a very unmerry 10th birthday to AFRICOM, spawn of NATO


October 1, 2018—The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) has launched U.S. Out of Africa!: Shut Down AFRICOM, a campaign designed to end the U.S. invasion and occupation of Africa.

“Today marks the 10th anniversary of the establishment of AFRICOM, short for U.S. Africa Command. Although U.S. leaders say AFRICOM is “fighting terrorism” on the continent, we believe geopolitical competition with China is the real reason behind AFRICOM’s existence. AFRICOM is a dangerous structure that has only increased militarism.
When AFRICOM was established in the months before Barack Obama assumed office as the first Black President of the United States, a majority of African nations—led by the Pan-Africanist government of Libya—rejected AFRICOM, forcing the new command to instead work out of Europe. But with the U.S. and NATO attack on Libya that led to the destruction of that country and the murder of its leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, corrupt African leaders began to allow AFRICOM forces to operate in their countries and establish military-to-military relations with the United States. Today, those efforts have resulted in 46 various forms of U.S. bases as well as military-to-military relations between 53 out of the 54 African countries and the United States. U.S. Special Forces troops now operate in more than a dozen African nations.

Vice Admiral Robert Moeller, first and former deputy of AFRICOM, declared in 2008, “Protecting the free flow of natural resources from Africa to the global market is one of AFRICOM’s guiding principles.”

We say AFRICOM is the flip side of the domestic war being waged by the same repressive state structure against Black and poor people in the United States. In the U.S. Out of Africa!: Shut Down AFRICOM campaign, we link police violence and the domestic war waged on Black people to U.S. interventionism and militarism abroad.

“Not only does there need to be a mass movement in the U.S. to shut down AFRICOM, this mass movement needs to become inseparably bound with the movement that has swept this country to end murderous police brutality against Black and Brown people,” says Netfa Freeman, of Pan-African Community Action (PACA) and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS). Freeman represents PACA, a BAP member organization, on BAP’s Coordinating Committee. “The whole world must begin to see AFRICOM and the militarization of police departments as counterparts.” [snip]

We ask the public to join us in demanding an end to the U.S. invasion and occupation of the continent of our ancestors by signing this petition that we will deliver to CBC leaders.

This campaign is BAP’s effort to help shut down all U.S. foreign military bases as well as NATO bases. BAP is a founding member of the Coalition Against U.S Foreign Military Bases.

Media Contact: info@blackallianceforpeace.com

It’s from 2015, but:

The US Military’s Best-Kept Secret’; For years, American military expansion in Africa has gone largely unnoticed, thanks to a deliberate effort to keep the public in the shadows,  November 17, 2015, thenation.com

“In the shadows of what was once called the “Dark Continent,” a scramble has come and gone. If you heard nothing about it, that was by design. But look hard enough and—north to south, east to west—you’ll find the fruits of that effort: a network of bases, compounds, and other sites whose sum total exceeds the number of nations on the continent. For a military that has stumbled from Iraq to Afghanistan and suffered setbacks from Libya to Syria, it’s a rare can-do triumph. In remote locales, behind fences and beyond the gaze of prying eyes, the US military has built an extensive archipelago of African outposts, transforming the continent, experts say, into a laboratory for a new kind of war.”

“Research by TomDispatch indicates that in recent years the US military has, in fact, developed a remarkably extensive network of more than 60 outposts and access points in Africa. Some are currently being utilized, some are held in reserve, and some may be shuttered. These bases, camps, compounds, port facilities, fuel bunkers, and other sites can be found in at least 34 countries—more than 60 percent of the nations on the continent—many of them corrupt, repressive states with poor human rights records. The United States also operates “Offices of Security Cooperation and Defense Attaché Offices in approximately 38 [African] nations,” according to Falvo, and has struck close to 30 agreements to use international airports in Africa as refueling centers.”

A Scarier Future

Over many months, AFRICOM repeatedly ignored even basic questions from this reporter about America’s sweeping archipelago of bases. In practical terms, that means there is no way to know with complete certainty how many of the more than 60 bases, bunkers, outposts, and areas of access are currently being used by US forces or how many additional sites may exist. What does seem clear is that the number of bases and other sites, however defined, is increasing, mirroring the rise in the number of US troops, special operations deployments, and missions in Africa.”

