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U.S. Elections: A Romney Win Installs A Republican Taliban

U.S. Elections: A Romney Win Installs A Republican Taliban

By N Oji Mzilikazi

October 30, 2012

Ever since Barack Obama was installed as the president of the United States, the Republican Party has engaged in orchestrated hostility against him, and all the plans and ideas his administration had for moving the country forward.

A successful 4-year term ensures Obama stays in the White House – a thought blasphemous to Republican ears. Hence, their opposition to everything, their spreading of dissention, fear, lies, and bigotry, and their willingness to see America fall, if it means they’ll return to the corridors of power…

 

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Conrad Black: Shameless

Conrad Black: Shameless

By N Oji Mzilikazi

October 29, 2012

Psychopaths, we are taught, have no sense of emotion or regard for others. They will doggedly go after, charm, bully, abuse, trample, stop at nothing to get what they want, and have no remorse whatsoever.

Former newspaper tycoon and convicted felon Conrad Black meets the above-mentioned criteria.

Though convicted of defrauding Hollinger, the company he ran, and having served a 42-month prison sentence in America, Black sees himself as “innocent” and unfairly targeted by the U.S. justice system.

In his U.K. jaunt this month, Black was interviewed by Susanna Rustin of The Guardian. When asked, “What is the appropriate punishment for people convicted, as you were, of financial crimes,” his response was “Working for free.”

When BBC television interviewer Jeremy Paxman made the point that Black was a convicted criminal, Mr. Arrogance Personified declared he was not a criminal. Black then called Paxman “a priggish gullible British fool.”

This is the same Black, who in pursuit of “class and status in relation to Empire” renounced his Canadian citizenship in 2001 to be British, to be inducted into the British House of Lords, blasting Paxman for the very Britishness he craved, identified with.

Black was honoured with the Order of Canada in 1990.

Any recipient convicted of a criminal offence could lose the honour, be stripped. Black’s conviction led to endless calls for revocation of his status as an officer of the Order of Canada.

Although Black pyssed on Canadians in the process of becoming British, that insatiable desire to be “somebody with prestigious titles” saw Black going all out to try and keep the Order of Canada.

Failing in his bid to appear in person before the Order of Canada Advisory Council to plead his case (Perchance in the belief his charm, force of character, and skill at manipulation would win them over.), he told CBC’s Susan Ormiston, “I would not wait for giving these junior officials the evidently almost aphrodisiacal pleasure of throwing me out. I would withdraw.”

Poor Conrad Black…everyone is out to get him…

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Beyond Sangre Grande: Book Launch Montreal

Book Launch:

Beyond Sangre Grande: Caribbean Writing Today

Edited by Cyril Dabydeen

Thanks to the effort and hard work by H. Nigel Thomas, “Beyond Sangre Grande: Caribbean Writing Today” had its Montreal book launch on Wednesday, October 24, 2012, at the UNIA Hall, 2741 Notre-Dame West.

Billed as a Caribbean Literary Evening, the turnout was awesome.

Readers were Novel Thomas, Richard Best (guest readers), book editor, Cyril Dabydeen, Horace Goddard, H. Nigel Thomas and I.

The four of us also made our John Hancock available for everyone who purchased a copy of “Beyond Sangre Grande.”  Quite a number of books were sold.

Dabydeen was simply inspirational, brilliant.

I did not read “Shards of Glass,” my contribution to “Beyond Sangre Grande.” I opted for a new piece – “Papa Bois: The Midnight Robber.” I was humbled by the response to this rather lengthy piece.

The launch is undoubtedly one of my 2012 highlights.

 

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Can We Trust The Food & Drug Industry Part 2

Can We Trust The Food & Drug Industry Part 2

 

Reshaping Physiognomy: Obesity, Fat is Normal

By N Oji Mzilikazi

Originally published in the Montreal Community Contact Volume 22, Number 20

October 18, 2012

 

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Nexen: Canada Sells, China Protects

Canada Sells: China Protects

By N Oji Mzilikazi

(Originally published in the Montreal Community Contact Volume 22, Number 19)

October 4, 2012

Almost the same day shareholders of Calgary-based energy company, Nexen Inc. voted overwhelmingly in favour of its takeover by China National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC), the Chinese state-controlled oil giant, to the tune of $15bn, China’s Ministry of Land and Resources cut the number of permits for rare earths mining by 40 per cent from 113 to 67.

Rare earths minerals are needed to manufacture mobile phones, electric cars and other high-tech goods. China has 30 per cent of world supplies of rare earths, but accounts for more than 90 per cent of production. The reduction of permits further tightens China’s controls over the minerals. Restriction on its production and exports are already in place.

Social stability, political stability, and economic prosperity of society are contingent upon people being able to eat bread and/or earn a dollar. The inability to do so will unleash unprecedented criminality, violence and social unrest. Draconian laws and repression by the police and army could only go so far.

China is a country of billions. Out of necessity – its social stability, its government must find ways to ensure its citizenry eat. Thus, we saw China instituting a one-child policy. She cannot afford uncontrolled population growth.

In its new march forward, ostensibly to be the world power, China cannot afford to suffer causalities like Mao Zedong. In 1935, Mao led 100,000 followers on a 9600-kilometre march. 6,000 made it.

