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AIDS origins opposed to scientific consensus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Early Hepatitis B Vaccines and the “Man-Made” Origin of HIV/AIDS:
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. Trpinjska cesta - groblje tenkova ![]() |
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Even so 50% of the population do still live below the poverty line, and there are huge problems with kidnapping and corruption, corruption actually being the biggest problem to africa as a whole, and one the western nations fuel by pumping 'aid' to the very people who are corrupt. Then you have the situation of crazy dictators spend half the domestic budget on extremly extravagent ceremonies and absolute shit like that. Essentially most aid to africa goes down a big black hole or just goes towards funding dodgy leaders tribalistic wars. I've also heard there is a massive brain drain issue in africa, for example 21,000 nigerian doctors are working in the US alone. Are they that greedy that they don't think about their countries welfare? |
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BRAIN DRAIN THE NIGERIAN EXPERIENCE
It says it here, which is not where I originally found the quote, but it can be found on many sites, was originally published in 1995 by the Health Minister at the time Ikechukwu Madubuike. Shockingly that is the same number of doctors working in Nigeria at the time. It seems a custom almost, to leave and get better pay in western countries, and a achieve better standard of living and education for their children. |
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. Trpinjska cesta - groblje tenkova ![]() |
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My favorite example of a failed state is Zaire in the time of Mobutu (a US ally). The national airline had a 747 and a Concorde. One day all long-distance flights had to be cancelled: Mobutu had taken the Concorde, and his wife the 747. Towards the end of his reign ("President-for-Life"), the Zairean Charge d'affaires to Poland was found sleeping rough in Warsaw's Central Railway Station; three Zairean diplomats were arrested for vagrancy in Italy; and the Zairean embassy in London had its electricity and gas cut off because of unpaid bills (the British Foreign Office stepped in to have them restored). Another favorite example is Uganda in the time of Idi Amin. Idi decided to name the country after himself. Then he was asked what the inhabitants of Cyprus were called -- Cypriots. So what would the people of Idi be called? Idea dropped (this is not a joke). Another time, there was a cabinet discussion on the absence of hard currency. One cabinet minister chimed in with: "Well, why don't we invite this fellow "hard currency" over here?" Just about every African country I know of is a kleptocracy, operating hand-in-glove with multinational companies intent on looting its mineral resources. The kleptocrats tend to be either tribal chieftains or generals. The "aid" given to these countries is taxpayer money from the developed countries subsidising their own multinationals -- usually for white elephant projects, with exaggerated costs. None of it ever reaches the people to whom it's ostensibly addressed. Thus if some African country wants to buy state-of-the-art counterinsurgency weaponry from Britain, it will receive an "aid" package from Britain which will allow it to buy said weaponry. The British taxpayer will be told that it's to foster "development" in the African country, but it's really just a subsidy to British defence firms. There are scores of other examples from Britain, France, and the USA. |
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As you say, Lagos is one of the most dangerous cities on earth. Like Rio, Mumbai and Mexico City for example. However all those cities are at the center of countries which will be knocking countries like France and the UK out of the high spots on the GDP rankings in coming years. Just because a city is dangerous, desperate and dysfunctional doesn't mean the country isn't on the ascendency. New York and London were horrific during the industrial age. Countries like Nigeria are going through their own industrial age right now. "The Next Eleven (or N-11) are eleven countries —Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Philippines, South Korea, Turkey, and Vietnam— identified by Goldman Sachs investment bank as having a high potential of becoming the world's largest economies along with the BRICs. The bank chose these nations, all with promising outlooks for investment and future growth, on December 12, 2005. Goldman Sachs used macroeconomic stability, political maturity, openness of trade and investment policies, and the quality of education as criteria. The N-11 paper is a follow-up to the bank's 2003 paper on the four emerging "BRIC" economies, Brazil, Russia, India, and China.[1] Eight of the eleven nations chosen are in Asia. South Korea is the only developed country in this list, having the largest economy and highest income per capita out of the eleven countries. All other countries are either developing countries or newly industrialized countries." |
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Twisting the facts to make me appear a racist bigot
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