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In this in-depth and unapologetic conversation, I sit down with Athenkosi Nzala to interrogate some of the most urgent political, economic, and social questions facing South Africa and the African continent today. This episode moves beyond slogans and surface-level debates to confront the real cost of African unity, the failures of governance, and the future Africa is actively negotiating—often at great cost to its people. We begin by unpacking African Unity, asking a difficult but necessary question: What does unity actually cost Africa, and who pays the price? From the African Union’s effectiveness to Africa’s positioning in global geopolitics, we explore whether unity has translated into material benefits for ordinary Africans or whether it has become a symbolic project with limited accountability. A major focus of the conversation is the cost of negligence by governments, particularly in South Africa and across Africa. We examine wasteful expenditure, corruption, and mismanagement of public funds, and ask how governments should be held accountable for squandering taxpayer money while citizens face unemployment, failing services, and declining public trust. This segment critically engages with questions of oversight, consequence management, and political culture. We then turn to the rise of coups in several African states, situating them within broader failures of democracy, governance, and economic exclusion. Rather than offering simplistic condemnations, we interrogate why coups continue to find justification among segments of the population, and what this says about the crisis of democratic legitimacy on the continent. The discussion on democracy goes deeper—questioning whether African democracies are genuinely participatory or merely procedural. We explore voter apathy, elite capture of political systems, and the gap between constitutional ideals and lived realities. Education and unemployment form another critical pillar of this episode. We assess the state of education in Africa and South Africa, its misalignment with labour markets, and how systemic failures in education continue to reproduce mass youth unemployment, inequality, and social instability. Looking forward, we examine Artificial Intelligence and technology—not as abstract concepts, but as real forces reshaping labour, governance, and power. We ask whether Africa is being left behind yet again, or whether there is an opportunity to strategically engage technology in ways that serve development rather than deepen dependency. Finally, we engage with decolonisation—not as a buzzword, but as an ongoing political, economic, and intellectual project. What does decolonisation mean in practice today? Who benefits from its language, and how should it be applied to institutions, education, and governance? This episode is critical, reflective, and necessary. It is for anyone interested in African politics, governance, youth futures, democracy, and Africa’s place in a rapidly changing global order. SEO Tags / Keywords African Unity Cost of African Unity African Union critique South African politics African politics podcast Government accountability Africa Wasteful expenditure South Africa Corruption in Africa African coups explained Democracy in Africa Education crisis in South Africa Youth unemployment Africa AI and Africa Technology and Africa Decolonisation Africa African governance Public finance mismanagement Political accountability South Africa African future debates Break It Down podcast Athenkosi Nzala African political analysis