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mapoui
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17 Nov 2017 14:03 - 17 Nov 2017 14:05 #354519
by mapoui
all right Captain den..the people of Zim have been doing well under Mugabe...the farmland that he took back has been blooming..there is solid Chinese investment and all under intense american sanctions and general intimidation and animosity to Zimbabwe
this is an american coup. this is the only way to get rid of Mugabe. the people wont vote him out no matter how old he is because they know he is on their side.
the opposition who are american pets cant win no dam election whether Mugabe running or not. the people wont vote for them. that is why they are now being installed by force
Last edit: 17 Nov 2017 14:05 by mapoui.
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mapoui
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17 Nov 2017 14:12 - 17 Nov 2017 14:14 #354520
by mapoui
allyuh have to remember that for a long time the west had african in totl turmoial..wars everywhere. there was no time or space for development.
the people settled the wars and for some time now there has been peace in which China has been investing and things have been rolling forward..not sideways or backward but forward.
at the same time Africa has evolved modern elites that are western trained academic mostly who are piss really. they would fit in perfectly if they had to run Italy, or britain, or france..not african countries. those are the sick traitors whp allowed the americans to walk right back into africa and take over
here is a glimpse of them:
Last edit: 17 Nov 2017 14:14 by mapoui.
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17 Nov 2017 14:23 - 17 Nov 2017 14:26 #354523
by mapoui
this is a judicial system that was evolved and honed in england, it has nutten to do with Nigeria/Africa yet there is the class that feeds off it, entrenched and supported by forrin powers.
that whole class are leeches...they produce no wealth but depend on taxes and other forms of leeching on the people for their fees.
all of them went to english schools and go to Nigeria to impose their english crap on the people. they should all be engineers, accountants, scientists, chemists, agriculturalists, industrialists, warrior businessmen who can recapture Nigeria for Nigerians
these are the assholes who have no wealth. no control over the corporations, have no power at all, who become politicians and prime ministers, minister of that that the other and sell their countries out to forrin powers for bribes.
Last edit: 17 Nov 2017 14:26 by mapoui.
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17 Nov 2017 14:47 #354524
by mapoui
globalfarmernetwork.org/2017/09/women-em...e-zimbabwe-optimism/
When I decided to become a farmer in Zimbabwe, people viewed that as an unusual decision.
Men dominated agriculture in Africa, especially older men—and here I was, a young woman who was just beginning, asking bankers for finance.
They saw me as a risk. So my first loan wound up coming from my family.
It wasn’t a lot, but it was enough to start out. Now I’m going strong—and my goal is not only personal success on my farm, but also the transformation of African agriculture through the empowerment of women and access to finance and technology.
My farm is in Marondera, a rural town in eastern Zimbabwe. We already have much of what we need: prime soil, plenty of sun, and the willingness to work hard.
On 400 hectares of arable land, we grow a variety of crops, such as maize, beans, rice, millet, and sorghum, as well as gum trees in partnership with a sustainable afforestation association. Our livelihood depends in part on global trade, as we have exported snap peas to the United Kingdom. We’re hoping to expand soon, growing vegetables for customers in the Netherlands.
Some people seem to think that when women farm, we don’t have ambitions beyond subsistence—and that our farming is strictly small scale. In other words, farming for us is closer to a hobby that we do in our spare time than a business that is worthy of investment.
I’m trying to change that by showing women how much they can accomplish if they band together and create business plans. They need to keep records. They must track profits and losses. They must show that they can meet the quality-control standards of the European Union so exporting their products will be possible.
Only then will they acquire long-term financing.
The tractor has enhanced productivity for Ruramiso in Zimbabwe.
The money from financing, of course, is just a means to an end. What we really need is technology. That’s what we want to spend the money on.
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17 Nov 2017 15:56 #354534
by mapoui
and there are so many of them now..thousands upon thousands all fighting over the scarps left in Nigeria by the multi nationals. there isn't enough to go around for them all. so the struggle among them for bribes is intense.
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17 Nov 2017 17:01 #354542
by Googley
"the people of Zim have been doing well under Mugabe...the farmland that he took back has been blooming..there is solid Chinese investment and all under intense american sanctions and general intimidation and animosity to Zimbabwe"
who is doing well, the local blacks or the Chinese?
The Chinese better watch out before they get kicked out too!!
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18 Nov 2017 20:29 #354616
by chairman
Tens of thousands of jubilant Zimbabweans joined rallies on Saturday to celebrate the imminent departure of President Robert Mugabe, the only leader they’ve known since independence in 1980.
Always tell someone how you feel because opportunities are lost in the blink of an eye but regret can last a lifetime.
cricketwindies.com/forum/
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18 Nov 2017 21:05 #354624
by chairman
"This is it, he must go,” said Ronald Mupfumi, a 29-year-old unemployed graduate who joined the throng in Harare’s streets. “These guys made us suffer for a long time."
Always tell someone how you feel because opportunities are lost in the blink of an eye but regret can last a lifetime.
cricketwindies.com/forum/
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