Posts Tagged ‘2008’

* The Snake has two heads

Posted on December 9th, 2008 by jill. Filed under Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008.


            As the days become so short that we in the UK get up and go to work in the dark, return in the dark again, after battling with the ice and cold rain, it is time to think, how did it come to all this? Time to think about the past, those days when rain fell constantly in the half-light days when we walked to school and back, dodging puddles across the pavements.

The exam question we all practised constantly then and which they still practise now was this: ‘Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely. Discuss.’ How many times have we written a version of this essay?
            The idea of power corrupting our leaders was a bit of a joke. The first time I understood it was when I saw a compassionate, much-loved, universally admired world leader turn into a frothing US poodle, a misled modern crusader.
            Tony Blair’s Iraq adventures with the USA were not really crusades, of course. As Tony himself pointed out, the UK strongly supports the Islamic community and the right to practise any religion freely in the UK, including the right to wear the headscarf in work, a right denied to women in many secular Moslem countries.    
In developing countries, in what we like to think of as ‘other’, people tend to hate and admire us. They envy our wealth.  They envy us because over the past 30 years or so life in the West has looked like Hollywood, though that is ending now with the Recession.
They fear us because of Iraq. Plunging with insane fury into his own personal crusade against the Devil, which you may think he lost, Tony Blair sent the reluctant Army, against the will of the people, into the secular, bourgeois, independent nation of Iraq. Now the majority of the nations of the world fear us, and fear turns envy into hatred.
This envy and fear is what led many to mutter under their breath, as the Towers imploded, ‘They deserve it.’
 What we need most is to develop alliances between the developed and LTD nations based on trust and friendship. At the moment, the vast majority in the nations considered to be technologically less developed, (not, we are constantly reminded, culturally less developed), want to be our friends. The rise of Islamist anger is a direct result of our unwillingness to respond positively to this offer of friendship: through wrongly perceived self-interest, through old fashioned racism, through state encouraged fear of Moslems. This ‘other’ who, we so need to see, is really just like us.
Consider two professionals: doctors, teachers, lawyers, politicians; one in the UK, one in an LTD country.  Naim, a teacher in southern Morocco knows about western philosophical ideas and Islam, he is young and enthusiastic, and he needs to see more of the world. His UK counterpart, by the time he is qualified, will have done his gap year, stayed in Goa, walked through part of the Amazon Jungle, taught for a while in an African charity (thus discovering the misunderstood concept that Africans are all poor and uneducated). Naim, on the other hand, has visas, exchange rates, racism and bigotry as obstacles to equality of opportunity with his counterpart. However great his desire to widen his horizons, his understanding of the world he is due to inherit, he will not be able to.
Poorer young people in developing countries need sponsoring to travel, just as those from wealthy families in wealthy nations do. The policy about who to issue visas to, has to incorporate students and young professionals. The world has benefited greatly from the opening of the eastern bloc countries, and southern countries should be included in this freedom of movement also. Why is this distinction made between white eastern Europeans, who, following the break up of the former Soviet block, were encouraged and financed to visit Western Europe, and darker skinned, often Islamic, young people from the South?
  There is an African saying from Ethiopia: ‘The snake has two heads’. One is stronger, so it gets more food, but because they have one body, both are fed, and the other head gains predominance, while the first is now weakened by his efforts. The tragedy is, neither head can see that the other is also attached to the same body, so they are a constant competition when they should be acting as one.
The richer nations treat the poor with disdain at risk only to themselves. That is why some of us try to make these links, these genuine friendships so when the young men of Africa have gone grey and rule the world through their nation becoming great, wealthy, well-run democracies, they will remember us and generously not repeat the folly of our leaders.  
For power certainly corrupts and as Bush’n’Blair had learned to their everlasting damnation absolute power corrupts absolutely.
 

 

 

Tags: 2008, Africa, articles, interconnectedness, Leadership, Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008, Less Technologically Developed Nations, poor nations, rich nations, snake has two heads

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* When we wake up on Wednesday …..

Posted on October 27th, 2008 by jill. Filed under Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008.


 

Well who would have seen that coming? Palin’s home electors in the Alaskan newspaper Anchorage Daily News have said they’re gonna vote Obama, Republican Colin Powell has come over from the dark side, along with many former Republican black voters. People who never voted before, young and old, black and white, they’re switching, and they’re switching in public, proudly.

