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Lane Johnson explains how push from players helped change Eagles’ offense – NBCSP
The Eagles’ offense has found some more stable footing in the three games since an early bye week. And some veteran players are at least partially responsible. Right tackle Lane Johnson on Friday afternoon explained that during and just after the bye week, he and other veteran members of the Eagles’ offensive line spoke up in offensive meetings to push for more runs and play action passes. “It was really an offensive-led movement,” Johnson said. “We knew we had to make some adjustments. Some of the guys, some of the leaders, veterans, on the O-line, we had our fair share of talks and help in it. We just want the offense to be the best version of itself and win some games and hopefully score some points in the f—ing first quarter.” Johnson, along with Jordan Mailata and Landon Dickerson, were vocal in offensive meetings to find a new formula to get the offense rolling at a better clip.

Eagles-Jaguars Game Preview: 5 questions and answers with the enemy – BGN
3 – The Jags are allowing the highest passer rating in the NFL this season. What’s contributed to their defensive issues? It’s pass rush on one play and pass coverage on the next. The Jaguars have a decent run defense, but anytime the opposing passer drops back, someone is liable to screw up. Jacksonville doesn’t have enough depth in its front or backend to be playing man coverage as often as they do. The safeties have been shoddy and the ‘Arik Armstead at EDGE’ experiment has been miserable. All that said, the Jaguars absolutely do not roster the worst defense in football. Again, the blame falls back to coaching. Defensive coordinator Ryan Nielsen needs to do something, anything different this week — they rank 32nd in blitz rate this year (?!) — or Jalen Hurts may have the best game of his career.

5 Questions with BGN: What we learned about the Eagles – Big Cat Country
As the Jacksonville Jaguars prepare to play the Philadelphia Eagles in Week 9, we sat down with Brandon Lee Gowton of Bleeding Green Nation to learn more about the opposing side.

NFL Week 9 predictions, fantasy sleepers, upset picks, buzz – ESPN+
Bowen: Don’t be surprised if … A.J. Brown posts over 100 receiving yards vs. the Jaguars. Brown has topped the 100-yard mark in two of his four games this season, and he’s averaging 19.4 yards per catch. That works against a Jaguars’ defense that’s allowing the second-most passing yards per game (271.1). I see Brown getting going early in this one on a deep ball from Jalen Hurts.

Eagles’ Fred Johnson once hit ‘rock bottom.’ Here’s how self-belief helped him belong – The Athletic
“The mind is your greatest friend or your greatest enemy,” he says.Johnson can talk about it now. He can contemplate the once-weighty topic of old insecurity as casually as tossing the water bottle he just sunk into the trash can in the middle of the locker room. (“I usually just sit here and try to shoot them,” he says.) It was often hard to remember that the job is also a game — especially after it had beaten him down. Gratitude for a practice squad spot? Try disappointment and aimless anger. Johnson was “mad at any and everybody.” That had been “rock bottom.” How did the Eagles have any use for him? Their O-line kept steamrolling defenses along the pathway to Super Bowl LVII. So why was position coach Jeff Stoutland always in Johnson’s face in practice, he wondered, “coaching me like I was a starter”? Johnson “got tired of it.” He spoke out as someone who viewed hard coaching as pointless abuse. Please stop. “I was so hard-headed,” Johnson said earlier this year. “I didn’t want to listen to nobody, especially Stout. And Stout just said, ‘I’m not gonna quit on you. I’m not gonna give up on you.’ And that’s just something that I appreciate him the most for, ’cause I was on my way out the league.”

Eagles: Jalen Hurts contract doesn’t prevent him from golfing – PFT
Eagles quarterback Jalen Hurts had a chance to golf with Barack Obama earlier this week. Hurts said that, while he was present for the round involving Obama, owner Jeffrey Lurie, and running back Saquon Barkley, Hurts didn’t play — because his contract prevents him from golfing. As it turns out, Hurts’s contract doesn’t contain a no-golf clause. Via Jeff McLane of the Philadelphia Inquirer, the team said Hurts is simply honoring a verbal request from Lurie, who didn’t want his team’s franchise quarterback to become obsessed with golf.