In taking its entire population on a global march of dominance, China has to ensure it has access to resources. Accordingly, cash-rich China has been strategic and aggressive in its pursuit of oil and other commodities.

A leaked letter from the office of the President of Nigeria, published by the Financial Times in September 2009, and dated August 13, 2009, revealed CNOOC sought to buy a sixth of Nigeria’s crude oil reserves. According to the Telegraph, CNOOC’s initial offer was rumoured to be between $30bn – $50bn.

China became a “trading partner” with Africa and other developing and struggling economies of the world that Western Nations couldn’t be bothered with. Investments, financing to support sustainable development gave China access to develop, exploit the resources of those countries.

In the past decade, over a million Chinese have moved to work in Africa, building roads, bridges and other infrastructure across the continent, drastically changing the economic landscape, and getting rich in the process, and with China’s cheap goods in tow.

Never mind that China has had a significant role, enabling ethnic conflicts in Africa, China-Africa trade grew from $6bn in 1999 to $166.3bn U.S. in 2011, according to the July 18, 2012, People’s Daily online.

It’s one thing when a “private” company buys an enterprise and another when it’s a state-owned company that’s doing the buying.

China has been buying into and buying up energy resources worldwide. And Canada, for all its developed, “First World” status is more than happy to sell.

In 2005, CNOOC paid $122-million for a 16.7 per cent stake in MEG Energy Corp. In August 2009, PetroChina Co. agreed to buy 60 per cent in two Athabasca Oil Sands Corp. properties. In April 2010, China’s Sinopec agreed to pay $4.65bn (U.S.) for a 9 per cent stake in Syncrude Canada.

As revealed in the May 13, 2010, Globe and Mail, China Investment Corp. paid $817-million for “a 45 per cent stake in an oil sands-like project owned by Penn West Energy Trust. The Chinese firm has also agreed to pay $435-million for a 5 per cent interest in Penn West.”

Also, “China Investment Corp. is a major shareholder of mining company Teck Resources Ltd., and has holdings in gold producer Kinross Gold Corp. and Potash Corp.”

The Calgary Herald, July 20, 2011, pointed out that CNOOC “has agreed to buy struggling Opti Canada Inc. for $34 million and $2 billion in debt, bolstering its position in the Canadian oilsands.” The Nexen deal is the icing on the “awaken dragon’s” cake.

In the meanwhile, Canadians can’t wait for 2018, and the arrival of Er Shun and Ji Li, two giant pandas from China.

In February 2012, our erudite Prime Minister, the Honourable Stephen Harper, signed an agreement with China to borrow the two pandas for 10 years – at a lending fee of $1 million dollars annually.

Since they are a mating pair, it wouldn’t surprise me if the agreement is, should they breed, their offspring(s) belongs to China.

While the oilsands are perfect for growing bamboo, should Canada ever have to import bamboo from China for Shun and Li, that’s more profit going China’s way.

Canadians need not worry about China’s long history of protectionism (The Great Wall is a testament to its attempt to keep foreigners out.), its forays into our energy sector – ensuring future domestic supplies, and the concerns of CSIS in regards to foreign takeovers or control over strategic sectors of the Canadian economy.

Shareholders in firms like Nexen are going to get paid, and they and theirs are going live happily ever after. Our selling off wouldn’t come back and bite us in the arse. Alberta would not become a province of China.

Canadians need not worry about China’s long history of no respect for human life, and human rights abuse. It’s not as if they’ll convert their share and interest of oil extracted from Canada into goods, “Poorly Made In China” as is the title of manufacturing expert Paul Midler’s book.

With no abatement to outsourcing, employment scarcity, poor economic prospects, and the universally strong economic culture, Harper knows Shun and Li will be a viable industry, and a source of unceasing revenue – foreign exchange – a profitable commodity, and Canada’s biggest attraction. Visitors to the Zoo will fork out millions.

It’s not for nothing Harper received the World Statesman of the Year award last month in New York, and this past August received The Righteous Who Fight Antisemitism award.

Still, the Council of Canadians Media Release (September, 27, 2012), called upon “MPs to reject the Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA).” They claimed the bilateral investment treaty between Canada and China “will put unacceptable constraints on Canadian energy and environmental policy.”

Canadians went to the polls and gave Harper a majority. And though governments are increasingly a front for corporate interests, and the clique of multinationals that control the world economy, Harper is of impeccable decency. His opening of Canada’s energy sector to Chinese investment is solely for the benefit of Canadians.

I for one do not intend to let the future catch me with my pants down. I learnt French to survive in Quebec; I’m going to learn Chinese and brush up on my Gung Fu. (I haven’t seen Martin Siu Choy, my sifu in some 30 plus years.) My only problem – would it be Mandarin or Cantonese?

 

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Can We Trust The Food and Drug Industry?

Can We Trust The Food and Drug Industry?

By N Oji Mzilikazi

(Originally published in the Montreal Community Contact Volume 22, Number 18)

September 20, 2012

In 2004, Anna Devathasan and Jenny Suo, two 14-year-old high school students in New Zealand, tested Ribena for a science project. Ribena, a blackcurrant based juice has a long history of being a healthy drink. Advertisements touted it as having more vitamin C than orange juice. The duo found Ribena contained no detectable vitamin C.

Given that food is the source of fuel and nutrients for the human body, and that healthy foods build a healthy body and a healthy mind…