Archive for January 21st, 2008
Adam Housley big shot reporter lands his jumbo jet in Georgetown, Guyana!
we just discovered this one in the big blue yonder. if you’re a big shit shot reporter full of terror chasing terrorific stories. you’d think you’d at least know where your plane landed? not big shit shot adam housley
In this case, no illumination whatsoever. I see nothing.I am told we are crossing over the jungle and for that matter, almost all of this once British colony consists of rain forest jungle. I don’t even realize we have reached the capital city of Georgetown until the wheels touch down on a hard landing.
Barama parent company Samling shares at all-time low with new fines
Illegal logging: New fines for Samling in Guyana
Additional fines raise doubts if investors were properly informed on risks related to Samling’s logging operations – Samling shares fall to all-time low
Israeli Ministers Call to Assassinate Sayyed Nasrallah
Al-Manar TV: “Nasrallah is deliberately trying to play on our nerves,” Israeli Interior Minister Meir Sheetrit said, “we should not be intimidated by him, nor should we surrender to him – we should eliminate him.”
Minister Ghaleb Majadle (Labor) insisted that “we should analyze Nasrallah’s speech and understand why he made it. Everything he does is calculated. We shouldn’t fall into his traps.”
‘Your army did leave the body parts of its soldiers behind’ - Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah
“Your (Israeli community) army has been lying to you. Your army did leave the body parts of its soldiers behind in our villages and battlefields. I am not speaking about simple body parts. We have heads, hands, feet and even a nearly intact body. What did your army tell the family of these soldiers? The Israeli army denied it had left body parts behind but not for a long time, because they know that we don’t lie,” Sayyed Nasralah said.
Neo-Colonialism, the Last Stage of imperialism - Conclusion - Kwame Nkrumah
Conclusion
IN the Introduction I attempted to set out the dilemma now facing the world. The conflict between rich and poor in the second half of the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth, which was fought out between the rich and the poor in the developed nations of the world ended in a compromise. Capitalism as a system disappeared from large areas of the world, but where socialism was established it was in its less developed rather than its more developed parts and, in fact, the revolt against capitalism had its greatest successes in those areas where early neo-colonialism had been most actively practised. Read the rest of this entry »