Meet Christian Parker, the 32-year-old secondary coach behind the Eagles’ rejuvenated cornerback room – Inquirer
In the fleeting moments between periods of Eagles practice, Quinyon Mitchell has developed a telling ritual. As the team breaks for special-teams drills, the first-round rookie cornerback heads toward an unoccupied field, finds his position coach, and resumes their shared pursuit of speeding along his development as quickly as possible. Lined up across from Mitchell and sometimes impersonating whichever wide receiver he’ll be facing most often that following Sunday is Eagles defensive backs coach/pass-game coordinator Christian Parker. He’s the 32-year-old, Jordans-wearing, watch-collecting assistant coach behind the Eagles’ resurgent secondary and the one who initially caught Mitchell off guard with the insistence that they don’t waste time on the practice field. “I’ve always believed in that,” Parker told The Inquirer. “If we’re out there on the grass, we don’t have that much time, so we might as well maximize it. It’s not full-speed stuff, it’s mainly just the training of the eyes and the feet and the hands and the technical development in all those things. Now, he’s used to the routine. At first, he might have thought it was a one-time thing, but we’re doing that every day.”

From dreams to reality: LeSean McCoy reflects on Eagles Hall of Fame induction – PE.com
The Eagles made that dream a reality with the 53rd overall pick in the second round of the 2009 NFL Draft. McCoy would go on to rush for 637 yards in his rookie season. At the time, it broke the franchise rookie rushing yards record and is now second-most in team history. “I was super excited; I wanted to be an Eagle. The funny thing is my hometown was maybe an hour and 20 minutes from the stadium, thinking about that for a second, to be drafted by that team – I stayed home,” McCoy said in an exclusive interview with Eagles Insider Dave Spadaro. “I remember it like yesterday. We were having a draft party with my family and friends, and I remember seeing Andy Reid (Eagles head coach 1999-2012) and Howie Roseman, Brett Veach (Eagles player personnel and assistant to head coach, 2007-12) and everybody called me and I remember saying, ‘Hey guys we’re going to Philly,’ and everybody erupted with joy.”

5 NFL MVP candidates, ranked by who should win in 2024 – SB Nation
5. Jayden Daniels, QB, Washington Commanders. The last rookie to win MVP was Jim Brown in 1957, but in a year where most of the superstar veterans are having down years, Daniels could seriously get some votes. He’s led the resurgent Washington Commanders to a hot start, while proving electric play with his arm and legs, like the leader on this list. Daniels has only thrown for seven touchdowns this year, but his underlying advanced stats are much more impressive. He’s sixth in Success Rate, and while EPA is a team stat, he’s second in adjusted EPA per play. His electrified the NFL with the Commanders being where they are to start this season, and if he keeps this up we’ll see his name on a few MVP ballots. Honorable mention: Saquon Barkley, RB, Philadelphia Eagles, Patrick Mahomes, QB, Kansas City Chiefs, Penei Sewell, OT, Detroit Lions, Tristan Wirfs, OT, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Commanders vs Giants Friday Injury Report: One offensive lineman ruled out for Sunday’s game – Hogs Haven
The Washington Commanders held the last full practice before their Week 9 matchup against the New York Giants today. Cornelius Lucas suffered an ankle injury vs the Bears and is the only player ruled out for the game. Rookie LT Brandon Coleman has cleared the concussion protocol and will get his first game s the full-time starter, and not rotating drives with the veteran lineman. Washington only has one player listed as questionable. RB Brian Robinson has been limited by a knee injury the last week’s, missing one game. He’s been limited all week with a hamstring injury, and will likely see another limited workload if he plays Sunday. Washington didn’t elevate a running back last week, and Austin Ekeler got most of the snaps.

Cowboys Point/Counterpoint: Cowboys may be nearing point of no return – Blogging The Boys
Things are not great in Dallas, to say the least. Yet another loss to the 49ers have brought the team to arguably its lowest point of the Mike McCarthy era, and their next opportunity to right the ship comes on the road against a Falcons team that’s won four of their last five and seems to be rounding into form. As far as things go in Dallas, the odds of a dramatic turnaround are pretty low. Their next four opponents have a combined record of 24-9, with two of them being divisional foes. The Cowboys are on a path where they may very well be effectively out of the NFC East race by Thanksgiving, and it already feels like morale can’t go any lower. Are they really approaching the point of no return, or are we being a little too dramatic? Our own Tom Ryle and David Howman have some differing views on the doomsday machine that is America’s Team.