““Where does this go post-Obama?” Reeve asks rhetorically, noting that the rise of AFRICOM and the proliferation of small outposts have been “in line with the Obama doctrine.” He draws attention to the president’s embrace of a lighter-footprint brand of warfare, specifically a reliance on Special Operations forces and drones. This may, Reeve adds, just be a prelude to something larger and potentially more dangerous.”

Enter this extortion psyop (h/t Phil Butler NEO): ‘Media Report: US Considers Shutting Down Counterterrirsm Units in Africa’, voanews.com, Sept. 2, 2018-10-05

“The Pentagon is looking at pulling nearly all U.S. commandos from Niger and shutting down most elite counterterrorism units across Africa, according to a media report.

Pentagon officials tell The New York Times U.S. military outposts in Cameroon, Kenya, Libya and Tunisia would also be closed if Defense Secretary Jim Mattis approves the plans, but the U.S. would still have a large military presence in [resource rich] Nigeria and Somalia.
According to the Times, the move is part of a shift in U.S. strategy from battling insurgents to focusing on potential large-scale fighting.
But it also comes after a militant attack on U.S. soldiers in Niger last year left four Americans dead, which the Pentagon admitted was a failure on its part.”

Africom on the Twit Machine: See, they’re just training eco-warrors, bringin’ books to chirren in Cameroon!  And dropping bombs on Al-Shabab in Somalia. etc. to aid the federal government, discussing the security situation in Tripololi and so on.

From africom.mil Africom’s 2018 Posture Statement to Congress’; too many ludicrous things to bring, but [hilariously, Firefox won’t even boot the site given the security thingie is out of date, IE only allowed me under dire warnings…Chrome gets it booted]:

From www.africom.mil/what-we-do:

‘AFRICOM Mission Statement. United States Africa Command, in concert with interagency and international partners, builds defense capabilities, responds to crisis, and deters and defeats transnational threats in order to advance U.S. national interests and promote regional security, stability, and prosperity.’

Most of what I’d learned about Africom: AFRICOM: Keeping Africans Safe from Chaos…or Something’, May 2013, café babylon had come from CrossedCrocodiles; but this was the ‘Commander’s Intent’ portion of AFRICOM’s mission statement at the time:

‘Our purpose is twofold: 1) to protect the U.S. homeland, American citizens abroad, and our national interests from transnational threats emanating from Africa; and 2) through sustained engagement, to enable our African partners to create a security environment that promotes stability, improved governance, and continued development. Should preventive or enabling efforts fail, we must always be prepared to prevail against any individual or organization that poses a threat to the United States, our national interests, or our allies and partners…”

‘And when the time comes…we’re the first to move toward tyranny, injustice…and despair’.  Did you happen to notice the convoys of cartons or crates stamped: AID?  We probably don’t need to hold a contest guessing what’s in the boxes, eh?

Crossed Crocodiles:

“The target audience of the commercial included vast numbers of people from the majority of the world whose states the Index labels failed or failing.

This is aid at gunpoint, it is also called stability operations, the reason the US Africa Command was created. The notion of stability is meant to be incoherent. It needs to be redefined for each country whose resources the US wants to acquire. Stability operations are needed to quell and control any groups or individuals who may stand in the way of perceived US interests, including acting against legally constituted governments.

Military aid and questionable trade are the twin pillars of US involvement in Africa. Imperial acquisition masquerades as humanitarian aid and manifests as the militarization of the continent through the US Africa Command, AFRICOM. Of course AFRICOM’s fact sheet speaks about working with military partners. These partners are intended to be proxies or surrogates that will provide stability without accountability for corporate interests to extract resources.”

Still true in 2018 as I'd said in 2015:

‘Given that the US is supporting so many bad guys/worst guys on the continent, and the amount of strategic minerals there are to be plundered, and the availability of corrupt national leaders,  none of it bodes well for the African people.  It’s hard to think that the African 99% will be able to create existences of their own choosing and governance anytime in the future, but never if foreign powers remain to make sure of it.

