjoys a prime position. The thing that tests me on my belief in God’s word and tempts me to lean on my own understanding? The thing which challenges my obedience and dependence on God? It would be my need to feel in control of my life.

I’ve been strong-willed for as long as I can remember. More than that, I have had experiences throughout my life which exposed me to the discomfort of vulnerability. The latter, I believe, most of us have in common. For me the result was an increased sensitivity to power relations and control, particularly in social settings and personal relationships.

In my life, disobedience to God often masquerades as perfectionism which comes from a belief in one’s ability to control outcomes. This moment is a case in point. I’m struggling to write because I continue to allow my perfectionism to immobilize me. I am passionate, thoughtful, creative, brimming with ideas and eager to shoot them out into the abyss. I’m also consumed by questions about the details – how, where, when, and what to present. Surprisingly, I don’t often consider the ‘why’. I shudder to think that may simply be because I am yet to establish my ‘why’. Though in all candor, I cannot dismiss the idea. What is my why?

Well, it’s complicated. I want to say that everything I do, I do for the glory of God. That is certainly my ongoing, foundational aspiration. But why am I at my desk on a weekday evening, unable to drum up the momentum to write a coherent piece while also feeling like what lies beyond this simple blog post could change my life completely? I’m having to fight my need to know the details. I’m having to trust that the words will come. I am having to trust God’s providence – his sovereignty. I’m learning that our obedience to God’s instruction is borne out of our faith in him.

Although in the past I craved the feeling of control, even its mere semblance. I had not appreciated the value of self-control. The notion of self-control is interesting because, as I see it, its the only control we can truly exercise. The only thing one can really control is oneself. It requires that you be able and willing to relinquish the illusion of control over those things which are beyond the scope of your control – beyond yourself. It is a practice of inner restraint and self-discipline.

I am constantly being reminded of how small I am in the greater scheme of time and space. It would be masochistic to expect of myself that I have control over the result and impact of a blog post, let alone the details of the course of my life. The cool thing about self-control is that, whether we know it or not, every moment is a test of self-control and, therefore an opportunity to exercise the muscle. Particularly, self-control is concerned with whether you can delay and moderate gratification. It influences your response to your daily alarms, your relationship with food, and how much you say about your weekend when your colleague asks on Monday morning. More than being the greatest expression of control, self-control is a fruit of the spirit.

I am doing this because it’s what I have to do. I know that because writing is what ignites my proverbial fire, but also what provokes my intimate fears and insecurities. This has made me all the more enamored by the oversufficiency of God’s grace. The challenge to wear my heart on my sleeve has revealed to me that I didn’t have a sleeve on which to wear my heart before I committed my life to God.

Walking with God has taught me that peace and self-control are closely related. I would not prefer to have the final say over everything I care about. Realistically, that’s simply too much pressure. I would rather concern myself with well, myself. I prefer to busy myself with maturing in my understanding, expression, and presentation of who I am and my contribution to the world. Perhaps that’s my ‘why’. I care about understanding my behaviour, along with the attitudes and beliefs by which it is informed.

– Lele M

Conversion to Conservatism

I believe in absolute truth.

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I’m going to try to do this without a detailed exposition of my relationship with faith and politics throughout my childhood.

By the time I arrived at university I was quite certain that I was an atheist and my political home was on the left. Beyond reading foundational writings and studying academic debates on postmodernism, Marxism and related schools of thought, I’d personally bought and read ‘The God Delusion’ and ‘The Coming Revolution’ before I left high school. I was invested. I was convinced that I had evaluated the ideas available in the political philosophy marketplace and I had made my purchase. I was a ‘disillusioned’ teenager in a working class, Christian home, and I was won over by socialism and relativism.

Frankly, the left is seductive. The university space I entered was still writhing palpably from the #RhodesMustFall and #FeesMustFall movements of the previous years. The environment was lush with leftist philosophy and my eager mind was reeling with excitement. I was captivated by the world of ideas which seemed to have opened up around me almost overnight.