Poll results: The Giants should sell at the trade deadline – Big Blue View
We’re at the halfway point of the 2024 season and the New York Giants are currently sitting at 2-6. Barring a remarkable turnaround, it seems very unlikely that the Giants will make the postseason or do much more than tread water for the remainder of the year. With that in mind we asked the Big Blue View community whether the Giants should be sellers, buyers, or stand pat at the upcoming trade deadline. Giants fans voted overwhelmingly in support of selling at the trade deadline in exchange for draft capital.

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Science & Technology
Ronald Johnson Nominated for the 39th Black Engineer of the Year Award Distinguished Leader an

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Technology tamfitronics Dr. DeLoatch, Dr. Ronald Johnson, General Wilson

Dr. DeLoatch, Dr. Ronald Johnson, General Wilson

BALTIMORESept. 19, 2024PRLog — Career Communications Group is proud to announce that Ronald Johnson, Senior Vice President of Strategic Initiatives and Chief of Staff at Georgia Institute of Technology, has been nominated for the prestigious Black Engineer of the Year Award (BEYA) at the 39th Annual BEYA STEM DTX Conference. This highly anticipated event will take place in Baltimore, Maryland, in February 2025, recognizing Johnson’s extraordinary career and leadership in engineering, public service, and higher education.

Johnson’s career has spanned more than three decades, during which he has demonstrated a profound commitment to excellence, diversity, and innovation. His nomination for BEYA’s top honor is a testament to his invaluable contributions to the STEM community and his leadership in initiatives that have shaped the careers of countless engineers and technologists.

A Career of Impactful Leadership

Ronald Johnson’s illustrious career began with his service in the U.S. Army, where he served for 32 years, rising to the rank of Major General. During his time in the military, he held several key leadership positions, including serving as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ second-highest-ranking senior engineer staff officer and as the Director of the U.S. Army Installation Management Agency. Johnson also made significant contributions as the commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ Gulf Region Division and U.S. Deputy Director of the Program Management Office in Iraq, overseeing critical infrastructure projects and leading efforts to restore key systems in conflict zones.

His transition from military service to the private and public sectors has been equally impactful. Johnson was the National Basketball Association’s (NBA) first Senior Vice President of Referee Operations, where he oversaw the officiating program for one of the world’s most visible sports leagues. His leadership in this role helped strengthen the integrity and performance of NBA officials, demonstrating his capacity for strategic oversight and operational excellence.

Since joining Georgia Tech in 2014, Johnson has served as a professor of the practice in the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering. Most recently, he was appointed Senior Vice President of Strategic Initiatives and Chief of Staff, where he is responsible for advising President Ángel Cabrera on a range of executive priorities, special projects, and key initiatives aimed at advancing Georgia Tech’s mission during a period of unprecedented growth. His deep understanding of organizational leadership and commitment to fostering an inclusive environment make him a pivotal member of Georgia Tech’s Executive Leadership Team.

A Legacy of Excellence and Recognition

Throughout his career, Ronald Johnson has been the recipient of numerous accolades, underscoring his lasting contributions to both the military and civilian sectors. Among his many honors are the Distinguished Service Medal, Bronze Star, and Legion of Merit. His pioneering role in engineering and public service has been recognized with several BEYA awards over the years, including the 2003 Black Engineer of the Year Award for Professional Achievement in Government Service and the 2008 Lifetime Achievement Award, a rare honor that highlights the exceptional and sustained impact of his work.

Johnson has also been recognized as an inductee into the 2005 Academy of Distinguished Engineering Alumni at Georgia Tech and has received the Trailblazer Award from the Georgia Tech Black Alumni Organization. His influence at Georgia Tech extends beyond his professional roles, as he has provided an endowment for two student scholarships and continues to serve as a mentor to emerging engineers, particularly from underrepresented backgrounds.

A Commitment to Diversity and Inclusion

Ronald Johnson’s career has been marked by his advocacy for diversity in STEM fields, particularly through his efforts to increase the representation of African Americans and other minorities in engineering and technology. His work aligns with BEYA’s mission to highlight the achievements of Black engineers and technologists who are making a difference in their fields and communities.

