Evil men ..the likes of Kaguta often ran to the gods, when thing are about to get out of hand. Not realizing that that the said evil men made their bed, they too must lay in them!!! ..NO running away.. moreever with the mafuta mingi stomach , running becomes almost impossible!!!
MK
musamize <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
musamize <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Ssemakula <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Buganda Discussion <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 26, 2006 1:37:44 PM
Subject: Re: [UNAANET] Re: Prayer day for peace in Uganda
__._,_.___Mr. Iga Musisi,You know the country is in trouble when its so-called politicians, thieves in reality, start doling out childishly simplistic solutions like prayers to cure its (often man-made) ills, like God had anything to do in creating them!Yet, history is replete with such impossibly simplistic solutions, very much along the lines of Marie Antoinette's "Let them eat cake", as solution to the hunger pangs felt by Parisiennes, their babies and men. Our own Marie is true to form. I wonder, when was the last time she (or her husband) actually went to the market to buy a bunch of bananas or the duuke for a kilo of sugar? No wonder Uganda is going no where: it is led by two blind mice that live in a bubble!With regard to Congo/Zaire/DRC, you might be interested in viewing a DVD "Mobutu, King of Zaire", directed by Directed by Thierry Michelavailable on the web at:
www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B0001WAGTM/202-8375227-3859807?v=glance&n=283926If you enjoyed Barbet Schroeder's "General Idi Amin Dada", you'll be riveted by Thierry's piece, since it is way more detailed and covers a Mobutu from just before he ursurped power to the end. You'll see the role played by the likes of George Bush Sr, Hoeorges Chirac, etc in maintaining this monster in power.There are sever books on how Mobutu ravaged Zaire, e.g.In the Footsteps of Mr. Kurtz: Living on the Brink of Disaster in Mobutu's Congo by Michela WrongOn colonial exploitation of Zaire/Congo, including the slauther of 4 to 8 million Congolese, a good read is:Adam Hochschild (1998) King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa
There is also:The Troubled Heart of Africa: A History of the Congo by Robert Edgerton(Of which one reviewer wrote, in part:He shows how Arab invaders spread cannibalism and notes that Africans have not redeemed themselves when in charge of the country. As a result, there's little reason to doubt Edgerton's conclusion: "Even if an agreement about elections and army integration were, by some miracle, to take place, there is no reason to believe that peace would be restored" to this embattled country.)
----- Original Message ----From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Wednesday, July 26, 2006 9:44:13 AMSubject: Re: [UNAANET] Re: Prayer day for peace in UgandaAbu,In case of Zaire it has been the scramble for Zaire's resources from external countries that has denied that country stability and hence lack of development. This may be true for many African countries too. The issue of poverty in Africa is due to bad governments and corruption. Look at Mexico why isn't Mexico like Canada? They are both neighbors to USA but the Standard of living in Mexico does not compare to that of Canada. All because of corruption that has been endemic in Mexico and they are not Africans.Patrick-------------- Original message --------------From: Abu Senkayi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>Jonathan & Ben:Janet's actions confirm to me that we need to get religion completely out of government. However, I think that Matsiko's comments about the mind set of Africans are really intriguing. In support of Matsiko's comments, sometimes I wonder why Africans have not progressed as much as other races with even less resources to work with. Take Zaire for example, the country is so rich with all sorts of resources and minerals but the people there are dying of poverty. Part of the answer, according to Matsiko's argument, could be that the African has failed to embrace science and technology. The problem is that the African mind is ingrained in myth and witchcraft much more so than science and technology.AbuBen Ziraba Nyende <[EMAIL PROTECTED] com> wrote:At first I too laughed with Matsiko over Janet's statement that Uganda needs two days prayer to solve her problems. Then I laughed at Matsiko for his statement that Janet's thinking reflects all African thinking!!!! (Including him too)"This just shows the inside of the brain of a typical Black African. Africans are not guided by scientific thinking. . . . .This warped Black African thinking is what has ruined and continues to ruin Africa and its populace."Ow'e BusogaOpinions | July 24, 2006Two days of national prayers show the absurdity of African thinking Matsiko wa Mucoori It started as a joke, then progressed into a circus and now it has matured into a laughable reality. When honourable members of a national Parliament, who have attained formal education, resort to fatalism to determine the countryâs destiny, you know danger is lurking.When Ruhama County MP and First Lady Ms Janet Museveni made her maiden contribution in Parliament by declaring that she had examined Ugandaâs problems with microscopic exactness and discovered that the cure lies in âtwo days of national prayers, I laughed to breaking point. I was resting in the belief that