From Christian missionaries to centuries of colonization by Europeans, from ruination of local self-sustaining agriculture throughout much of the continent that helped to create massive drought, hunger, and Diasporas, an AIDS epidemic like no other, slave trading…to the present re-colonization after successful revolts against their ‘owners’, and the new regimes like in South Africa still treating workers like dogmeat, my heart goes out to the people of Africa.’

May the Great Awakening of higher consciousness aid them in their struggles, and Africom leaves them the fuck alone and stops ‘creating the chaos’ thru CIA(USAID) spooks and over-stating attacks by radical  leading to failed states they so love to…rescue in order to pillage and plunder resources.

Black Agenda Report Columnist Margaret Kimberley was back with us to discuss a new effort against the militarization of the African continent via the USA Africa Command or AFRICOM led by Black Alliance For Peace, Jared Ball, imixwhatilike.org

(Well, Miz Kimberly, one quibble: those are billions upon billions for Military Imperialism, not ‘defense’…after about 13 minutes the issues Ball had steered it toward were were pretty meh to me…)

‘What Western imperialism is up to now in Zimbabwe’, Netfa Freeman, pambajuka.org, Feb. 2018

(cross-posted from Café Babylon)

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divineorder's picture

Brave souls, more power to us all!

...

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

wendy davis's picture

@divineorder

but ain't ajamu baraka a peach? i'd voted green once again on the strength of stein's third choice OMG the first two) to stand as her VP. wish the ticket had been switched, but i will say that he wasn't proud, which is estimable in its own right.

too bad she sold him and the green steering committee out later, though. 'recounts due to roosian interference', tra la la.

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divineorder's picture

@wendy davis Third times a charm.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

wendy davis's picture

@divineorder

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divineorder's picture

@wendy davis Love to have a list of ur ‘hopefuls’. Smile

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

wendy davis's picture

@divineorder

closing lullaby.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acT_PSAZ7BQ]

night all; there's got to be a better world...if we can make it so.

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divineorder's picture

@wendy davis

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

divineorder's picture

@wendy davis and for 'interests' . Fugggggggh.

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

wendy davis's picture

@divineorder

clinton war ON not FOR somalia. was it over semi-rare buaxite as some have claimed? just looked up africom an south sudan (from the yesteryear) again. good gawd all-friday.

boots (commie hip-hop rapper) says it right.

let this be tonight's closing lullaby (big grin):

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uaFQw52wJug]

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magiamma's picture

in the resource rich nations. Duh. An who might I ask are the "transnational threats emanating from Africa"? China?

Thanks for all the detailed information. Once again I will study it in small bits. Smile

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Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation

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wendy davis's picture

@magiamma

on edit [in competitionon w the US empire], although it may not be quite so simple if phil butler's many links were...reasonable, and hadn't simply stepped on my kinda sacred cows] for resources in africa, but if i get their drift in different iterations and mission statements thru the decade, it's (faux)fighting 'muslim extremists' of whatever stripe the can point to. revisionist history reads that even the josepph kony theme was a bit of a trump up, but in my ignorance, i remain agnostic on that. but boooga-booogas work always, as w/ 'gadaffi's army were issued condoms for their pocketses..', implying rape, which also incites, even when not close to the truth. oh: the fog of war, the rumors of rape. live-blogging libya was hideous where i was writing and cross-posting at the time.

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dervish's picture

@wendy davis China is increasing its presence in Africa by establishing trade, building infrastructure, and issuing loans. The US does it by flexing military muscle. Which do you think will have the greatest ROI?

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"Obama promised transparency, but Assange is the one who brought it."

wendy davis's picture

@dervish

but as i'd said too magiamma, phil butler's links did step on some of my sacred cows. ; ) i'd spent far too much time trying to figure out the authors, the websites, and esp. who funded them. i finally decided to not muddy the waters needlessly.

it did seriously flip out Africom, the pentagon, and waldhauser when china created a base in djibouti not far from camp lemonnier last year. who knows what the truth of it is?

but: 'logistical support' seems about right to me.

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magiamma's picture

the military bases of the africom members - which are all African countries save for two or three per Kimberley.

There are 46 africom military bases out of a total of 883 us military bases worldwide in 183 countries.

Of course, I want to translate this not only to lives it impacts but also to the carbon footprint.

