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Posts archive for: August, 2007
  • South Africa: President seeks to punish former deputy health minister

    Govt screws tighten on Madlala-Routledge's finances
    Mail & Guardian Online reporter and Sapa | Johannesburg, South Africa
    26 August 2007 09:39

    A government assault on the finances of axed deputy minister of health Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge has left her broke, the Sunday Times reported.

    She has been forced to accept money from her elderly mother after her salary was docked to reclaim the cost of her controversial trip to Spain.

    Now, as the screws are being tightened on her finances, Madlala-Routledge on Friday received a third letter of demand, this time from the Department of Public Works.

    Continue Reading here...

    The South African government, or more precisely Thabo Mbeki, are so painfully predicable and petty. For those of you who have been following this story on this blog will no doubt remember when this story first broke here and I said:

    The truthiness in this case being the truth (or more accurately, non-truth) that Mbeki wants every one to believe is going on. No doubt Mbeki will now try to make the deputy minister a pariah and 'make an example' of her in some way. One of those ways could be to bring a court case against her for her trip overseas, which she talks about in the video clip.
    - South Africa: Sacked deputy health minister tells her side of the story

    This is the petty retribution of Mbeki against Madlala-Routledge for not towing the line, his line. Namely that nothing is wrong with South Africa's health care system and every thing is fine.

    This is despite such reports that South Africa has an alarming number of baby deaths, such as at Frere Hospital in Eastern Cape, and has had, and in many ways continues to have, a stupid pigheaded approach to HIV/AIDS which is almost entirely the fault of... you guessed it, Thabo Mbeki and his incompetent minister of health Tshabalala- Msimang.

    Now the question is what will the parties involved do next? This action has no doubt made Madlala-Routledge a hero amongst those people, inside and out side of the ruling ANC, and it will most likely force her into their, very diverse, political camp. Mbeki will continue to persecute Madlala-Routledge and keep Tshabalala-Misimang as minister of health. He will only fire Misimang when he absolutely has to and every one thinks that he is an idiot for not doing it sooner.

    The sad truth is about Mbeki's cabinet is that the only way a minister ever leaves a cabinet position is if 1) they die, 2) they quit or 3) they aren't unquestioningly loyal to Mbeki. No matter how incompetent a minister or deputy minister may be and the country suffers for it, so long as they are loyal to Mbeki, they will keep their job.
    A time line of the Madlala-Routledge controversy...

    Refrences:

    Mail & Guardian: Govt screws tighten on Madlala-Routledge's finances
    Mail & Guardian: Madlala-Routledge was set up
    Political Vuvuzela: South Africa: Sacked deputy health minister tells her side of the story
    AllAfrica.com: South Africa: DA in Support of Cosatu On Frere Hospital Scandal

  • US Media: Fox News attacking Iran like it did to Iraq in 03

    The clip above shows how Fox News in the US is using the same, now debunked and discredited, arguments it used to convince the US public for invading Iraq in 2003 to convince the US public today to attack Iran. Attacking Iran would be one of the worst mistakes the US could make, it would be devastating to their interests in the region and in the long run only plays into the hands of America's enemies. Iran's current president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is not very popular these days with his own people, attacking Iran would change all that and rally the Iran people behind Ahmadinejad thereby undermining the US's ,in my view legitimate, objective to discredit that crazy little man. This blogger suspects that if Bush is planning to attack Iran he will do it next year in September, October, November when the US elections are being head. This way he could, in theory, get it through congress and the senate by using the presidential elections as a distraction. As half of congress will be running for election/re-election they will be to busy campaigning to stop it or fight it properly. Enabling Bush to push it through. For more information on the clip above or if you are interested in the Open Letter then check out this site: http://foxattacks.com/iran
  • Zimbabwe: Why the West should cut aid to Mugabe's apologists

    This Commentary by UK MP Kate Hoey in the UK newspaper The Telegraph brings up some very good points. That the US and the UK are inadvertently propping up the Mugabe regime in Zimbabwe by giving food aid to Zimbabwe; which on the face of it seems like the only humanitarian thing to do. That is if one does not take into account how Mugabe is using that food aid to cement his power by starving those against him into submission or death and rewarding his supporters.

    To quote Didymus Mutasa, one of Mugabe’s cronies, which chillingly sums up the thinking behind this strategy:

    “We would be better off with only 6 million people [out of a total of 12 million], with our own people who support the liberation struggle (ZANU-PF)."

