African useless elite

Capitalist Nigger: The Road to Success: A Spider-Web DoctrineIn his book ¨Capitalist nigger-the Road to Success¨, pp. 97-119, Chika Onyeani concludes that the African educated elite is a failure, an individual who is not useful to the society, either in Africa or even as migrants. “The African elite has been a total failure; they cannot raise their heads in the community of scholars or the intelligentsia.  They want to continue to sit at the head of the totem pole, being spoon-fed, rather than at the head of the battle line leading the masses of Black people throughout the world.  That they have not been able to understand that the total Black race is under economic slavery is a testament to their half-education and illiteracy.

A community cannot survive when its so-called educated citizens are morally and intellectually bankrupt and decrepit.  You cannot have a community whose intelligentsia are mere parasites of other cultures.” Read the rest of this entry »

Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal by Ayn Rand

“A New Path for World Development”

It is clear that the present path of world development is not sustainable in the longer term, even if we recognise the enormous potentials of the market and of technological innovation. New ideas and strategies will be needed to ensure that improved living conditions and opportunities for a growing population across the world can be reconciled with the conservation of a viable climate and of the fragile ecosystems on which all life depends. A new vision and path for world development must be conceived and adopted if humanity is to surmount the challenges ahead. Read the rest of this entry »

Africa Doesn’t Matter..book review

Africa Doesn’t Matter  How the West has failed the poorest continent…..by Giles Bolton

Africa, a continent enormously rich in resources and people, remains the sick child of the modern world. Why, and what can we do about it? Why is Africa still poor? What happens to the billions of aid dollars given yearly? Why do trade rules that fail African countries also cost us at the checkout line? Why doesn’t Africa matter? In this engaging, jargon-free, reader-friendly guide, longtime aid worker and diplomat Giles Bolton offers his radical analysis of the problems Africa faces, drawing on years of experience on the ground. Dividing the book into five sections—poverty, aid, trade, globalization, and change—he analyzes the issues, breaking them down with helpful features like sidebars and bullet points and humanizing them with stories about real people in Africa and anecdotes from his own years in the field. In a final section, he outlines what we as individuals can do to make a difference. Read the rest of this entry »

The history of DIAMONDS

The Global Chess Game

Have you ever felt frustrated with being forced to play a game you didn’t want to participate in? You know you have something important to do, but someone is for some reason convincing you that you have to play the game. You think to yourself; “playing Monopoly can’t possibly be more important than what I actually need to do”. You may sigh, be a little irritated and reluctantly accept, thinking you can do the important things later. However, later on when you are trying to pick up where you left out, you find that someone else is forcing you to play yet another game you don’t feel like playing. With other words, you never seem to get your things done.

The game of Chess translates pretty well to the global scene. Most of the players on the Chess Board don’t even know that the Game Creators, who remotely and secretly move the pieces, exist. They are above the game, and the players (us) believe that we are creating the game as we go along; that is if we even know we are part of the game. Just like in chess, we can translate the pieces to different functions, to make the analogy more visualized:

The King: This would be the Presidents, Kings, dictators, prime ministers of the different countries. Read the rest of this entry »

The power of shrines “Martyrs help create new followers”

Osama Bin Laden’s body was buried at sea to deny his followers a shrine, it has been widely reported. But why do the graves of leaders matter so much? For a man who had been the world’s most wanted, it was a deeply undistinguished final resting place. The remains of Osama Bin Laden met an inauspicious fate – his body dropped into the ocean from an American aircraft carrier.US officials were at pains to insist that the process was conducted in “strict conformance with Islamic precepts and practices”.

But the purpose of his burial at sea was clear – to ensure that there was no grave to become a shrine for supporters, and a recruiting tool for extremist Islamism.It’s a motive with clear historical antecedents. Victorious regimes, particularly when confronted with ideological movements with charismatic leaders, have often been anxious to deny their defeated enemies a rallying point, a place where sympathisers can gather to venerate their dead. Read the rest of this entry »

Nightmare in Dreamland – A Journey of Ethiopian Girls to Middle East

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