As BEYA celebrates its 39th year, Johnson’s nomination stands as a shining example of the dedication and perseverance required to break barriers and create opportunities for the next generation of engineers. His leadership in strategic initiatives at Georgia Tech, coupled with his continued commitment to mentoring, makes him a role model for aspiring STEM professionals nationwide.

About the Black Engineer of the Year Awards (BEYA) Conference

The BEYA STEM DTX Conference is one of the nation’s largest and most significant events honoring excellence in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). Each year, the event brings together professionals, students, and educators to recognize the contributions of African Americans in STEM fields. The conference serves as a platform for showcasing the achievements of Black engineers, scientists, and technologists, while also offering career development and networking opportunities for participants. Through awards, panels, and professional development workshops, BEYA aims to inspire and empower the next generation of STEM leaders.

Looking Ahead to BEYA39

The 2025 BEYA STEM DTX Conference promises to be a landmark event, with the spotlight on trailblazers like Ronald Johnson who exemplify the qualities of leadership, excellence, and service. Johnson’s nomination for the Black Engineer of the Year Award is a recognition of his tremendous contributions to the STEM fields and his ongoing efforts to pave the way for future generations.

Top Stories
RW Johnson: Nats on Apartheid mirrored by ANC on economic policy. Race-based idiocy

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Political scientist RW Johnson exposes obvious parallels between the National Party’s Apartheid project and the ANC’s obsession with racially-based economic policies. Both had disastrous consequences – and required a radical re-think, fuelled by social unrest, before abandonment. The big question is whether Cyril Ramaphosa is able to adopt the radical change of an FW de Klerk or the timid, incrementally-based approach of PW Botha. Johnson spoke to BizNews editor Alec Hogg.

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Highlights from the interview

In this interview, R.W. Johnson, a seasoned political analyst, discusses the current state of South Africa’s political landscape with Alec Hogg. Johnson expresses concern about the trajectory of the ANC, suggesting that their continued adherence to outdated, Marxist-influenced policies could lead to severe social unrest. He compares the ANC’s situation to that of the National Party during apartheid, noting how both parties were trapped in ideological bubbles, unable to adapt to changing realities. Johnson reflects on how the ANC, like the National Party before it, seems unable to break free from its entrenched views, leading to stagnation and poor governance.

He also critiques the ANC’s focus on rhetoric over action, a pattern he believes stems from their exile years when resolutions and statements were seen as achievements in themselves. Johnson touches on the potential for significant social disturbances if the government continues to neglect the country’s pressing economic issues, such as inequality and unemployment. Despite these challenges, Johnson sees some hope in the new DA ministers, who he believes are bringing a fresh, action-oriented approach to governance. However, he remains skeptical about whether these changes will be enough to alter the ANC’s course or prevent further decline.

Edited transcript of the interview ___STEADY_PAYWALL___

00:00:09:13 – 00:00:36:03
Alec Hogg:
There’s a whole lot happening on the political front, and we’ve been kept up to date by R.W. Johnson, who’s been giving us some of the best columns that I’ve seen on the political analysis of South Africa anywhere. Then again, we expect that from him. We’ll be talking to the former Oxford Don in a moment.

00:00:36:05 – 00:01:05:12
Alec Hogg:
Well, good to see you. Let’s start off with the key issue that you’ve been driving over the past few columns, and that’s the ANC economic policy. Perhaps you can unpack for us the parallels you’ve drawn between the National Party, who finally decided that they’d messed up with apartheid, and then had that incredible moment where F.W. de Klerk told the world that they were dropping this policy they’d had for decades.

00:01:05:14 – 00:01:30:11
Alec Hogg:
And the ANC’s similar missteps or mistakes in labor legislation, minimum wage deployment, basically messing up the economy. It’s there for all to see. However, we await the de Klerk moment. Just unpack that for us, if you would, and how long it might take before sanity prevails.

00:01:30:12 – 00:02:11:16
R.W. Johnson:
Well, that last question is the most difficult. Look, the point I was trying to make was that the National Party, in power over a period of 40 odd years, built up this enormous edifice of apartheid legislation, which, in the end, was remodeling the whole country—dividing it up into black homelands and the rest, group areas, and changing the geography of cities and so forth, let alone all sorts of other laws regulating everything from who you could marry to who you could go to bed with, or, you know, everything.