    - Foreign Secretary of Mugabe’s ruling ZANU-PF party Didymus Mutasa

    Hoey is absolutely right to demand that the UK, as well as the US, government look into how they spend their development aid money in Southern Africa when, judging from the great reception that Mugabe received from them at the last Southern African Development Community (SADC) meeting, most SADC members openly support Mugabe.

    This indicates that most of the government in SADC either don’t care about human rights and/or they are just so corrupt, both morally and economically, that all they care about is a leaders ‘struggle credentials’ no matter how bad they are. Either way, governments should not be giving development aid to such countries or at lease as much aid as they are currently giving them.

    To give you an idea of how much aid a country like the US, for example, gives to a Southern African country in development aid here are some examples from USAID (the US government organisation that gives out international development aid).

    South Africa, Africa’s wealthiest country will receive US$128 million this year (2007). Zambia, Zimbabwe’s northern neighbour, will receive US$113 million this year from USAID. Even the small nation of Namibia (population: 2 million), one of Mugabe’s closest allies in the region, will receive US$31 million this year.

    These are large amounts of money, all of which the US taxpayer is providing and much of which the US government is giving to governments that are openly supporting Mugabe.

    Sources:

    The Telegraph: 'Cut aid to Robert Mugabe's apologists'
    News at iafrica.com: SADC welcomes Mugabe like a hero

    USAID South Africa: http://www.usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2007/afr/za.html
    USAID Namibia: http://www.usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2007/afr/nm.html
    USAID Zambia: http://www.usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2007/afr/zm.html

  • Mugabe preparing for propaganda war on the net

    This article from the Zimbabwe Independent, and hosted on the net by allAfrica.com, details how the Mugabe regime is gearing up to fight a propaganda war against it’s (by that they want you to think the enemies of Zimbabwe but in reality it's just Mugabe's opponents) ‘enemies.’ It is reviled that the government has spent large amounts on Chinese surveillance equipment and hired Chinese and North Korean trainers to train some of Mugabe’s cronies in the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO).

    None of this is really news though as this has been going on for a while now. What is new however is that the Mugabe regime is setting up a propaganda arm of its ‘cyber warriors’ to try and convince people in the rest of the world of the lie that they are not as bad as every one makes out. So don’t be to surprised if you suddenly start seeing more people on the net supporting Mugabe. The chances are that they are employed by Mugabe to make him look good and cover up his inexcusable sins against the country.

    Source:
    http://allafrica.com/stories/200708170606.html

  • Zimbabwe & North Korea: the similarities between Mugabe and Kim Il Sung

    Pyongyang's man in Harare

    National Post, Canada

    RW Johnson, National Post
    Published: Saturday, August 11, 2007

    For 30 years, Robert Mugabe has idolized north Korea's Stalinist leadership.
    Predictably, the two nations now share the same disastrous fate;

    Visitors to the offices of high-ranking officials in Robert Mugabe's beleaguered government in recent weeks have noticed the same book open for study: Juche! The Speeches and Writings of Kim Il Sung. "Some may actually believe this stuff, but it's more that they want to understand where the President is coming from," one insider told me.

    It appears that those who have become anxious about Mugabe's Canute-like attempt to order inflation of 7,000% to be halved and to subordinate the economy in general to his political will, is not just acting wildly. He has a model:North Korea's Great Leader who, though he died in 1994, is still enshrined in that country's constitution as "president for eternity." (To this day, the current ruler, his son Kim Jong-Il, never actually uses the title of president.) Receiving the new North Korean ambassador in May this year, Mugabe told him that North Korea had been a guiding light and friend ever since it began to aid his ZANU guerrilla army, Zanla, in the 1970s, and that "everything in Zimbabwe is associated with the exploits of president Kim Il Sung."

    Because Joshua Nkomo's rival ZAPU movement was aligned with South Africa's African National Congress during this period, and thus with the orthodox Moscow-led Soviet bloc, ZANU perforce had to find its foreign funders and arms-suppliers elsewhere, in Beijing and Pyongyang. This was a rare breakthrough for Kim Il Sung, so when Zimbabwe became independent in 1980, it immediately became North Korea's most ambitious diplomatic objective. Hundreds of North Korean military advisers arrived, not only training but equipping much of Mugabe's army, particularly the notorious Fifth Brigade. Indeed, for a few years North Korea even dreamt of emulating the Cuban model. From its Zimbabwean base, it deployed over 3,000 troops helping the Angolan, Mozambican and Ethiopian governments.