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wendy davis's picture

@magiamma

nor if it will ever be known, nor if miz kimberly were close, but yes, the carbon footprint of the US military is huge.

nick turse had alluded to it back in the day as 'forward bases on the water', tra la la, but in the diary i'd mentioned, crossed crocodiles had shown an africom 'sea basing' video that's since been removed from youtube, and i couldn't find anything close.

but giant rubber/canvas pontoon boats were shown, able to navigate any waterways into the interior of a 'nation in chaos needing our help', with the added attraction that the 'host nation' didn't need to bother about us. read: 'give their permission for our presence'. i confess africom has messed with my mind for a long time. colonized, re-colonized, then neo-colonized.

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the second any of us walk out the front door. The key though is to ask is that threat at 1% or up to 100?

Military's job and duty is to see it as 100%, for the sake of security. But for real life, and most especially in politics, that's just rock solid insanity. You don't want the military making foreign policy because they're jaundiced and unaware that very few potential threats are real. Plus there's careers and untold trillions $$$ involved.

Because the government is, these decades past, led by greed junkies, crackpots, pursuing (bwahahaha!) World domination, the military really become our problem. Russia and China were spending a pittance on military and talking about world wide trade within capitalism's frame, when Bush/Cheney neoconservative came in.

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Orwell: Where's the omelette?

wendy davis's picture

@jim p

philosophical musings. but the nuclear clock is now at two minutes to midnight, that can't be good w/ so many proxy wars including nuclear ones afoot. but i do think that while there are competing forces with the various military/intel services depending on which administration, the big goal is FUNDING. imo, given that, threat level is all the game, really.

reminds me of both obomba and now trump, pence calling the government in VZ a 'direct threat to amerikan national security'. wot? because: (degrading) socialism, reason hidden in plain sight? as with the CIA/MI6 1953 overthrow of mossadegh who'd nationalized the oil? syria: the center of pipelinestan (nordstream 2), bill clinton's R2P war in somalia, creating a failed state for...bauxite, was it?

china and russia still spend little on their militaries, but their systems are far superior, apparently. go figure. now it's the EU and japan who are gearing up, and i was sad to see a headline that russia would be selling missile defense s-300s to the rogue nation india.

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mimi's picture

and am as non-understanding everything today as I always was in the past.
If at all I followed things political in African countries it was through listening and watching some Africans (of which one is a President in his own country today) way back in or before H.and B.Clinton's, GHW Bush's and Obama's times (those observations were made either in Germany, or in the US or in the respective African home countries of Africans I listened to). And that only haphazardly and on a personal or individual level as an irrelevant outsider, who just happened to sit next to them.

I only listened once to the video above, in which Margaret Kimberley talked. Having never blogged or done research of online sources like you all seem to have done since years, I just like to give one little spontaneous reaction to some of her words that stuck to my mind.

At TC 4:50 and beyond. MK:"They get money". Of course. Nothing new about that. MK: "That's a pity, because African countries lose their sovereignty".

I ask, when did they ever had their own sovereignty? Before the US and before the Chinese entered the stage in African countries, there were the French and British and way back there were the Germans and Belgians. There was never a time African countries were sovereign from their first day of idependence on. (not to speak of colonial times of course anyhow). So, I just wondered a bit of her speaking of sovereignty as if they ever had it before.

She continues to talk about American soldiers being killed in Niger, which now people seem to be surprised about. As if people would ever talk about what happens in Niger (what happens in Niger stays in Niger, right?).

For fairness reasons, I happened to have been married to an African, who became representative of the IMF in Niger way back in the mid nineties. I was already separated from him at that time and just vaguely learned, that the French complained about him and asked for his removal. (That wasn't actually necessary, as those assignments were time limited anyhow and he wouldn't have stayed much longer. To make it even more ironic in todays context, the complaint was apparently for 'inappropriate sexual advancement with the wrong African ladies of the wrong higher-ups over there in Niger - ok what happens in Niger stays in Niger, and I simply have nothing but rumors to go by - so I leave it there, just for your amusement.)

