On 15 January 1970 Muammar Qaddafi was named Premier of the Libyan Arab Republic. A military revolutionary who looked to Egypt’s Gamal Abdel Nasser as a personal hero, Qaddafi’s future as the dictator of the oft-renamed country the rest of the world would know in shorthand as Libya would never be anything less than interesting. …

  • January 15, 2021
  • Comments Off on The Premier of the Premier

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On 8 January 1912 the first meeting of what would become the seminal anti-apartheid organization was held in Waaihoek, South Africa. The South African Native National Congress would become the African National Congress in 1923 and would later become known as the party of Nelson Mandela.   The men (and one woman) who founded the …

  • January 8, 2021
  • Comments Off on The First Meeting to Free Men

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There was an Amazonian Guard, an American airstrike, Pan-Arabism, Pan-Africanism, a terrorist bombing in a disco, a terrorist bombing of a Pan-Am airplane, the founding of the African Union, and a final violent gasp that resulted in his overthrow.  There was always a story about Muammar Qaddafi. Various dates have been given for Qadaffi’s birth …

  • January 1, 2021
  • Libya
  • Comments Off on The Man Who Funded the Revolution

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On 8 January 1912 in an unprepossessing Wesleyan Church in the Black community of Waaihoek near Bloemfontein several men and one women met to create the organization that would shake the foundations of the South African nation. The South African Native National Congress would become the African National Congress eleven years later in 1923, but …

  • December 14, 2020
  • South Africa
  • Comments Off on Eighty Years to Change the World

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“The time may have come to say good-bye to Muhammad Ali.  Because, very honestly, I don’t think he can beat George Foreman,” Howard Cosell. But we all know that Cosell was wrong. After eight rounds of utilizing the rope-a-dope tactic, accepting the punishment of Foreman’s legendary heavy fists in order to tire out the heavily …

  • October 30, 2020
  • Uncategorized
  • Comments Off on Is That All You Got?

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During  the Cold War years, the third world was a place of tremendous diversity in cultural and natural wonders.  The Indian subcontinent, the Africa Savannah, the Asian rainforests – third world countries on these continents offered cultures as varied as the Sikhs, Maasai, and the Karen.  These cultures survived, and even thrived, while being surrounded …

  • October 24, 2020
  • Kenya
  • Comments Off on Saving a Species

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When the Mau Mau leader Dedan Kimathi was captured on 21 October 1956, the military portion of the Mau Mau Uprising in Kenya was effectively over. That did not end the British system of camps, called the “Pipeline“, nor did it end the systemized torture torture and brutality that played a large role in quelling …

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