    What particularly appealed to Mugabe, however, was that the North Koreans were not only experts in martial arts but in the far blacker art of political indoctrination, having honed their skills in the notorious "brain-washing" of U.S. and British prisoners in the Korean War. The essential principle was that if, by physical torture, isolation and relentless humiliation, you could break down someone's personality, it was then possible to re-mould it along more "acceptable" lines.

    The full horror of such techniques, first glimpsed in Zanla's liberation war tactics, was fully revealed only in the mid-1980s when Mugabe ordered the Fifth Brigade to repress political opposition in the Matabeleland region. Using North Korean terminology, Mugabe explained that "The people there had their chance and they voted as they did. The situation there has to be changed. The people must be re-oriented."

    Some 20,000 people died in the resulting campaign of torture and murder, but it was not just repression pure and simple. What the villagers grew to fear most was the dreadful all-night singing sessions in which they would have to sing ZANU songs with cheerful enthusiasm at the same time that they were savagely beaten; when they would not only have to watch as friends or family members were tortured or shot but would themselves have to assist in the process -- the emphasis always being on achieving their utter humiliation and incrimination so that they could re-emerge at the end as Mugabe loyalists.

    One great focus of such loyalty would be the pilgrimage to Heroes Acre, the 140-acre site in the capital of Harare, which commemorates the heroes of the liberation war. Its huge granite obelisk and Stalinist architecture were North Korean-designed, such monuments being a regime speciality. (Kim Il Sung erected over 34,000 monuments to himself.)

    Kim first announced his philosophy of Juche ("self-reliance") in 1972, whereafter North Korea cut itself off from almost all foreign trade and defaulted on all its foreign debts -- steps which Zimbabwe has now emulated. According to Juche, "man is the

    master of everything and decides everything," and the most important work of "revolution and construction is moulding people ideologically as good Communists with absolute loyalty to the Party and Leader."

    Kim had realized that to achieve this, he needed to isolate North Korea from all outside influences --crimes such as singing a South Korean pop song or reading a foreign newspaper carry a life sentence. Kim would have strongly approved of Mugabe's recent expulsion of foreign media, his crackdown on the independent press and his slavish broadcast outlets. Indeed, Mugabe's Herald newspaper has carried laudatory articles about Juche.
    After independence, Mugabe was at first prime minister. But his first visit to North Korea had an enormous impact on him. "He came back almost a different man," one of his former party stalwarts told me. "He was tremendously impressed by the stadiums full of people doing mass callisthenics and colour displays spelling out Kim's name or even depicting his face. He came back wanting to change the constitution so that he could become president, like Kim."

    Nicolae Ceaucescu, the Romanian dictator, was similarly affected by his visit to Pyongyang, and returned to Bucharest to launch his "systematization" program, knocking down old buildings and churches in order to build marching lines of

    apartments, North Korean style. Mugabe and Ceaucescu became close to one another so that the downfall and assassination of the Ceaucescus in 1989 were a trauma in Harare, and all news of the event was snatched off TV screens. The fall of Cambodia's Pol Pot, who had also embraced Juche, was similarly unwelcome news in Harare.

    When Kim, the Great Leader, died in 1994, the Gregorian calendar was abolished in North Korea, and a new calendar installed in which Year One is 1912 (Kim's year of birth), and in which the first day is April 15, Kim's birthday. Zimbabwe set up its own Committee to Honour the Memory of Kim Il Sung, chaired by Vice-President Joseph Msika. This holds a special month of mourning for Kim every year, with lectures, seminars and a memorial service "praying for his eternity."

    The birthday of Kim's son, Kim Jong-Il, "the dear leader," is effectively celebrated as the North Korean Christmas: he is "the central brain," "a genius of 10,000 talents" and "the morning star."

    Mugabe, whose birthday (Feb. 21) falls only five days later, has now copied this: He too is celebrated as "our dear leader" with the same mass synchronized dancing by women in traditional dress and army parades. Feasts are also staged--even though, as in North Korea, the faithful celebrants are often near starvation.

    "The central idea is also the same: Everything, including the economy, can be commanded and made to fall into line with the Leader's will," one close Mugabe-watcher told me. "In North Korea, anyone unable to live with that ended up in the gulag or fled as refugees to China, so you ended up with a country where everyone left was totally obedient. This is undoubtedly Mugabe's model." In both countries, regimes starting out as Marxist have both ended up as apostles of extreme monarchical authority.

