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Zambian Vice president Guy Scott, bio and recent remarks on SA
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Doug M: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by IronLion: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Doug M: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by IronLion: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Doug M: [qb] More "po white folks" in South Africa... [QUOTE]Originally posted by IronLion: [QB] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Doug M: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by IronLion: [qb] [QUOTE]Originally posted by Doug M: [qb] More "po white folks" in South Africa... blah..blah..blah.. [/qb][/QUOTE]More irrelevant dogging. OP is on ZAMBIA. Do you still insist that Zambia has no national electricity grid? Do you still claim that all black Zambians have no electricity? Do you still claim that Zambia is a plantation economy? Malevolent Doug, you are nothing but an ignorant picture spamming white boi, trying to use inverse psychology to insult black people. If you want to talk South Africa, open another thread and I will murder you like I am doing here! [/qb][/QUOTE]If only 14% of Zambians have access to electricity how does that constitute a NATIONAL grid? Do you know what a national grid means? It means a grid covering the entire nation and most of the population. So by ANY definition there is no "national grid" in Zambia or most of Africa for that matter. MOST AFRICANS do not have access to electricity because there is no true national grid. The only grid that exists is to supply power to the major industries, primarily mines and farms, which are primarily NOT owned by blacks. LOL! [/qb][/QUOTE]Meaning of National Grid: [QUOTE]A National Grid is a power or energy supply system for a nation. They are called this because the network of supply lines from various generating or storage sources forms a grid in a mathematical sense, as there is usually more than one supply line to most points (or grid nodes). ...................... National grids do not necessarily cover the entire country, especially in poorer or less populated areas. http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_National_Grid [/QUOTE]Dog, white people don't own the electricity in Zambia. Who owns the Electricity Company of Zambia: The Zambian people, the state of Zambia. [QUOTE] Zambia Electricity Supply Corporation Limited (ZESCO) is a state-owned power company in Zambia. It is the Zambian the largest power company producing about 80% of the electricity consumed in the country. ZESCO represents Zambia in the Southern African Power Pool. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZESCO [/QUOTE]Dog you are an ignorant so-called white boi! :D The grid used by the Zambian government to supply electricity to its people is the national grid. There is no requirement that it must traverse the entire nation before it is called a national grid. That is your white boi twist, you pale dog! :p Earlier you declared that only whites and their companies had electricity in Zambia. Now you have been reduced to hot airs about the percentage of rural Black Zambians with access to the National Grid. Pink Dog, India, a major industrial power has serious problems with connecting its rural population. Close to 87% of India's rural population have no power, does that mean India is now colonized and enslaved by white people? Same situation in Brazil, China, and many parts of Eastern Europe. Those are called Developing Countries. Nothing mysterious in that. Developing countries will develop! Your other issue was that we Africans were fools to deal with men like Guy Scott, a white man raised up in Zambia. India is being ruled by an Italian woman today, Sonia Ghandi, are they fools? How dare you cry false crocodile tears about how whites were lording it over Zambians, when there are no whites (strictly speaking) in Zambia? And how black Zambians were all slaves, had no ..to none existent white Zambians. It is no secret that Africa is a developing continent, a youthful continent. What is evil about you is your wicked spells against Africans, against our leaders, against our future prospect, like an evil wizard, sending malevolent wishes on a people who did nothing to him. But you have failed miserably. You and the other multiple names you registered which you use to support your self in hard times like this.... :D :D LMBAO @ this chump! [/qb][/QUOTE]Come on man. You are seriously deluded: http://2012.riverrunfilm.com/films/tobacco-king http://www.fringillalodge.com/index.htm http://www.farmersweekly.co.za/article.aspx?id=35175&h=Ceres-fruit-farmer%E2%80%99s-journey-to-success [QUOTE] For many Chinese entrepreneurs, Africa is seen as a continent of opportunity. Now even small businessmen are arriving in force - and some local traders in Zambia just cannot compete. If you want to get an idea of how China is reshaping the world economy just try to buy a chicken in the Zambian capital, Lusaka. The city's main market is hot, humid and very, very busy. As you push your way through the crowds, the hawkers and traders will shout and cajole, offering you almost every product imaginable. You will probably not see a single non-African there. Until, that is, you get to where the chickens are sold. Here you will see a row of trucks piled high with cages, each packed with plump white chickens all fussing and squawking. The African shoppers will be weighing the birds in their hands and looking their prospective purchases in the eye. In the background you might spot the owners of the trucks - Chinese men and women holding wads of money and making sure things go smoothly. These people are chicken farmers. [/QUOTE] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/9386678.stm Zambian farmers: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8582353.stm [QUOTE] It cannot be disputed that Zimbabwe was once a glorious country under the leadership of President Robert Mugabe. The country was among the giants of development in the world. It has also been a vehicle for development in many developing countries such as South Africa, China, India and developed countries such as Britain, the US, Canada to mention just a few, through the country.s mineral and human resources. Today, Zambia is considered an agricultural country with agricultural products being exported to many parts of the African continent if not the whole world. Yet a decade or so ago Zambia was a struggling importer of agricultural products. Zambia and many other countries relied heavily on Zimbabwe for food and other materials. Zimbabwe unwittingly promoted Zambia to the position of agricultural products exporter when our Zimbabwean white farmers were booted out of the country. Uganda under Idi Amin expelled all the Asians out of the country. It goes