00:02:11:18 – 00:02:41:20
R.W. Johnson:
And it appeared likely to those of us who were opposing this system, which had taken all those years to construct, that it would take just as long to dismantle it. But in practice, that didn’t happen at all. It all happened pretty quickly. I mean, there were reform attempts in the ’80s, but it was what happened when de Klerk made his big turn in February 1990 that mattered.

00:02:41:22 – 00:03:10:20
R.W. Johnson:
And very quickly, it was all gone. Now, it seems to me that the same situation is building up with the ANC, in the sense that they have been happily legislating away for 30 years, building up a similarly complicated system. Again, the basis of it all is racial legislation, despite what they said about being non-racial. They have brought in hundreds of laws which use racial classification as their basis.

00:03:10:22 – 00:03:41:22
R.W. Johnson:
Whether it is affirmative action, BEE, or all sorts of other things, this is really the problem. We are still only partway from getting away from the apartheid system. We still have a racially-based system, and this also happens to be very hostile to investors, both domestic and foreign. It drives away investment, with the results that we know in terms of unemployment, inequality, and so forth.

00:03:42:00 – 00:04:12:14
R.W. Johnson:
Clearly, the ANC has failed in a grotesque way. I mean, it promised a better life for all, but it has actually brought about much higher unemployment, much more poverty, and much more inequality. They try to talk as if these things are somehow the heritage of apartheid, but they’re not. Certainly, it started from a high base of inequality, but it’s gotten much worse under the ANC, and they don’t seem to reckon with that.

00:04:12:17 – 00:04:46:19
R.W. Johnson:
Their policies are actively chasing them away from where they say they want to go. Now, it seems to me that we can hope that, as we have seen in the last few years under Ramaphosa, some of the attempts at reform, some limited degree of privatization—in some of the SOEs, the allowance of independent generation of electricity, and so forth—these are small changes compared to what is required, but they are, in a sense, rather similar to what began to happen under P.W. Botha, where he made one small change after another, which in the end were quite significant.

Read more: De Beer: The “Most Wanted Poster” Politicians in SA

00:04:46:19 – 00:05:24:12
R.W. Johnson:
But, of course, it didn’t get us anywhere near where we needed to be. I think they are now in a similar situation, and that what we will sooner or later have to face is a big torrent of change, in which we get rid of most or all of that racial legislation, and have a completely liberalized economy.

00:05:24:18 – 00:05:53:14
Alec Hogg:
So it’s interesting, when you put it in those terms, the incremental changes that P.W. Botha made and the incremental changes that Ramaphosa is making. So we need, if I hear you correctly, an “F.W. to the P.W.,” in other words, somebody from the ANC or somebody in government, as president, who can break with the past and bring through radical change. Is it not possible that Ramaphosa himself could do this?

00:05:53:16 – 00:06:28:18
R.W. Johnson:
Well, I mean, obviously, we don’t know what the agency will be. What worries me is that I mentioned in the talk that David Makhura and his IFP counterpart were warning that unless we change, we will face revolution. Now, I don’t think that’s true, but I do think that if we carry on the way we are, we will face great social disturbances because you can’t expect people to put up with this degree of inequality, poverty, and falling per capita income, for God’s sake.

00:06:28:20 – 00:06:52:23
R.W. Johnson:
Sooner or later, this will create an explosion, which will make what happened in July 2021 look quite minor. So, it may be that the ANC will refuse to reform until we get an explosion of that sort. I don’t know, but that’s where we are heading at the moment if we continue along the path that we are on.

00:06:53:00 – 00:07:22:19
Alec Hogg:
Mr. Johnson, you’ve been giving us some fabulous insights for a while now about the emergence of MK. Over the weekend, my colleague Christine had an interview with Jabulani Khumalo, the founder of MK, where he made some radical exposés about Jacob Zuma, and more than 300,000 people have watched that video in just over 24 hours, which to me, shows that there’s a lot of interest in it.

00:07:22:21 – 00:07:26:16
Alec Hogg:
What can we read from this? And I’m glad you’ve seen it. What can we read from that?