    Juche, like Mugabe's radical socialism, was a fraud. In reality, North Korea depended utterly on Soviet aid, just as liberated Zimbabwe's economy depended completely on a few thousand white farmers. When Soviet aid ceased in 1991, North Korea's income halved and mass starvation ensued, just as it has in Zimbabwe following the eviction of the white farmers. Anywhere up to three million North Koreans died, but Kim Jong-Il simply denied the facts of starvation and at first turned away food aid. Mugabe did exactly the same. When the World Food Programme offered to help Zimbabwe's starving in 2004, he asked "Why foist this food upon us? We do not want to be choked, we have enough." In the end, both regimes have become massively dependent on foreign food aid.

    This week, Zimbabwe's Parliament faces Mugabe's proposed constitutional amendment enabling him to choose his own successor and impose him without an election. This, too, exactly imitates the way in which Kim Il Sung designated his own successor; and it allowed Kim to continue to be celebrated long after his death.

    But there is something else to which Mugabe might pay heed. Although Kim Jong-Il declared three years of mourning for his father, spent nearly $1-billion on his mausoleum and declared two national flowers for the country, Kimilsungia and Kimjongilia, his father's death from a heart attack and "heavy mental strains" followed a bitter argument with his son and is still clouded with suspicion. Kim Jong-Il would not allow doctors to enter his father's room till long after the death. And all the doctors, as well as his father's bodyguards, were immediately killed in a series of helicopter "accidents." Other functionaries who had been close to his father all quickly disappeared without trace.

    So while North Koreans are encouraged to believe that Kim Il Sung still rules and watches over the country, it seems likely that the great man's end was more like the usual tyrant's exit.

    -RWJohnson is emeritus fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, and Southern Africa correspondent for the Sunday Times.

    Read full article on the Zimbabwe Situation...

  • Zimbabwe: Mugabe's cyber war

    Zanu PF plans cyber warfare against online publications

    Zim Independent

    Itai MushekwePF has blacklisted 41 online publications, including websites for
    American-owned Cable News Network (CNN) and the United States Embassy in
    Harare, which it claims have launched a cyber war to promote a regime change
    agenda against President Robert Mugabe's government, the Zimbabwe
    Independent can reveal.

    It was not immediately apparent what measures, if any, the party can
    take against offending websites.

    The list of the websites was tabled at a recent politburo meeting and
    is said to have caused alarm among party members during a heated debate on
    the media, sources said. Various download print-outs from the websites were
    distributed at the meeting.

    The development comes against the backdrop of Mugabe's outburst in
    Malaysia on Monday alleging journalists lacked objectivity and were writing
    "subjective views" in their reports.

    Mugabe made the attack on scribes when taking part in the Langkawi
    International Dialogue aimed at fostering closer ties between Asia and
    Africa and between governments and business.

    "The press and journalists, are they driven by the sense of honesty
    and objectivity all the time? Or are they swayed from objectivity and truth
    by certain notions arising from their own subjective views?" said Mugabe.

    One of the downloads seen by this paper was extracted from ZimUpdate
    Forums and shows a reader on the forum giving seven reasons why he thinks
    Mugabe does not want to step down. "Is it because he is afraid of being
    hanged just like Saddam (Hussein); or extradited just like Charles Taylor,"
    the reader asks. "Is it because he is afraid that the party will
    disintegrate? Is it because he is intoxicated with power? It is because he
    does not trust anyone in Zanu?"

    The reader added that Mugabe was afraid of the Americans and British.

    Government has been struggling to counter what it terms "negative
    publicity" by Western media organisations. Among a cocktail of strategies to
    counter bad publicity from various international media, the state has set up
    a short-wave propaganda radio station, Voice of Zimbabwe (VOZ) operating
    from Gweru.

    However, the radio project appears to have suffered a stillbirth amid
    reports of self-jamming as a result of gagging equipment installed to block
    broadcasts from foreign radio stations such as Voice of America's Studio 7.
    The project has also been unpopular with state media journalists.

    ZBC's Sports FM manager Methuseli Moyo recently left the station after
    he refused to be deployed to VOZ, saying he was not a propagandist but a
    journalist. Government has also splurged over US$1 million in an
    image-making campaign with New African magazine.

