Posted on 01/14/2018 6:29:04 AM PST by Rummyfan
Given the ongoing furor over President Trump's executive order commanding the State Department cartographer to mark the map of the world with "Here be sh***holes", I thought for our Saturday movie date we should have a film about just how bad it can get. Twenty-four years ago, the Rwandan genocide was just about to get under way: In a hundred days, a million people were murdered - with machetes, all very low-tech. Since then, as I noted only the other day, the machete has been introduced to such boring white-bread places as Shelburne, Vermont, and Dundalk, Ireland, and Gothenburg, Sweden, and Kandel, Germany. But back then you had to go to what the President calls the s***hole countries to be on the receiving end of such vibrant diversity.
How compassionate was pre-Trump America to Sh*tholia? There being no hashtags in those days, President Clinton, the Pain-Feeler-in-Chief, had to slough off the victims with a brusque soundbite nixing international intervention: "The UN has to learn how to say no," he declared. And so 20 per cent of the population of Rwanda was slaughtered, a number so huge that the world chose to hold it at a big, woozy, blurry distance. To mark the tenth anniversary, the editors of the Economist asked, 'How many people can name any of the perpetrators?' I'd say it's more basic than that. How many could tell you whether it was the Hutu killing the Tutsi or the Tutsi killing the Hutu? C'mon, take a guess, without looking it up.
(Excerpt) Read more at steynonline.com ...
yep
Not exactly a fun Saturday night....
Beyond the Gates was a better movie (better as in filmed on location; provided a more accurate picture of the UNs complicity; no cavalry to the rescue)...
=====================================
Can you say kickback?
CIRCA 2013---Obama pledges $7 billion to upgrade power in Africa (CNN) U.S. President Barack Obama pledged $7 billion Sunday to help combat frequent power blackouts in sub-Saharan Africa. Funds from the initiative, dubbed Power Africa, will be distributed over the next five years. Obama made the announcement during his trip to South Africa, the continents biggest economy.
Access to electricity is fundamental to opportunity in this age. Its the light that children study by, the energy that allows an idea to be transformed into a real business. Its the lifeline for families to meet their most basic needs, and its the connection thats needed to plug Africa into the grid of the global economy, he said.
Two-thirds of the population of sub-Saharan Africa lacks access to electricity, including more than 85% of those living in rural areas, the White House said. A light where currently there is darkness the energy to lift people out of poverty thats what opportunity looks like, Obama told students at Cape Town University. So this is Americas vision: a partnership with Africa for growth, and the potential for every citizen, not just a few at the top.
The program includes $1.5 billion from the U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corporation and $5 billion from the Export-Import Bank, the White House said. Sub-Saharan Africa will need more than $300 billion to achieve universal electricity access by 2030, it said.
The preliminary setup will include Ethiopia, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria, Tanzania, Uganda and Mozambique.
These countries have set ambitious goals in electric power generation, and are making the utility and energy sector reforms to pave the way for investment and growth, a White House statement said.
Obamas three-nation African trip started in Senegal and will end in Tanzania this week. The visit aims to bolster U.S. investment opportunities, address development issues such as food security and health, and promote democracy.
It comes as China aggressively engages the continent, pouring billions of dollars into it and replacing the United States as Africas largest trading partner. Obama applauded Chinas investment in Africa, saying he is not threatened by it.
Africas greater integration into the global economy will benefit everyone with the potential creation of new jobs and opportunities, he said. Im here because I think the United States needs to engage with a continent full of promise and possibility, Obama said. Its good for the United States. I welcome the attention that Africa is receiving from China, Brazil, India and Turkey.
However, he urged African officials to ensure that those who invest in the continent and its natural resources benefit Africans in terms of jobs and other assets.
Obama also visited Robben Island, where anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela spent a majority of his 27-year imprisonment, on Sunday. And he spoke at Cape Town University, the site of a famous speech by Robert F. Kennedy at the height of apartheid in 1966.
Obama heads next to Tanzania, where he is scheduled to attend events until Tuesday.
Liz: That $7 billion figure made me remember I had read something else about kickbacks from African “energy” projects — and it was from you!
Post 8 in this thread:
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3459668/posts
You wrote:
“Cheryl Mills’ BlackIvy is developing a privately-financed dry port that will be located 56 km outside of the Port of Dar es Salaam, and will use shuttle trains to take transit and upcountry cargo to and from the Port, BlackIvy spokeswoman Erin Pelton confirmed to Breitbart News.
“BlackIvy is focused on in-land logistics, not operating seaports,” (no mention that BlackIvy is running into opposition from the Tanzania Ports Authority).
“So how did BlackIvy, a brand new firm with no discernible track record of building ports, manage to become an overnight player in the East African energy market? It turns out Clintons former aides had some help from a company called Symbion Power, which was created to profit off rebuilding efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan after the U.S. invasions. Symbion Power happens to be a very good friend of Hillary Clintons.
. . .
“In one confidential e-mail to Clinton, Blumenthal was clearly colluding w/ onetime Amb Joe Wilson (Valerie Plame’s hubby) to help himself to the tax dollars in the State Dept cookie jar.
“Amb Wilson pumped himself up as a ‘director’ of Symbion Power-—an outfit seeking millions of dollars in contracts from an obscure government agency chaired by Hillary....the Millennium Challenge Corp. (MCC)
“In September 2010, Hillary’s MCC awarded Symbion $47 million tax dollars for (cough) ‘power projects in Tanzania.’
“EVER WONDER how much of the $47 million tax dollars got to Tanzania....after the players divvied it up among Blumenthal, Wilson, the Clintons, Obama?
“NOTE Millenium is also the source of the 100 million tax dollars Michele gave to Morocco “to teach Muslim girls” . . . “
Thanks for the research!
A few million on this scheme, a few million on that one, and pretty soon there’s none of our country’s $7 billion left to go to the African nations after all.
Many many thanks for posting the Mills scam......
I kept intending to put it up but never got around to it.
Thank you.
Dallaire said that with 400 marines he could have stopped the genocide, or at least have created a safe zone to defend refugees.
But Clinton refused them. Its OK, he still got a statue in his honor in return for his apology, and a major avenue named for him.
The French sent troops, but they were there to cover the Hutu retreat from the country after the massacre.
bump
If I recall correctly Kofi Annan was the “chief” UN guru for the region at the time as well.
When Trump was winning, how many celebrities said they would go to Canada ?
Remember pointing out that no one was saying Mexico ?
It’s because the list of countries, to a progressive, that are sh*tholes is WAY longer than Trumps.
Honestly, the world is a sh*thole and the only places it isn’t are within the US borders. And even then the coasts are stained with the leaking.
Just a quick look at the stats for the Dominican Republic next door make Haiti look pretty bad.
“...the only places it isnt are within the US borders...”
...except for any municipality run by dems for more than 4 years.
BTTT
Nice!
It was one of the best movies I’ve ever seen, and I’ve seen thousands. Definitely in my top 15.
Too bad Don Cheadle is such a moonbat.
I heard him say that in a lecture at the Borah Symposium, and read it in his book. He is indeed a haunted man. I think he is correct in that a safe zone could have saved tens of thousands, but I don't think he could have stopped the thing. A single bomb on that radio station, though - that could have stopped the thing.
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