00:07:26:18 – 00:07:49:19
R.W. Johnson:
Well, I wasn’t too surprised by most of it in the sense that Zuma, you know, he took hold of their initiative, used it for his own purposes, and clearly had rather limited ideas about what he was going to do, making it up as he went along. And, you know, MK is a fairly chaotic party.

00:07:49:21 – 00:08:15:18
R.W. Johnson:
I don’t know whether that’s going to change, frankly, but it is a peculiar situation where—I mean, I see that the party is demanding that the grant for the Zulu royal house be doubled. I mean, this is allegedly a radical left party, which is arguing in favor of Zulu chieftaincy and monarchy, with enormous resources to be devoted to it.

00:08:15:18 – 00:08:27:03
R.W. Johnson:
I mean, it’s peculiar. It’s a bizarre set of notions that an old Zulu man like Jacob Zuma has, but which make no sense otherwise.

00:08:27:05 – 00:08:55:15
Alec Hogg:
Part of the discussion that Christine had with Mr. Khumalo was that Zuma’s daughter had fraudulently gone into CIPC, into the back end, and changed the ownership or the directorship of the MK party. And that’s one of the reasons why he’s laid a fraud charge. It seems open and shut. But what are the implications of something like that?

00:08:55:17 – 00:09:23:13
R.W. Johnson:
Well, I wasn’t too surprised, as I say. I mean, you know, Zuma, in his years of armed struggle, would have done many things more radical than that. His daughter obviously has learned from her father, and they wanted certain things, so they made sure that it happened. And then you go on from there. I mean, that’s just the style they have.

00:09:23:15 – 00:09:43:02
Alec Hogg:
What are you seeing from the other big announcement of the past week, the resignation of Floyd Shivambu from the EFF and his joining MK? Again, Mr. Khumalo says it’s a ruse, a deception. He doesn’t see this as a major break. How are you reading it?

00:09:43:07 – 00:10:14:23
R.W. Johnson:
Well, of course, I know no more than anyone else, but the Sunday Times yesterday had a completely different story, which made good sense. They reported that there had been a split between Malema and Shivambu, basically over the negotiations with the JR, and their story made perfectly good sense to me. Malema had been so keen to advance his own interests that he sort of sabotaged Shivambu’s negotiation, and I can see how that would be very upsetting to Shivambu.

00:10:15:01 – 00:10:45:03
R.W. Johnson:
So, look, I think part of the problem is that we’ve now got two, well, radical economic transformation parties, if you like—MK and the EFF. And I don’t really think there’s room in our system for two such parties. Since MK is bigger, has a former president leading it, and has this large block of support in one province, it’s more formidable.

00:10:45:05 – 00:11:08:18
R.W. Johnson:
Which the EFF doesn’t have. It’s a more attractive pool of opposition, and I can see that it will pull people away from them. Yeah, Malema’s got a real problem with that. But, at the end of the day, as I say, it’s kind of chaotic to me. They keep drafting in more people with very shaky, dubious credentials. It’s a party of crooks to a considerable extent, and it doesn’t make much sense. So, I don’t know whether even AMK is going to hold up very well over time. I’d be surprised if it does well in the 2026 municipal elections, for example.

00:11:32:02 – 00:11:58:02
Alec Hogg:
Moving back to the Government of National Unity. So far, so good, it appears. And some of the initial reports coming back from the new ministers, particularly the DA ministers, are that they are shaking up their predecessors. Would this cause concern for the retention of the status quo?

00:11:58:04 – 00:12:23:08
R.W. Johnson:
I don’t think so. I think Ramaphosa would be delighted that this is so. They have some ministers who work really hard and don’t just talk. I think there was a very good column by Justice Malala in the Mail & Guardiancontrasting Motsoaledi going on another big talk show with Schreiber at Home Affairs, who’s getting on and actually doing the work.

Read more: MK founder spills the beans, unmasks Zuma’s real agenda…

00:12:23:10 – 00:12:48:18
R.W. Johnson:
I think this is the difference, really. I mean, Motsoaledi has been talking about this issue for 17 years now, and he still thinks the answer to the problems is yet more talking, not doing. The DA ministers are a breath of fresh air from that point of view. My concern, as I pointed out, is that they’ve been carefully kept away from all the national ministries, meaning that all the basic ANC economic policies are still in force and are indeed being reinforced. That is exactly what needs to be changed and isn’t changing.