    Zanu PF secretary for science and technology, Olivia Muchena,
    presented a report on the role and importance of information and
    communication technologies (ICTs) on July 26, arguing that the ruling party
    had no choice but to embrace ICTs to remain "politically relevant".
    "Comrades, we are all aware that Zanu PF is at war from within and outside
    our borders," said the report. "Contrary to the gun battles we are
    accustomed to, we now have cyber-warfares fought from one's comfort zone, be
    it bedroom, office, swimming pool, etc but with deadly effects."

    Muchena said Zanu PF must pause and think who is behind the creation
    of "these websites", the target market of the websites, the influence and
    impact they have on Zimbabweans and what the image of Zanu PF and its
    leadership looks like "out there as portrayed".

    Muchena said websites, the Internet and cellphones had become daily
    weapons used to fight Zanu PF, adding that ICTs were now vogue platforms for
    high-tech espionage -hardware, software and infrastructure that peddles
    "virulent propaganda" to delegitimise "our just struggle against
    Anglo-Saxons".

    President Mugabe recently signed into law the Interception of
    Communications Act which empowers government to snoop on messages
    transmitted through the telecommunications system, cellphones and the
    Internet.

    Below is the list of the blacklisted websites:

    www.zvakwana.org

    www.newzimbabwe.com

    www.zwnews.com

    www.zimvigil.co.uk

    www.zimbabwesituation.com

    www.zimddays.com

    www.allzimbabwe.com

    www.crisisgroup.org

    www.zimbabwe.8m.com

    www.zimbabwedemocracytrust.com

    www.zimonline.co.za

    www.changezimbabwe.com

    www.thezimbabwetimes.com

    www.wozazimbabwe.org

    www.zimupdate.com

    www.zimpundit.blogspot.com

    www.thegreatzimbabwe.com

    www.zimdaily.com

    www.thezimbabwean.co.uk

    www.gozimbabwe.com

    www.zimobserver.com

    www.zimbabwepost.com

    www.insiderzimbabwe.com

    www.africantears.netfirms.com

    www.hrforumzim.com

    www.amnesty.ca

    www.dfat.gov.au

    www.abyznewslinks.com

    www.worldpress.org

    www.topix.net

    www.harareusembassy.gov

    www.technorati.com

    www.delzwe.ec.europa.eu

    www.globalvoiceonline.org

    www.usip.org

    www.ipsnews.net

    www.washingtonpost.com

    www.uk.oneworld.net

    www.pbs.org

    www.msnbc.msn.com

    www.cnn.com

  • South Africa: Sacked deputy health minister tells her side of the story

    Madlala-Routledge Responds

    Sacked deputy health minister has her say

    Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge was South Africa's deputy health minister - until Wednesday night that is. President Mbeki fired her after she allegedly failed to gain proper permission for a trip to Spain, and after she paid an unannounced visit to the troubled Frere Hospital in East London.

    Today Nozizwe addressed the media and gave her side of the story, which has become an intensely contentious one. Why wait for 7pm tonight to see her response on the news - watch her full 15-minute address on MyVideo right now and judge for yourself whether or not her dismissal was fair.

    -Michael Salzwedel

    I am of the opinion that her dismissal was completely unfair and was done for purely political reasons; the main reason being that she deviated from South African president, Thabo Mbeki's, stupid and short sighted stance on how the department of health should be run. It is also apparent to me that she was sacked because she was concerned about the 'facts' based on truth as apposed to the factoids based on Mbeki's truthiness.

    The truthiness in this case being the truth (or more accurately, non-truth) that Mbeki wants every one to believe is going on. No doubt Mbeki will now try to make the deputy minister a pariah and 'make an example' of her in some way. One of those ways could be to bring a court case against her for her trip overseas, which she talks about in the video clip.

    The threatening of people who do not 'tow the president's line' is fare more common then people think it is. It is known that Rhoda Kadalie, for example, has received death threats when ever she writes anything damning or bad about certain ANC issues or people.

    Video:
    http://www.myvideo.co.za/video/madlala-routledge-responds

  • Zimbabwe & South Africa: ANC heavy weight speaks out against Mugabe

    [2007-08-06] Barrys Memorial 034a

    Asmal Seeks UN Pressure on Mugabe

    Cape Argus (Cape Town)

    7 August 2007
    Posted to the web 7 August 2007

    Angela Quintal

    South Africa should turn to the UN Security Council to put pressure on
    President Robert Mugabe to embrace democracy, says veteran ANC MP Kader
    Asmal.

