angrysoba
Philosophile
I don't have a link.
But he is dead.
But he is dead.
I don't have a link.
But he is dead.
I don't have a link.
But he is dead.
Yet another case of The Don getting it utterly wrong - though in my defence I was only 12 at the time.
The Smith regime in Rhodesia was so unpopular in the UK (presumably as a result of UDI) that when Zimbabwe became (officially) independent and held elections in 1980 I was really optimistic. Even in the first few years I had hopes that Zimbabwe would manage to be a multi racial country with a good economy - boy was I wrong
Not only has Mugabe ruined a country when he was alive and President, I believe that he has sown the seeds for its continued destruction for decades afterwards![]()
Yet another case of The Don getting it utterly wrong - though in my defence I was only 12 at the time.
The Smith regime in Rhodesia was so unpopular in the UK (presumably as a result of UDI) that when Zimbabwe became (officially) independent and held elections in 1980 I was really optimistic. Even in the first few years I had hopes that Zimbabwe would manage to be a multi racial country with a good economy - boy was I wrong
Not only has Mugabe ruined a country when he was alive and President, I believe that he has sown the seeds for its continued destruction for decades afterwards![]()
It is often said (with much truth) that Mugabe turned the bread-basket of Africa into the basket-case of Africa.
Compare the state of the country with that of neighbouring Botswana.
He announced a policy of reconciliation and invited whites to help rebuild the country.
“If yesterday I fought you as an enemy, today you have become a friend,” he told them. “If yesterday you hated me, today you cannot avoid the love that binds me to you.”
Zimbabwe's intellectual despot: how Mugabe became Africa's fallen angel (Guardian, Sep. 6, 2019)
Few in the west noticed, or wanted to. They preferred to see an economy that was growing as agriculture boomed ...
... and Mugabe built clinics and schools, turning Zimbabwe into one of the healthiest, best-educated and most hopeful countries in Africa.
The optimism began to sour in 1997, when Mugabe gave in to pressure from war veterans waging violent protests for pensions.
Trade unions and political activists began organising what would become the first viable political threat to Mugabe, the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). But it was partly bankrolled by white farmers
In 2000 Mugabe began a land reform programme, billed as an attempt to correct the unresolved colonialist legacy by giving white-owned farms to landless black people.
Mugabe's first mistake was to believe that capitalist agriculture would improve conditions for Zimbabweans:
...snip...
And that is how Mugabe became the epitome of a black African dictator in the West.
Yet another case of The Don getting it utterly wrong - though in my defence I was only 12 at the time.
The Smith regime in Rhodesia was so unpopular in the UK (presumably as a result of UDI) that when Zimbabwe became (officially) independent and held elections in 1980 I was really optimistic. Even in the first few years I had hopes that Zimbabwe would manage to be a multi racial country with a good economy - boy was I wrong
Not only has Mugabe ruined a country when he was alive and President, I believe that he has sown the seeds for its continued destruction for decades afterwards![]()