Hon
Chairperson, I am just standing up to help hon Mileham, who does not acknowledge the fact that, after we published the Integrated Resource Plan, IRP, the rand strengthened from R15, 20 to R14,70, which is an
acknowledgment of certainty in regulatory terms and in policy terms. So, he cannot do that, because when you have a small mind, you chase mistakes, but when you have a great mind, you learn from every mistake that is committed in the process of execution.
I want to refer him to a book written by Jack Wells. There is a chapter that talks about blowing the rooftop. Read that chapter. It will help you understand that people who commit mistakes in execution, don't get fired, instead they end up being CEOs because they learn from every mistake that they commit.
Now, the weakness with this ... Yesterday I was called to withdraw lobbyist. I am a lobbyist today and it is fine with me. [Laughter.] What people don't understand when they lobby for foreign technology at the expense of national technology, is that they don't know national interests and national needs. They are unsettled and therefore they are loudhailers for powerful governments that are outside. In that way, you unsettle the nation, you weaken it and you hand it over to foreign powerful governments to run.
That is what Mileham is doing. I want to ask him to learn a little bit, whether it is just a ... [Inaudible] ... whether it is ... [Inaudible] ..., we actually corrected all those mistakes. We are moving on. The train is running. [Time expired.] You are going to be shocked with the way of delivery. [Inaudible] ... get out!