    In one of the strongest statements to date from a senior ANC member and
    former cabinet minister about the deteriorating situation in Zimbabwe, Asmal
    said he favoured an "internationalized" approach.

    South Africa is currently involved in mediation efforts sanctioned by the
    Southern African Development Community.

    However, if Asmal has anything to do with it, the pressure on Mugabe for
    change will be wider and more drastic, including turning to the UN to turn
    the screws on Mugabe.

    Asmal told the Cape Town Press Club that he detested what he was seeing in
    Zimbabwe and that he did not believe that Mugabe should stand in the next
    election there.

    In an interview after delivering the inaugural memorial lecture in honour of
    the late Barry Streek, veteran South African journalist Asmal suggested
    pressure on Zimbabwe should be "internationalized".

    Asked what, if anything, South Africa could do, he said: "We have to work
    out much more drastic options.

    "I think we need to go to the Security Council. I know it is unpopular to
    say that," Asmal said.

    Asmal gave this response after a question was given to him by a member of the Cape Town Press Club, apparently I have some thing to do with this question being asked and so am some what responsible for getting this comment out of Asmal. :)

    Kader Asmal was minister for Education and minister for Water Affairs in the ANC government. Asmal still sits on the ANC high council, politburo, what ever you want to call it. This statement is very relevant as it indicates, amongst some within the ANC, a shift from a previous position on Zim that was "nothing is broken, every thing to fine" to "some thing should be done about this regrettable state of affairs."

    Its not perfect but it is a step in the right direction, this is, but only if the ANC decides to actually take that step.

    Before I forget, here is another article about the same event. This article is more in dept and, I think, gives one a better idea of what was said at the actual event.

  • Zimbabwe & Malaysia: "Malaysia welcomes Mugabe"

    Malaysia welcomes Mugabe
    06/08/2007 10:14 - (SA)

    Langkawi - Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, internationally condemned for his nation's economic meltdown and human rights abuses, was given a warm welcome on Monday at an anti-poverty summit in Malaysia, said delegates.

    While he had proved elusive to the packs of journalists and photographers staking out the venue, he was said to be actively taking part in round-table discussions with other African and Southeast Asian leaders.

    Delegates warmly welcomed Mugabe to the three-day conference, known as the Langkawi International Dialogue, which had stirred some controversy because of his presence.

    A Malaysian delegate said: "Mugabe is actually participating in all the events" and had been "hugged and kissed" by some participants.

    The delegate, who didn't want to be identified, added that "other people had expressed unhappiness with Mugabe, but not at this conference."

    Continue Reading here...

    All I can say about this is that Malaysia's treatment of Mugabe and the support they give to his regime clearly indicates that country's lack of interest in human rights and the plight of the average Zimbabwean who is being brutally oppressed by Mugabe. It also makes the Malaysian government look like real hypocrites when it comes to 'supporting the poor and marginalised of the world.'

  • US media: "PLANE MISSING SINCE 1939 LANDS WITH SKELETON AT THE CONTROLS"

    WeeklyWorldNews

    That was one of the headlines from the Weekly World News; a tabloid launched 28 years ago by an ex-CIA agent who ran a newspaper publication. Never letting facts get in the way of a good story, the Weekly World News was famous for the outrageous and hilarious stories it would run every week. Unfortunately for fun loving and/or gullible people all over the US the Weekly World News is closing down due to low readership.

    The tabloid reached its zenith in the 1980’s when up to 200 000 people would read it every week. The writers would often debate how many of them believed their crazy, non-truth based stories. It seems as though a good number did and the common perception amongst them seems to be that most of their readers actually believed them.

    I am not really so sure how I should feel about it. On one hand I am sad that a once great, thoroughly unbelievable and very funny newspaper that was obviously so much fun to write for and read is going under. On the other hand it does open up some space for more serious journalism, and heaven knows, America needs that more then ever. Then again, we can’t have too much doom and gloom all the time. That would just be very boring.

    Below is the beginning extract from a Washington Post article about the issue:

    All the News That Seemed Unfit to Print

    By Peter Carlson
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Tuesday, August 7, 2007; Page C01

    Somewhere in Kalamazoo, Elvis weeps: The Weekly World News is folding.