without saying that countries near and around Uganda benefited from the skills of Asians. Like Uganda, Zimbabwe has been struggling for the past decade to feed its ever growing population. Why should we struggle to feed ourselves when we are a super agricultural country? Our leaders are too proud to admit failure in their policies towards our commercial farmers. It is true that the indigenous people needed land but did we solve that problem by commercial farm invasions? Many Zimbabweans could have been settled on these farms if the government had done the exercise correctly. However this was not done. I am not saying that white farmers are better than our black farmers but they were better established and had worked our virgin land into productive farms. Zimbabwean black farmers would have learnt a lot if the white farmers were asked to help them. No one is disputing our need for land distribution but expelling commercial farmers the way we did was like throwing away the baby together with the bath water. Commercial farmers may not be as vindictive as many people fear. With a genuine accord and a promise of no hindrance, commercial farmers are willing to forgive and begin to develop Zimbabwe to its past glory.[/QUOTE] http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2012/08/12/govt-must-bring-back-white-farmers/ [QUOTE] canning the trampled patch of farmland where wheat should be growing. "Wildlife are a big headache here," he says, kneeling down and running his fingers over the crops crushed by the African cousin of our own red deer. "Down on another farm of ours, we have elephants breaking the electric fence. It's on an old elephant trail, so of course they don't know, but they broke half a kilometre recently. Then the buffaloes came in, about 50, so we had to call the wildlife service because it.s illegal to shoot them." To the average Irish farmer, it might sound like an unusual complaint, but then Grogan (48) doesnt run your average Irish farm. His 200 million a year company Zambeef owns 50,000 hectares of land across Zambia, slaughtering 60,000 cattle and 3.5 million chickens a year, making it one of Africa.s largest agri-food businesses. [/QUOTE] http://www.meattradenewsdaily.co.uk/news/011010/zambia___irish_beef_baron_francis_grogan.aspx And that is just Agriculture. Maize, beef and tobacco are some of the largest crops and the biggest exporters/producers of these crops are guess who? NON African Zambians. And as for copper, I already posted a video showing who runs that. And this is where the electricity goes: the mines and the farms followed by the cities. And I already posted images of the white schools and towns in Zambia where whites live a suburban American lifestyle with electricity of course. But you will deny that as usual. Keep in mind that Zambia was once part of Rhodesia and therefore the white farmers moving back and forth is nothing new. They have been doing it since the colony was set up. The only folks limited by the borders are the Africans themselves. [QUOTE] Ten years ago, James and Rita Chance were forced off their thriving tobacco, maize and cattle farm in Zimbabwe. Since then, they have made a success of tobacco farming in Zambia, which they now regard as their home. Heather Dugmore reports. It.s 5am on what promises to be a hot, humid day on James and Rita Chance's 1.840ha tobacco farm, 25km from the town of Choma in southern Zambia. James discusses the day.s work with his Zambian farm manager, Claude Bukoka, and together they give instructions to the workers. These are mostly men and women who live on their own small-scale or subsistence farms on the neighbouring property, which is owned by the local chief. James employs between 80 and 120 staff, depending on the season. [/QUOTE] http://www.farmersweekly.co.za/article.aspx?id=35175&h=Ceres-fruit-farmer%E2%80%99s-journey-to-success http://www.farmersweekly.co.za/default.aspx Here is the center of farming in Zambia: Mkushi. Here is one of the main attractions of the year in Mkushi, the M Festival: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JNH__YaZC0U Images of Mkushi Country club: [IMG]https://fbcdn-sphotos-e-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn1/38992_145914375424389_7143475_n.jpg[/IMG] Some of your so-called MUURISH brethren.... LOL! [IMG]https://fbcdn-sphotos-a-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn1/37274_141926129156547_7728068_n.jpg[/IMG] [IMG]https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/38992_145914368757723_63222_n.jpg[/IMG] https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mkushi-Country-Club/141923239156836 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_AtpDcRmBMg [QUOTE] The vision unfolding across the Mkushi plain in Zambia is at odds with the doleful imagery of modern Africa to which we have become accustomed. Three hours from the capital Lusaka the wheat crop glows under the tropical sun. A combine harvester moves methodically across one portion of a vast field. Nearby a giant sprinkler irrigates the soya bean crop. One might as easily be standing on the plains of the American Mid-West or among the grain fields of the Ukraine. These are fields of plenty, a productive Africa that challenges the narrative of conflict and hunger that so dominates our idea of the continent. "If we just increased the yields to 80% of world averages, Africa would become a net exporter of food. We believe that Africa can feed itself and the rest of the world too," Dabney Tonelli of Chayton Africa, the British-owned company that manages the 25,000 acre farm at Mkushi, says. [/QUOTE] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/9623031.stm This last story brings it all together: World Bank, Zimbabwean white farmers (settlers), American technology and of course black slaves. Sure looks like a hand full of white folks enslaving Africans to me. As a MATTER OF FACT the history of colonization in Africa was the story of a hand full of white folks enslaving a whole continent of blacks. Who the heck do you think you are kidding? I mean whites were ALWAYS a minority in their African colonies. For example, South Africa. Africans been in Africa how many thousands of years? And you mean to tell me white folks, Asians and other foreigners get "LAND RIGHTS" before the Africans? That is the main reason Africans are poor and it is because THEIR TRAITOROUS @SS governments work for foreigners. They "hold the land" what the hell is that? You mean to tell me you don't give DEED AND TITLE to the NATIVES of the land? Why not? It is theirs isn't it? And this is neo-colonialism at its best. No land rights for the population therefore they cannot get loans, cannot have large commercial farms and cannot have a REAL ECONOMY because nobody recognizes them as being part of the economy except as peasant workers. [/QB][/QUOTE]
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