00:12:48:20 – 00:13:09:21
Alec Hogg:
So let’s go back to those parallels with the National Party. Where will the spark come from? Or how could the spark occur that gets the ANC to sober up and realize that it is not doing itself, let alone the country, any good by following economic policies that have failed and are continuing to fail?

00:13:09:23 – 00:13:33:02
R.W. Johnson:
Well, as I say, I can only see two ways. One is that they will continue to lose electoral support. If that happens badly enough, it will shake them, and they will be in less and less of a position to call the shots anyway. But, the worrying thing is that we could see, as we did under apartheid, you know, every now and again, you get explosions—Sharpeville, Soweto, the situation rising—explosions of social discontent, which then force change of some sort.

00:13:33:04 – 00:14:01:11
R.W. Johnson:
And I fear that that is also a real possibility, that you can’t keep on cutting people’s per capita income, increasing unemployment, and increasing social misery without, in the end, producing some convulsion. And that’s what they’re pushing towards.

00:14:01:13 – 00:15:06:05
Alec Hogg:
For those of us sitting outside of the political science arena that you’ve spent your life analyzing here and all around the world, it kind of beggars belief that when the facts are so clear, the people who should be making the changes don’t. What is it about the human condition or indeed about the politician’s condition that stops them from seeing the obvious, what is seemingly obvious to others?

00:15:06:07 – 00:15:45:01
R.W. Johnson:
Well, I think that the ANC has been in its own particular bubble ever since it went into exile. It imbibed, as you know, for a whole generation, essentially Marxist ideas, both political and economic, and those are still highly influential. Phrases like “National Democratic Revolution” still have a sort of sainted meaning, which they don’t in the rest of the country. But they’re still clinging to those things because they don’t have any other way of thinking about things.

00:15:45:03 – 00:16:15:21
R.W. Johnson:
And that is a huge problem. But, you know, the same was true with the National Party. As you know, they saw things in the way that Verwoerd laid out in the 1950s, and they carried on with that for a very long time. I remember talking to Laurie Schlemmer in the 1970s and 80s—I saw a lot of Laurie then—and he was by far the best analyst of South Africa that we ever had.

00:16:15:21 – 00:16:42:17
R.W. Johnson:
I think I said, you know, how come we’re still doing these things, trying to create homelands and all of this apartheid when it’s quite obviously not working? Why is it still going on? And he said, well, you know, that’s true. But the point is that you’ve got all these bureaucrats and technocrats in the government and throughout society. The last time they got a clear message, which they understood, was from Verwoerd. Now he’s dead and gone. But they continue to do it because no one has offered any alternative. So they continue with those policies, even developing them, because they don’t have any idea of where else to go. And I think, in a sense, the ANC is now in that sort of situation, where they must be losing confidence in their own policies to some extent.

00:17:17:03 – 00:17:22:10
R.W. Johnson:
But they don’t have any feeling of where else to go, if you know what I mean.

00:17:22:12 – 00:17:29:19
Alec Hogg:
And what was that clear message that the ANC had? Where did that come from? Tambo? Mandela?

00:17:29:21 – 00:17:58:12
R.W. Johnson:
Oh, I think it came earlier than that, during the exile years, when those were the years after when the SACP was at its height, to some extent in control. And when its policies became ANC policies, all sorts of very exciting, but completely unrealistic policies were adopted. There was always talk about revolutionary seizure of power.

00:17:58:12 – 00:18:31:14
R.W. Johnson:
And as you know, that never took place. But it was the sort of thing which excited people and made for good rhetoric and exciting statements drawn up in countries far from South Africa. But it was completely out of touch with reality. The armed struggle was also, you know, a disaster, really. Within a very short time of being launched, it resulted in everyone going to jail, into exile, being dead, or whatever.

00:18:31:16 – 00:19:07:20
R.W. Johnson:
It never really got off the ground in a serious way. So I think they were in a very peculiar state in exile, as most exile movements are. Of course, the only thing they then did was to issue statements and pass resolutions, and that became the modus operandi of the ANC. They still have this tendency to make speeches, pass motions, etc., and then feel the work is done. But it’s not because it’s just noise.

00:19:07:22 – 00:19:16:09
Alec Hogg:
R.W. Johnson, author, political scientist, and the favorite columnist of the BizNews tribe. And I’m Alec Hogg from BizNews.com.