    The Weekly World News was not one of those sleazy tabloids that cover tawdry celebrity scandals. It was a sleazy tabloid that covered events that seemed to occur in a parallel universe, a fevered dream world where pop culture mixed with urban legends, conspiracy theories and hallucinations. Maybe WWN played fast and loose with the facts, but somehow it captured the spirit of the age -- and did it in headlines as perfect as haiku:

    "DEAD ROCK STARS RETURN ON GHOST PLANE!"

    "BLIND MAN REGAINS SIGHT AND DUMPS UGLY WIFE!"

    The most creative newspaper in American history, the Weekly World News broke the story that Elvis faked his death and was living in Kalamazoo, Mich. It also broke the story that the lost continent of Atlantis was found near Buffalo. And the story that Hillary Clinton was having a love affair with P'lod, an alien with a foot-long tongue. And countless other incredible scoops.

    None of these stories was, in a strictly technical sense, true, which explains why the Weekly World News never won a Pulitzer Prize. But in its glorious heyday in the late 1980s, the supermarket tabloid amazed and amused a million readers a week.

    Continue Reading here...

  • Word: Factoid

    factoid

    A factoid used to refer to a concept that is spurious, unverified, unverifiable, incorrect, and/or invented that is passed off as a "fact." In other words factoids are "facts" that rely on truthiness instead of truth and as such is not a "fact" at all.

    The word is used to manipulate public opinion, either to be used as premises to support an argument or to create or prolong public exposure.

    An example of this is Robert Mugabe's attempt to blame most of Zimbabwe's economic woes on sanctions imposed on him by the EU and the USA and present that argument off as fact; even though this completely over looks the fact that the sanctions imposed are only on him and a select group of his cronies and their families. It also never mentions that trade between Zimbabwe and the US has increased greatly in since the sanctions were imposed.

    Links:
    Wikipedia: Factoid
    Wikiality: Truthiness (keep in mind that this is a satirical political site that first coined the word Truthiness)

  • Zimbabwe: [NYT] “The Powerful Thrive” in impoverished Zimbabwe

    In this absolutely excellent article by the New York Times, a concise and thorough overview of the situation that Mugabe has created in Zimbabwe is presented. I would strongly recommend reading it if you are interested in what is happening in the country.

    Zimbabwe’s Chaos: The Powerful Thrive

    By MICHAEL WINES
    Published: August 3, 2007

    BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe, July 28 — Earlier this month, shortly after Zimbabwe’s president, Robert G. Mugabe, proposed legislation mandating a gradual transfer of all businesses to what he called “indigenous” ownership, a Zimbabwean businessman said he received an unexpected telephone call. The caller, a stranger, said that he represented a group of indigenous investors.

    The investors, he said, would like to discuss the merchant’s plans for complying with the coming ownership law.

    There is a flip side to Zimbabwe’s economic decline, critics and analysts contend, and this is it: As 11 million or more people descend into destitution, a tiny slice of the population is becoming ever more powerful and wealthy at their expense.

    No one outside of Mr. Mugabe’s inner circle, of course, can say with certainty why he has pursued policies since 2000 that have produced economic and social bedlam. For his part, Mr. Mugabe says Zimbabwe’s chaos is the product of a Western plot to reassert colonial rule, while he is simply taking steps to fight that off.

    Among many outside that circle, however, the growing conviction is that Zimbabwe’s descent is neither the result of paranoia nor the product of Mr. Mugabe’s longstanding belief in Marxist economic theory. Instead, they say, Zimbabwe is fast becoming a kleptocracy, and the government’s seemingly inexplicable policies are in fact preserving and expanding it.

    “Their sole interest is in maintaining power by any means,” said David Coltart, a white opposition member of Parliament. “I think their calculation is that the rest of Africa is not going to do anything to stop them, and the West is distracted by Iraq and Afghanistan. The platinum mines can keep the core of the elite living in the manner they’re accustomed to — just in a sea of poverty.”

    Continue reading here...

  • Racism & Gaming: a blogging maelstrom has broken out over Resident Evil 5

    RE5

    I was going to blog about the “Rise and fall of the SABC” (South African Broadcasting Corporation) but something else has just caught my eye today so I will do the SABC story some other time soon.

    Currently, on a blog called Black Looks, a blog about black pride an other such issues, a maelstrom has broken out about the pc/console game Resident Evil 5.