Being what he was, my former husband filed a suit against the IMF for racial discrimination first with the IMF Ombudsman. He won the case (and got tons of bills from some lawyers, he never opened up), but was advised to retire early. Of course I learned of it only ten years later and then more when he died.

I am only telling you this, because everyone involved is dead by now. To believe that Africans somewhere in the back of their minds and souls do like Americans telling them how nice they are and offer them "help", would be a pipedream. That's why - oh surprise, surprise - one day some African military grunts just kill a couple of them US soldiers. Of course a little cash to the right people could have postponed those killings a couple of months or years or so, but never prevented it from ever happening. So, the cash would have been wasted anyhow.

I don't know nothing, just that I have not witnessed Afro-Americans being close to Africans within the United States. Mostly, I assume, they are politely not talking much to each other about anything and just socialize nicely to save their faces. Most Africans I became aquainted with, are suspicous and non-trusting (and often scared for the right reasons) and they are skilled liars, a feature that is respected among the little people in Africa. At least they get a kick ouf of one of their own higher-ups having successfully cheated some white (or black) Americans. Arrogance of Africans towards Afro-Americans within the US, as Kimberley has also experienced, I have witnessed and the arrogance originated basically out of 'some Afro-Americans not being able to read and write properly'. (sorry for saying that, but that's what I heard - which also means African people got a better education in their public - formerly colonialist run schools - than Afro-Americans got in their own US public school system. I apologize to mention this as it is so sad and awful to say, but it was what I witnessed).

It is all about who gets the bigger pieces of the cake among all imperialists and wanna-be do-gooders in NGOs among them Americans going to Africa and being involved there in one way or the other, so they all compete with weasel words, cash and weapons to get what every one of them want. I also don't quite believe that there is a lot of solidarity between the Africans in Diaspora in the US, as Kimberley said at TC 12:00 and beyond. I think among Africans their own solidarity among their fellow other African goes along the lines their own national and/or tribal origins, which is fogged into the background, if experienced from the perspecitve of American eyes.

Ok, I guess I have nothing to say. I laughed about the "imixwhatilike" name of Jared Bells website.

It seems my brain also always mixes up what it likes, no matter how hard I try to get some order in my thoughts. Smile

Thanks for the essay. I always stumble into other videos along the way reading your links, that successfully distract me. Darn intertubes.

But on that note, I think many things have changed from the past of the nineties, as during the burial ceremonies of my former husbands I saw many younger Africans of his extended family, being glued to their tablets and cell phones. That means they are reading the same stuff as all of us do at the same time and speed and this just will change the conditions for the future.

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@mimi from Cameroon years ago. And yes, he did look down on American Africans.

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dfarrah

wendy davis's picture

@mimi

first, although i hear you and had noted in the OP concerning colonization, re-colonization, and neo-colonization, aside from liberia and ethiopia, here's the Wiki on the decolonization movement in africa.

but of course most african hate the paternalistic attitude of white people who give money then demand obeisance to their 'sage advice' in any fields: economic, military, extractive resources, even recently advice on birth control from malthusians/green revolutionists bill gates, bono, and friends. gates always recommends smart phones for all, including female farmers in their fields...yada yada.

now what miz kimberly may have been referencing (i watched the video a couple days ago, an forget a lot of it) was that the 4 amerikan soldiers killeed in niger in 2017 were killed in a secret op by green berets who weren't even known to be there. africom op again? i kinda forget, but yes, the scandal was a bit of a tempest that sucked up all the oxygen, with no truth really ever coming, at least as far as i remember.

the section you're referring to that ball had led her to was what was least interesting to me, not ball, and i thought kimberly had kinda waved off: how africans see black amerikans. and of course neither 'group' are as monolithic, but what you may be referring to is a class-based distinction, yes?

given your husband had worked for the (racist, racialist?) IMF, you all would have (i assume) known more educated blacks, and while there are plenty of the same cast in the US, in the underclass, esp. in inner cities, yes, education was and is deplorable (bad under arne duncan and getting worse under devos (erik prince's sister, remember?) as well, studies have shown that for similar offenses in schools, blacks are something close to 10 times as likely to be expelled as their white counterparts.