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Science & Technology
NASA Johnson Dedicates Dorothy Vaughan Center to Women of Apollo

NASA Space Technology

On the eve of the 55th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing, NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston commemorated the unsung heroes who helped make humanity’s first steps on the Moon possible.

To celebrate their enduring legacy, Johnson named one of its central buildings the “Dorothy Vaughan Center in Honor of the Women of Apollo” on July 19, 2024, during a ceremony recognizing the early pioneers who laid the groundwork for the Artemis Generation.

Dorothy Vaughan, a mathematician and NASA’s first Black manager, played a crucial role in this historic achievement. As the head of the West Area Computing Unit at Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, from 1949 to 1958, she led her team in mastering new computer programming languages, helping to pave the way for the agency’s current diverse workforce and leadership.

The program included remarks from Johnson Director Vanessa Wyche, NASA astronaut Christina Koch, and Deputy Associate Administrator Casey Swails.

“Dorothy Vaughan, alongside all of our Women of Apollo, represents the best of NASA’s past, and their legacies serve as the inspiration and foundation for our future,” said Wyche. “As we prepare to take our next giant leap, the Women of Apollo will take each step with us.”

NASA leadership joined for the special occasion, including Associate Administrator Jim Free, Acting Associate Administrator for Space Technology Mission Directorate and Langley Director Clayton Turner, Director of NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi John Bailey, and former Johnson Director Mike Coats. Also in attendance were Reps. Lizzie Fletcher and Sylvia Garcia, and representatives from the offices of Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. John Cornyn, and Rep. Brian Babin.

NASA astronauts Suni Williams, Jeanette J. Epps, and Tracy C. Dyson celebrated the historic moment with a special message from the International Space Station.

“We have accomplished our dreams of space exploration thanks to the many NASA women that paved the way for diversity, inclusion, and excellence,” said Epps.

“Building on the efforts of our space exploration pioneers, we continue to work for the benefit of humanity,” said Dyson. “NASA’s success is only possible because of the tenacity and expertise of individuals like Dorothy Vaughan whose legacy of brilliance continues to inspire us today.”

The program also featured the reading of a poem by Dr. Vivian Ayers Allen, a Pulitzer Prize-nominated poet, cultural activist, and former NASA editor and typist. The poem, titled “Hawk,” was published just 11 weeks before humankind’s first venture into space with Sputnik I as an allegory where space flight symbolizes freedom. Allen’s daughter, Phylicia Rashad, recited the poem ahead of the presentation by Texas Southern University’s Dr. Thomas F. Freeman Debate Team.

The ceremony also included a “Women in Human Spaceflight” panel discussion with some of the impactful Women of Apollo and current trailblazers in human spaceflight.

The panelists inspired the crowd with their collective experiences of breaking barriers and making monumental contributions to space exploration.

Debbie Korth, deputy manager of the Orion Program, moderated the event with panelists Lara Kearney, manager of NASA’s Extravehicular Activity and Human Surface Mobility Program; Sandy Johnson, CEO of Barrios Technology; NASA astronaut Christina Hammock Koch; Andrea Mosie, manager and senior sample processor for NASA’s Lunar Materials Repository Laboratory; and Dr. Shirley Price, former NASA equal opportunity specialist.

“I learned that as long as I am being myself, I can make a difference,” said Price. “Dorothy Vaughan helped me make that difference because she paved the way for me, and I am here to pave the way forward for more to follow.”

Koch reflected on the future, saying, “I am looking forward to us being driven by our values of inclusivity, making sure that we are going for all and by all in a non-hidden way and that we are calling out the amazing contributions of every single person that has a dream.”

Heather Vaughan-Batten, Vaughan’s granddaughter, marked the official naming of the building with a ribbon-cutting ceremony.

The event concluded with a surprise unveiling of a painting of Vaughan to her family. The portrait, created by Eliza Hoffman, an artist and student from Clear Creek Independent High School, now illuminates the main hallway of the Dorothy Vaughan Center in honor of the Women of Apollo.

More than 30 portraits of women who made notable contributions to NASA during the Apollo era now line the building’s main hallway.

Watch the building dedication ceremony, ribbon-cutting, and portrait unveiling below.