    One of the contributors for the blog, Kym Platt, wrote a post accusing the games producers of being racist and held it up as an example of white racism. Although Platt has some very anti-white racist views of her own, making her a bit of a hypocrite when it comes to such issues, this is not what interests me in this instance.

    Platt’s point of view is wrong for many reasons. The game’s plot has historically taken place in relatively random places across the world, Resident Evil 4, for example, was set in Spain and no-one there complained that it was promoting an anti-Spanish prejudice. The game is also produced by a Japanese company, Capcom Co., and not a white run and owned developer as the writer insinuates.

    Anyway, this has stirred up a huge fuss on Black Looks and the average number of comments for a post on the blog has shot up from the usual 3-15 to 130-230 for the two posts about RE5. It has drawn a lot of attention, mostly from a very outspoken gaming community, to this relatively obscure blog.

    What surprises me the most is how defensive the gaming community is of its favourite games. This might be brought about by years of criticism from mainstream media about violent games and warnings that it is promoting violence; warnings that have time and again been proven to be unfounded.

    Some of the comments are the usual ignorant, emotional, and racist responses that one would expect from what many would consider a ‘race baiting’ article. Others, however, are surprisingly eloquent and well thought through opinions.

    There is still a lot of racism in this world which must be stamped out where ever it is found. This is particularly true of anti-black racism. However comments and posts like the one Platt has made only serve to exacerbate the problem by playing into the hands of racists, off all hues, and by cheapening the word ‘racist’ by labelling anything they don’t like as racist, even when it is clearly not so.

    Links:
    Black Looks blog: http://www.blacklooks.org
    Black Looks article: Resident Evil 5
    Black Looks article: where lies the resident evil
    Resident Evil website

  • Zimbabwe: A most outlandish point of view

    My Zim contact explains why fasting is good for the people

    Cape Times

    26 July, 2007

    By John Scott

    Interview with one Doc Mtusi who appears to be one of the few people who understands Zimbabwe's economic policy. He knows whats going on even better than his boss, Finance Minister Samuel Mumbengegwi who announced in Masvingo that there was no need for people to hoard food.

    "But if people don't hoard food, what will they eat when the shops run empty?" the Doc was asked after he had agreed to an interview. "Who says they will run empty?" he retorted

    "Shelves are already empty of basic foodstuffs." "Then we will order the shopkeepers to fill them. We have already jailed a few who refused to do so. It is simple economics. We will also jail anyone who hoards food because that is what has caused the shelves to be empty."

    "Sorry to cross swords with you Doc but your government is forcing shopkeepers to sell all their existing stocks for less than they paid for them. How can you expect them to buy in more supplies at the wholesale price if they know that by selling them at the government's retail rate they'll make a bigger loss. It's a quick way to go bankrupt?" "No one ever said saving Zimbabwe's economy would be easy. We all have sacrifices to make?"

    "My point is that you can't blame shoppers for thinking that, unless they quickly buy up whats left, there'll soon be no food to buy. They are not stupid. They can see that all the shopkeepers will either be bankrupt or in jail?" "Änd my point is that it is unpatriotic hoarding of food gives the impression that we have a problem, which clearly we haven't, except in the South African media's mind. I'm surprised that Mbeki still allows you to write this nonsense. We are relying on comrade Zuma to make you change your tune once he takes over." The Doc responded.

    "But until then, Doc, why have you now even passed a law to stop Zimbabwians importing food from SA. If they can't hoard food, they have to get it from somewhere. Otherwise they will starve?" "We don't call it starving. We call it fasting. Fasting is actually good for you. Lots of famous people fasted for the benefit of their people. Ghandi, for instance, fasted. In our case, the people themselves well be encouraged to fast thereby strengthening themselves against the onslaught of colonial imperialism." Doc said.

    "I'm sure they really would prefer to eat, most people do." "We have no objection in principle to people eating." Doc conceded. "Those of us in government all eat, but only because persons in our important positions have to. What we must guard against, though, is the belief that ordinary people have the right to break the law if they are hungry."

    "Thats how the French Revolution started." said interviewer "Thank goodness we won our revolution 27 glorious years ago. So there is no need to worry." declared Doc.

    Read the article on the Zimbabwe Situation here...

    ?????!!!!

    I am sorry... I did I miss some thing here?! That is some seriously backward and deluded logic there... if you can even call it logic!

    This article is just one of many that highlight the evilness and deluded justifications that the Mugabe regime espouses to support their oppressive existence.

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