as to this you've said: "I think among Africans their own solidarity among their fellow other African goes along the lines their own national and/or tribal origins, which is fogged into the background, if experienced from the perspecitve of American eyes."...i'm agnostic, but you may be correct. but as far as the pan-afrikan movement, plenty of amerikan blacks are in solidarity, from marcus garvey to malcolm x to omali yesheteyla's Uhuru socialist movement, and black agenda report journalists among many others. 'the burning spear' is pretty militant, good on them.

gotta go for now, chores are backing up. but egad on the cameroon elections. no fun at all it seems, but i did grab the hashtag #cameroon for you. lotta opinions: who can you trust is always the Q when we're uninformed as i am about #cameroon: reuters, the guardian, the new york times?. but given south sudan and africom, i'll have go look at my notes when i have time.

see ya in a bit, miz mimi.

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mimi's picture

@wendy davis @wendy davis
I don't like generalizations and try to make judgments on individuals only and not on organizations. Political decisions within those organizations are made by individuals. So if there is racism or tensions about issues and people, then it is a matter of individuals in those organizations, who cause them. It is there and it's white-, brown- or yellow-washed dependent on who you talk to. Weasels are plentiful. Intrigues as well.

My memories are old and vague and no, I really don't know many Afro-Americans and don't know many Africans and I don't know many Americans. The ones I knew where all different and it was hard for me to understand from where each of them came from with regards to their attitudes and opinions they voiced.

I would say for an African of my generation, born during or after WWII, during colonial times, to make a professional career was necessarily dependent on their education outside of their home countries in the US or Europe or Russia. So, they feel that their educational achievements were important in their lives and had lots of impact on them (good impact and painful ones).

I just observed that some of them (Africans in the US - confronted with Afro-Americans in the US, who didn't have achieved same levels of education) couldn't surpress emotions that would put the Afro-Americans down. But that was back in the eighties and nineties. It certainly has changed today, at least I hope. I thought back then that it was very unfortunate. But what wasn't when it came to colonialism, imperialism, racism anyhow?

I have had no contact whatsoever on my own with many Americans of any ethnicity or race after 1990. I am an irrelevant German woman in the US diaspora, was was pretty isolated and worked for German employers inside the US (I was glad that my German employers hired me, I wouldn't have made it otherwise in the US and would have damaged my child more than I already had.) So basically, I am not a person, who would know much about anything. The little I felt I knew I have told.

Hope that clarifies it a bit.

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mimi's picture

are you related to Alligator Ed by chance? Oh gosh, would have been nice for me to have seen that site back in the days...

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wendy davis's picture

@mimi

but no, X croc is an amerikan expat in ghana. he'd suspended his blog in august of 2014 to fight against the sick green revolution, by way of GMOs and big ag, and for food sovereignty....brought to africa by:

'Bono, Obama and the G-8 Ally with Monsanto to Bio-Wreck African Agriculture', june, 2012, wd

jayzus; even scanning it's depressed me.

i did check my old diaries on south sudan, crated by the US after bubba clinton couldn't quite get it done. the south has all the resources, of course, but reading that diary with a dozen links and photos...including the fact that genocidaire paul kagame is good friends with gates, obomba, susan rice, sam power...is also so disgusting to remember. and please, i know you won't have time to read it. heh, neither did i, to say the truth.

back to chores. aside from the usual ones, it snowed in the la platas just north of us, so mr. wd has harvested all the flowers he can and brought them in, so i'm working on arranging them in vases. nice work, but time-consuming to do it beautifully, and the dahlias and others deserve to be treated as....art.

p.s. on edit: it's quite disorienting that the site's been reformatted into three columns. or am i gas-lighting myself again?

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mimi's picture

@wendy davis
and couldn't get to it. I was gathering walnuts in my sisters garden and cracked them all. Now I feel I am all nuts. Sigh. Smile

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mimi's picture

Cameroon's 85-year-old president seeks re-election or the ame materila provided by France24. (same AFP material)
Cameroon votes in presidential polls as conflict rages
Ok, I am going to cook a spicy peanut-tomato sauce with rice and chicken and wait it out.
Do you wanna bet? Will Paul Biya be reelected? I remember times when his predecessor Ahidjo was still president. Biya is a scared puppy and I wonder who was more successful in bribing him...

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wendy davis's picture

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