@boastboy

Hey to the People who find themselves here! My posterous site, don't you dig posterous, I think it rocks, so easy to post stuff, for me it's mainly video's and pics I find on the net. Otherwise, you can find me here too...

You can find my site here

My Blog here

My twitter here

My facebook here

My flickr here

& My LinkedIn here

Remember, always live in the moment, without prejudice from the past or fear of the future.

Fw: No running inside... (funny!!! via email from @simonmaraisza)

How many times have we been told...and have told our children...


NOT to run in the house? Did we always listen? Do they listen? Not always.


Sometimes our seemingly futile efforts fail, and 'boo-boo's' happen. 
Here is a little guy who didn't listen, and he got his own souvenir scars.


Perhaps he'll learn from his mistake. Maybe.... 

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Doesn't look too bad. But perhaps he should keep this next photo handy to explain the way it happened!...... 

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OOOHHHHH!!! 
That's GOTTA hurt!!!! 
(pic taken in the emergency room)





Outside my balcony right now #anotherawesomelondonsummerevening

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How we (Mac Users) treat our computers vs everyone else

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un-effing-believable (via @dailymaverick's First Thing)

"Apple’s financials for the quarter ending June have not so much exceeded expectations as hammered them into a bloody, weeping mess as it boasted its best quarter ever. Revenue of $28.5 billon (82% up) produced $7.31 billon in net profit (125% up) and the company’s share price broke the $400 barrier for the first time. Apple sold over 20 million iPhones during the three-month period, which analysts claim makes it the biggest smartphone producer in the world – and this without launching a new product in the timeframe."

Fw: Bottle of wine... (via Chris)


THE BOTTLE OF WINE

For all of you who are married, were married, wish you were married or wish you were not married, this is something to smile about the next time you see a bottle of wine:


Fred was driving home from one of his business trips, in  Northern Arizona , when he saw an elderly Navajo man walking on the side of the road.


As the trip was a long and quiet one, he stopped the car and asked the Navajo man if he would like a ride.



With a silent nod of thanks, the Indian got into the car.

Resuming the journey, Fred tried - in vain - to make a bit of small talk with the Navajo man.  The old man just sat silently, looking intently at everything he saw, studying every little detail, until he noticed a brown bag on the seat next to Fred.

"What in bag?" asked the old man.


Fred looked down at the brown bag and said:  "It's a bottle of wine.  I got it for my wife."
 


The Navajo man was silent for another moment or two.  Then, speaking with the quiet wisdom of an elder, he said:

"Good trade . . .."


Clem Sunter on Julius Malema

Clem Sunter

"
You have to hand it to Julius Malema. He is a headline-grabber of note; he sticks rigidly to what he believes in; he delivers his popular message with such ferocity and charisma that he attracts truck-loads of adoring fans; and he knows when to say sorry.

Moreover, he has done one thing for which he should be given credit. He has taken the Establishment - political, business and other - completely out of its comfort zone by focusing on the point that radical measures have to be implemented to turn a highly unequal, exclusive, lop-sided society into something which the writers of the Freedom Charter would be proud of. For me that is common cause; but where I differ is on the tactics to get there.

Nationalisation and land grabs - with or without compensation - are dead-end policies. Nationalisation without compensation will result in sanctions being re-introduced against South Africa by the US and EU, as it will be perceived that their citizens - the ones who have invested here - will have had their assets stolen from them by the South African government. International travel restrictions on members of the Cabinet will probably be applied as well.

Nationalisation with compensation at fair value will mean that a trillion rand will have to be diverted from health, education, welfare and law and order to purchasing the targeted assets. In other words, the opportunity cost will be enormous. The only alternative is for the government to borrow the money - if they can - which will send South Africa's national debt to GDP ratio through the roof.

Land grabs, on the other hand, will in the worst case scenario precipitate a civil war. People who sing liberation songs like "Kill the Boer" should remember that the first modern freedom-fighters were the Boers - well before Swapo, Zanu-PF and the ANC. They effectively held the British imperialists at bay for the first half of the Boer War at the turn of the previous century. It was only when Kitchener introduced concentration camps and herded their women and children into them with an absolutely appalling loss of life, that the war turned in Britain's favour.

