1/7 @matigary, Just been reminded I said we'd talk about enablers. Here goes: Zimbos are ALL enablers without exception: Do you pay tax? Enabler. You buy anything in the shop? Enabler. Even if you're not formally employed, you're an enabler.
2/7 You're in the diaspora and send money home? Enabler. You buy fuel to put in your car? Enabler. The VAT you pay fuels gvt & seen as "mari yehurumende". If you're serious about not enabling, then stop buying (unopenga, tozodyei!).
3/7 Zimbabweans are NOT interested in SOLVING the corruption problem in the country - we just use it to score points against ZANU PF: that's why we the anger when non-ZANU PF corruption is exposed. If we were serious about stopping corruption, we could do it quickly:
4/7 Like the Montgomery bus boycott: people walked, did car pooling and suffered as a COMMUNITY in order to send a message and it worked - it hit the authorities where it hurt and a country was changed.
5/7 It's the VAT, the taxes, the bribes you pay at roadblocks, the reluctance to report when you see corruption or are asked for a bribe that enable a corrupt system to thrive. We all want an advantage over the next person: we will pay the corruption tax by buying stuff whose...
6/7 ...price has been unreasonably hiked so that we can show off to the neighbour, or so we can be comfortable. No change is going to come without discomfort. I suppose that's why @daddyhope kept saying "we have not suffered enough" ED is not going to stop corruption....
7/7 ....only you can do that. So next time you talk about enablers, don't forget that you are doing quite a bit of enabling yourself, whatever excuse you may want to offer (survival, hunger, fear of arrest) is the same excuse given by those in power who live off corruption.
Now. let's hear your excuses about why enable ZANU PF, corruption etc 