In the momentous wave of leftist rhetoric, I began to learn the terminology of critical theory, became familiar with Marxist-Leninism, and did so among a community of likeminded, zealous, young people with stories affirmingly similar to my own. It was as if I was finally discovering the truth about the world – pulling back the curtains of society and and finally seeing the ugly cogs of its machinery. I was learning the words and ideas which described and affirmed my econo-sociopolitical experience. I could finally articulate my disaffection with the way things were. I felt empowered.

Soon, critical race theory was the lens through which I saw the world. All my experiences (past, present, and especially future) were neatly explained by the notions of hegemonic power structures, systemic racism, and intersectionality. I was on the radical left; never missing an opportunity to expose ‘the establishment’, disrupt ‘white, heteronormative spaces’, and challenge the idea of objective truth in favour of relative truth and the paramountcy of individual experience.

It was not until years later that I came to see this attitude as defeatist – expecting and sometimes resigning myself to defeat against the pervasive and monolithic ideas of the establishment. I was painfully conscious of what I perceived as the facts of life which threatened my socioeconomic mobility – my ability to live my conception of the good and fulfilling life.

After years of commitment to ‘fighting the system’, I was exhausted. In hindsight, this was inevitable. I had allowed the postmodern worldview to consume me. I found myself feeling increasingly combative, unfulfilled, and searching for meaning to no avail. Though, importantly, I felt entitled to the pain of my past experiences and my anger with the way things were. I wanted growth and hope but would not relinquish my right to hostility in order to make room for it. I was tired and hopeless.

Then, enter the ancient of days. I will reserve the story of mine and God’s courtship for a later piece. For now, I will describe it as an enduring lesson in humility, healing, and humanity. Crucially, I was awakened to the reality of absolute truth. I did not come to believe that God exists, I came to know it to be true – the truth, not ‘my truth’. Immediately, I was forced to interrogate the ‘truths’ I had previously believed about myself, the world, and my place in it.

Obstinately, almost predictably, I contended with my newly changed heart and spirit to allow me to continue to hold radical political views. I attempted to reason that Christ’s teachings were radical, that his work (and indeed Christianity) was a social justice revolutionary effort. This is the deceptive, albeit attractive, line of reasoning argued by purported ‘progressive Christians’. It tries to lay claim to Christ while chasing the allure of radical leftist rhetoric in popular culture. However, I have since found that this view simply does not survive Biblical muster – a requirement I have adopted for all my beliefs.

The decision to trust the authority of scripture in the face of my obvious and inherent fallibility has been the bedrock of my current worldview. With time, I have had to yield to discovering the world anew in what has been an ongoing exercise of humility, healing and humanity. I have had to probe my prior convictions for concordance with the Bible and consequently, I found myself inching closer to the center of the spectrum of political ideology. This came as a mild shock to me given my obsessive devotion to the radical left. Every time I remember this striking change, I am reminded how small I really am and I am grateful for the grace to learn and grow in understanding.

This experience has revealed and continues to reveal a wealth of insight which I intend to explore and develop in my life’s work. I wake up each morning eager for the lessons that await me and excited to sharpen my discernment. But in the interest of keeping this entry brief, I submit my answer in the affirmative – Christianity has indeed made my views more conservative than they have been in the past. Though I am reluctant to assume a position because I hope to continue to evolve as I learn and mature, my views would probably be classed as moderate or liberal in many circles.

It is the details of ‘how’ or ‘why’ my views have changed which fascinate me most. Which views, if any, have survived the shift? How do I make sense of my experience as a vehement proponent of leftist ideology? Having been opposed to moderate-conservative views in the past, what do I understand now about society and governance that I previously did not? How would I respond now to my own previous critiques of centrist positions?

I’m interested in these questions not so much for the answers they may reveal, as for the further, more intriguing questions about political philosophy and human nature that they may uncover.

– Lele M