Neither being a pariah or highly indebted state in the case of nationalisation nor being a country riven by civil war in the case of land grabs will sort out the problems of unemployment and living on desolation row. The only way the problem can begin to be resolved is to follow the philosophy of Steve Biko, an equally charismatic character, who before he was cruelly murdered in the 1970s basically expressed the view that handouts do not improve your self-esteem: doing it for yourself does. That is as true today - in the world of Facebook and Twitter which have enormously increased the power and freedom of individuals - as when he said it in the 1970s.

So if I were Julius, I would take Steve's ideas on board because they are so much more inspirational and relevant to the members of Generation Y than the old-fashioned and discredited policies that the state should become the centre of everything. I say this coming from a family in the UK where my socialist ancestors not only wrote nationalisation into the Labour Party constitution (Beatrice Webb), but actually implemented it across the board (Stafford Cripps who was Chancellor of the Exchequer in the late 1940s and made Julius look positively unambitious by comparison). Needless to say, everything is back in the hands of the private sector apart from the National Health Service which in retrospect was a worthwhile initiative.

Rather than trying to destroy Malema, I would urge him to consider redirecting his energy down the path outlined by Steve Biko. I would be asking him actively to engage with Business Leadership SA and AgriSA as to how a more inclusive and participative economy can be created and how one can transfer an appropriate proportion of land from white to black farmers without diminishing agricultural productivity. All of this will take time. It cannot happen overnight in one quantum leap. Perhaps he and his colleagues in ANCYL should also go on a leadership programme at GIBS. Get out of the confines of the ANC into the real world.

Furthermore, instead of harping on about expropriation of this or that asset which will not create one extra job for the youth of this country, I would like Julius to change his pitch and demand three things:

1. We raise the quality of education in this country to give young people the power to do their own thing;

2. We provide the entrepreneurial space in this country so that young people have the freedom to do their own thing; and

3. We celebrate South African pockets of excellence like Siyabulela Xuza (who has a minor planet named after him by NASA) in order to give young people theconfidence to do their own thing.

That is just so much more funky a vision than having everyone work for the state or be dependent on the state. As Michelle Obama said a few days ago at the Regina Mundi Church in Soweto: "You are your own liberator." Amen. 

Clem Sunter "

about @EranEyal and the @springleap team and my slight obsession

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Firstly, I want to state that this is totally unsolicited!

I really want to thank Eran and his team at Springleap. What an incredible experience buying T's from them, and if you haven't yet, do it! 

So what actually makes the experience incredible? Firstly the price, R183 for a designer T is for nothing, have you actually shopped for brand name T's??? 

Then the quality, the quality is not the usual kak that you get from most places, I don't know the technical terms for cotton, the weight and weave etc etc... I just know it's good, they last, and more importantly, the print doesn't fade after washes... #justsaying 

Then the service, you buy your T's and you have a choice, delivery or pick-up, it's really not that difficult, if you're in the Cape Town Area you can go to their Woodstock offices, they'd probably be ready the next day, mine were.

Another awesome thing is that they are making pop art totally accessible by selling posters and stretched canvases of the same art work that goes onto the T's. And it really is art, I'm off to London shortly and I'll definitely be buying a few canvases for my apartment!

Have a slight obsession with Springleap... probably, I have 7 of their T's, which in my opinion is far too few.

Thanks guys for delivering a fantastic product!

.@acarvin do you think twitter & social media would have brought about the end to Apartheid sooner?

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.@acarvin do you think twitter & social media would have brought about the end to Apartheid sooner?

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With breathless anticipation the crowd awaits the unveiling of the Julius Malema Statue: (via @simonmaraisza)

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With breathless anticipation the crowd awaits the unveiling of the
                              
J u l i u s   M a l e m a    Statue.