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  On a totally unrelated side note. These days I often find myself thinking of the following quote by the early 20th century Chinese scholar Yan Fu from his "Letter to the proprietors of Waijiao bao concerning education" (與外交報主人論教育書). I think it is because it reminds me of the importance of democracy, rule of law and free knowledge from a perspective that is outside of a Western point of view:

Those who today praise Westerners say they are just good at calculations; they say they are just adept at mechanics and technique. They do not know that what today we and hear about - things like pneumatic motors and military weapons - are all just coarse material traces; the greatest flowering of so-called astronomy and physics is also just a scant mark of their abilities; it is not what is really within their veins. What runs within their veins? To speak in general terms, it is nothing other than methods of learning (xueshu) that filter out the bad and elevates the good; and a legal and political system (xingzheng) that suppresses selfishness so as to advance the public good. [1]

User:Discott/test/MapTemplate

Line item Original Budgeted Reallocation amount requested Notes
Laptop for the administator R15,000 R10,000 We only spent R5000 on this amount.
Board expenses (AGM) R30,000 R30,000 The AGM was digital and therefore cost nothing this year.
Communications R44,155 R40,000 Looks like the total amount will not be spent this year as volunteer in charge has not yet auctioned it.
Staff Costs R288,000 R45,000 Second administrator (based in Johannesburg) will be hired later than expected resulting in significant underspend.
Totals R125,000

Corruption in South Africa#Types of corruption in South Africa

  1. ^ Jenco, Leigh (2015). Changing Referents: Learning Across Space and Time in China and the West. Oxford University Press. p. 114. ISBN  0190463775.
  2. ^ "External debt stocks, long-term (DOD, current US$) - South Africa". World Bank. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a test page.

  On a totally unrelated side note. These days I often find myself thinking of the following quote by the early 20th century Chinese scholar Yan Fu from his "Letter to the proprietors of Waijiao bao concerning education" (與外交報主人論教育書). I think it is because it reminds me of the importance of democracy, rule of law and free knowledge from a perspective that is outside of a Western point of view:

Those who today praise Westerners say they are just good at calculations; they say they are just adept at mechanics and technique. They do not know that what today we and hear about - things like pneumatic motors and military weapons - are all just coarse material traces; the greatest flowering of so-called astronomy and physics is also just a scant mark of their abilities; it is not what is really within their veins. What runs within their veins? To speak in general terms, it is nothing other than methods of learning (xueshu) that filter out the bad and elevates the good; and a legal and political system (xingzheng) that suppresses selfishness so as to advance the public good. [1]

User:Discott/test/MapTemplate

Line item Original Budgeted Reallocation amount requested Notes
Laptop for the administator R15,000 R10,000 We only spent R5000 on this amount.
Board expenses (AGM) R30,000 R30,000 The AGM was digital and therefore cost nothing this year.
Communications R44,155 R40,000 Looks like the total amount will not be spent this year as volunteer in charge has not yet auctioned it.
Staff Costs R288,000 R45,000 Second administrator (based in Johannesburg) will be hired later than expected resulting in significant underspend.
Totals R125,000

Corruption in South Africa#Types of corruption in South Africa

  1. ^ Jenco, Leigh (2015). Changing Referents: Learning Across Space and Time in China and the West. Oxford University Press. p. 114. ISBN  0190463775.
  2. ^ "External debt stocks, long-term (DOD, current US$) - South Africa". World Bank. Retrieved 27 March 2022.

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