no person of modern and scientific learning would lend any slightest attention to such.That evening I and my pals at our local drinking joint, mentioned Janetâs motion in the House. We all burst into explosive laughter and d eclined to comment on it because we believed it was an obvious joke.Shock came the following day upon hearing that the MPs had overwhelmingly endorsed that âtwo days of national prayerâ was a critical and logical solution to Ugandaâs prevailing problems. By endorsing the motion, the MPs confirmed their firm belief that Janet had discovered such a great cure, which had eluded them for all these years.So Ugandaâs problems; rising poverty, electricity crisis and the dropping of Lake Victoriaâs water level, robbers, killers, defilers, drought, corrupt government officials who swindle money meant to buy drugs for the sick, the poor roads, rising HIVinfection, will be best addressed by two days of praying!Did Janet consult God and so did He tell her that He is not satisfied with the regular Friday, Saturday and Sunday prayers Christians and Muslims hold every week?Could it be the reason why God had been reluctant to help Uganda?This just shows the inside of the brain of a typical Black African. Africans are not guided by scientific thinking. They survive on belief in a supernatural being because they donât believe that solutions to their problems are within their means or knowledge. Thatâs why Africa will remain the most backward continent for centuries. We are so stuck in fatalism that we firmly (but falsely) believe we cannot determine our destiny by ourselves. There must be a divine intervention.Thatâs why from Cairo in the north, down to Cape Town in the south, no single Black African has made a discovery of world standard.When HIV/Aids cases were first detected in Uganda in 1980s, most people first called it a curse from God. Others said it was witchcraft. They had resigned to fate until a non-Black African discovered that actually Aids was caused by a virus called HIV.This warped Black African thinking is what has ruined and continues to ruin Africa and its populace. Otherwise how would a progressive brain in this 21st century suggest that a countryâs material problems are curable by mere prayers?That is why in Africa, we can still have a vice president who engages in live sex with an HIV infected woman and after he has enjoyed his fill, he runs to bathe with soap thinking he will not catch the virus.When other countries were busy engaged in advance tactical and strategic planning on how to win the World Cup in Germany, Togolese were busy soliciting services of a witchdoctor to help them win the world trophy. Though the witchdoctor was denied a visa to travel.Recently in Niger, the worldâs poorest country whose 60 per cent of the population survives on less than one dollar a day, the President Mamadou Tandja, joinednational prayers, like Janetâs, to pray for the seasonal rains to come. All people who went to school know what causes rain and definitely prayers are not among the factors.So if Africa is blessed with such leaders, who seek solutions to their countriesâ problems from the divine world, not their brains, how will this continent and its people develop?Resorting to prayers is an indelible admission of desperation. People go for prayers when they have lost all hope of finding any pragmatic redress to their plight. In Uganda, the problems we have are not spiritual and therefore their solutions do not lie in the prayers.We have government officials who have swindled public money. I would have expected Janet to call for tougher penalties to such fraudsters. She would call for their arrest and prosecution and probably say that upon conviction such criminals should be retired without benefits or should be forced to pay back the stolen money. Do such people need prayers or jail?If we were to engage in marathon prayers to fight crime, wouldnât we wake up one day to find the country besieged by criminals? But perhaps Janet and her fellow MPs can help me understand this: How will prayers for instance help raise the water level of Lake Victoria and solve our power crisis? How will prayers solve our poverty? How will they repair our roads? How will the prayers solve cattle rustling in Karamoja?This thinking is just embedded in the Black African mind. Africans always want to blame someone for their dilemma and they will find colonialism their easy target even when what colonialists left behind has been wasted or destroyed by the African pseudo-liberators/ revolutionaries.You will attend a conference presided over by professors and other intellectuals purportedly to tackle Africaâs problems. But speaker after speaker, will be blaming colonialists for Africaâs backwardness. Most present day developed nations wer ealso one time colonised. America, the worldâs super power today, was colonised by the British until 1783.So was Japan, Korea, China, Russia, India etc. But how come they have developed and Africa has not? If colonialism was the cause, how come Ethiopia and Liberia which were never colonised are not Africaâs super powers or the worldâs developed economies?The logical question is: For how long shall we lament about colonialism? The colonialists had no obligation to develop Africa. Itâs like blaming the Pope for not promoting Islam. If Africans had colonised Europe, they would have done the same.The author is a journalist0772-431939![]()
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