 

A leading online newspaper asks, if Obama were Republican and McCain a Democrat, who would you vote for?  At least among the media, the issue of Barack Obama’s colour has gone out of the window. Not only is he being compared in quite serious circles with Christ and Superman, but he is more realistically being compared to John F Kennedy.

 

 Young, idealistic, making few promises they thought they couldn’t keep (including, strangely perhaps, the promise early in the Campaign that he would ‘stop the sea level rising’, presumably through finally signing the Kyoto protocol.) Obama makes people believe. In his closing speech in Canton , Ohio he said:

 

‘I ask of you what has been asked of Americans throughout our history. I ask you to believe, not just in my ability to bring about change, but in yours.’ They believe in him, and because of the way he speaks, they believe in themselves at the same time.

 

 

When Obama sombrely descended from his plane coming into Hawaii to see his very sick Grandmother, you thought the script was honestly being written by God Himself. The hope of America, the light at the end of the dark tunnel for the rest of the world, cared more than anything for his Grannie, the woman he said ‘poured everything she had into me’. Republicans who made snide remarks about publicity stunts were hushed by a shocked public. Obama, as his campaign draws to an end, has the confidence to be genuinely warm-hearted, and all America loves him for it.  

 

Even the finance for the Obama campaign has something of the people about it. Anyone who wants to can log in to his website and make a donation. Unlike previous elections, and unlike the McCain campaign, people who have very little are donating small amounts, but millions of small donations make the richest Campaign in history, and Obama isn’t beholden to any big companies or sectors for it. his million dollar advert on prime TV this weekend is one of the benefits he can reap from the public’s generosity.

 

In his speech this week, the last full week of campaigning, Obama speaks of a family whose son is ill with a debilitating and incurable condition, who cannot get the proper treatment because their private health insurance turned down his case. The mother  Robyn wrote,  

 

"I ask only this of you — on the days where you feel so tired you can’t think of uttering another word to the people, think of us. When those who oppose you have you down, reach deep and fight back harder."  This mother of a dying son believes that thinking of her suffering will be enough to encourage Obama. In other words, she believes that Obama really really cares about her family. That is his secret; people believe that he genuinely cares about them.

 

 

Compare this to the reaction to Sarah Palin’s admirable sentiments about supporting special needs children, where the reporter merely points out that while her words are pleasant, she actually opposes amendment 51, which would provide funding for the project.

‘We’re not outa the woods yet,’ as Palin might say, in her jokey ‘Alaska girl’ way. Thousands of black voters have allegedly been handed leaflets warning them that should they try to vote, they will be arrested for any loose legal ends, unpaid parking tickets and so on.  In other areas, voters are expected to queue for over 4 hours, making it more difficult for women with families to vote, if they have to pick up children. As usual, voting is on a working day, so employers may make things difficult for staff hoping for time off to queue up. We saw these tactics and more in 2000, when the tragedy of losing Al Gore as president was not then fully realised.

 

Let’s say when we wake up on Wednesday, Barack Obama is president. We who watch anti-CIA conspiracy films all know that it isn’t the President who runs America. As well as potential assassins, there are plenty of enemies for Obama policies on health, education, green policies, pulling out of Iraq and so on. Even Obama’s running mate Joe Biden has warned there will be a testing period for the new president. Those of us who totally believe in all the CIA conspiracy movies (and we are legion) are not above worrying if a home-grown president-weakening crisis might be in the planning stage right now.

 

Obama could do with a bit of luck if and when he becomes President. We hope that the relief the world will feel at the end of the Bush era will encourage certain ‘rogue’ elements to make him a peace offering, to help him onto a firm footing. Steps towards appeasement with the US in Iran, in Palestine, and in Pakistan would help enormously.

 

We are hoping Obama will turn out to be a world leader we can all trust, but we should remember that, although he may be the first ever national leader apart from Obafemi  Awolowo who knows what it is like to live in a little African village, it is the United States of America he will be President of, and his first allegiance is with his own people over there.

 

 

947 words

Jill Rees

27 October 2008

 

Tags: 2008, articles, Awolowo, closing speech, if Obama wins, Iran, Leadershiip, Leadership Abuja Nigeria articles 2008, Palestine, presidential elections

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Buddhist Quotes

If you wish to free yourself from the sufferings of birth and death you have endured since time without beginning and to attain without fail unsurpassed enlightenment in this lifetime, you must perceive the mystic truth that is originally inherent in all living beings. This truth is Myoho-Renge-Kyo. Chanting Myoho-Renge-Kyo will therefore enable you to grasp the mystic truth innate in all life. — Nichiren Daishonin

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