Thursday, October 30, 2014

Of mechanics and lumpen proletarians


Another strange rift emerged this week as a simmering battle spilled over into the open to reveal a hatred that has been brewing now for quite a while. The issue...so say the mechanics had something to do with the loss and theft of spare parts by one group. The result was catastrophic. A host of car repair men descended on the young people and sought to bring their wrath upon them with bricks and sticks and any other makeshift tool that they could come up with. 

The young street children were left with no choice but as nature dictates responded with equal force even if some of them were met by the bigger mob of angry vehicle men. 

While on the surface it seems as though the challenge was one of theft, my guess is that it points to something much bigger...a collapse in an organized system of crime and the likelihood of a spillover where someone had to take the fall. 

I seems to be common knowledge of the existence of a larger group whose sole purpose seems to be to handle a burgeoning industry in parts. 
Alas in these parts too, the truth is the sum of the parts is greater than the whole. 

It is strange to see that in this situation, the usually well functioning law enforcement people were left speechless and unable to move in the presence of the mammoth crowd of irate citizens. 

Now once again I wait for the fallout of this incident. I have few doubts that there will probably be an escalation if not a deepening of resentment and two groups nurse their wounds. 


Monday, October 27, 2014

Long sleeves short sleeves and bear arms: militias and the protection of liberty.



It's only a matter of time before we have to unite in order to harness the vast size of our continent and tap into its immense resources both human and natural. As we move hastily towards that end, what does the future of the continent look like and which parts of the U.S constitution would we be first to adopt. What do we view as the most important part of the U.S constitution and it's relevance in our context?

I think that the most important part of the constitution is the second amendment and it reference to right to bear arms especially in regards to the protections of liberties. But in a much larger context, the reference to a militia in defense of those rights. 

There have been several recent notable examples of people who deviated from the path and took up those arms in protest and who as a result were pursued and violently gunned down. What this means is that even if the American knows that he has the right to protect and guard himself against what he views as violations to liberty, he must prepare himself for a system that is much better equipped and better trained and that holds much more sway with a massive media machine. I speak here in reference to a former member of the LAPD who went rogue and strangely received quite a lot of support from citizens on social media. Even if he was well trained he was no match for the crew that was sent to rein him in. You have the right to bear arms and to form a militia in defense of liberty but will you be able to stand against the force that represents the other side?

Maybe our response to the drive towards this process has been a little slow but many have responded...but I fear that our doubts about terrorism and the change in language and landscape that took place post 911 has brought about a fear of all sorts of protest even armed protest so that no one dares raise the alarm of truth with the knowledge of the consequences. 

The nature of modern warfare has changed dramatically but there are some fundamentals that have remained. Even an army as large and well equipped as the U.S army still feels rather incapacitated because of an inability to put boots in the ground. Maybe this is a veiled reference to the old Nations Story about a man who must walk the land in order to receive it as his inheritance. 

While seeming to deviate, the arrival of the drone in African should be writing on the wall for those of us who never dreamt of a day when we would see an occupying force on our lands even under the guise of building hospitals. Should we be looking at the the reported high incidence of airborne diseases as a sign of a new from of chemical warfare? I hope not. 

While not completely certain of how the cards are going to stack out, I still see a proliferation of arms...which we must counter with some form of civic education. In some circles this is a much better option that the crude weapons which a largely agrarian group would resort to if pushed. 



A rock and a hard place: Between the cops and the merchants



Last week the students at the MUK responded to a proposed hike in their graduation fees. The response was measured but when the students began to be seen as disruptive, the riot police was forced into action. Some of the students then found themselves caught between a rock and a hard place...or in this case between the police officers (anxious to preserve order) and the merchants (keen to protect their merchandise). 

As can be expected soon the matter was resolved, albeit temporarily and a few heroes emerged. The solution in my view was temporary because the problem that brought about the hike in fees...which in this case, is likely to be a shortage in funds, still remains. In addition to this, the enforcement arm of the law continues to undermine the administrative work of the university council by appearing at strategic and calculated moments to play the role of messiah in times when they should really allow the University and it's systems to play their role. 

The students seem to be concerned that they have been gagged while in council and at the moment restricted to observer status so that they are unable to present their views in order to influence in a direct manner the way business is run at their University. 

As though this is not enough, our lecturers have emerged through their association with fresh demands regarding some of their payments. 
Unlike their counterparts though, they are more likely to down their instruments in an effort to paralyze the system a move that will further enflame the student body to response with yet another demonstration resulting in the same cycle in which yet again another savior will emerge dressed in full riot gear. 

Advise? Try as much as possible not to alienate yourselves from the merchants...they happen to be the ones who feed you. 
The use of force is brutish and must be your last option. After all you are being trained to be our first line of defense and there is great likelihood that most of your will find your way into some top positions in parliament and in our political parties. 
Thirdly, do not take part in activities that place you at the mercy of better armed and better trained officers of the law. Do not chose to be a pawn unless you are certain of promotion at the end of the game. 
Fourthly, you are aristocrats...do treat the rodents with some measure of respect!


Sunday, October 12, 2014

Milking the masses



It's been a few days since the Kenyans pulled off a coup d'tat at the Hague. A triumphal entry similar to the one that had taken place only a few days prior (in Uganda) then followed in which a sizable group of Kenyans met the head of state as he arrived back into the country. 
As the Ugandan media was trying to deal with an apparent rift between two major players in the so called resistance movement (so called because the history of resistance movement in my view is often fraught with much less pomp and circumstance-which is why it is probably preferable to refer to it as a revolutionary movement). 

Those with a keener eye and better memory referred to the return of the Colonel...to Uganda which back in the day was met with a mammoth crowd as well as that of popular TV personality who had made a name for himself in a season of Big Brother. 

Even if some called this an amazing feat of mobilization, there is great risk of placing Big Hat under the same category as his former Colonel and the Big Brother Star. Apart from the free fuel...and the chance to see a star or two, we can speak of a power vacuum that existed and that necessitated an absence of one leader for a certain aspect of the rift to be dealt with. 

It is important to note that we are now speaking of a broader East African Politic in which different parts of the opposition and civil society are making use of each others creativity by acts of replication.

And so the triumphal march of one is imitated by another (politics) and the use of hogs in parliament, and coffins (Kenya) is dubbed by another (civil society in Uganda). The force with which both protests are met is matched as the enforcement arm of the judiciary responds with rapidity and continues to spend millions towards equipment. 

In an interview or appearance on the radio, TMJ or the man some of you choose to refer to as motor mouth, makes a reference to the value of what I call the emotions of the masses. In this reference he is basically saying that it serves you well to milk the masses of their mercy especially when you find yourself in trouble. 
This is what some experts refer to in the ICC case...at least in reference to the head of state. It is a little too late to apply the same to our counterparts in Khartoum and would prove rather risky for him to attempt to pull this off. 
We are now left to wonder if the right decisions have been made. A long prison sentence is bearable in as far as it allows you to live to fight another day (albeit behind bars). I do not see the international criminal court assenting to hanging as a means of justice but these are possibilities in many of our countries and that is if natural African justice is not allowed to come into play. 

None of the our major players have been in power long enough to claim the right to a collapse of their nations a la Libya, Egypt and Iraq. 

Put this together and I see a rise in Radicalization of the youth. You can only watch for so long before you become affected by what you see and act on it. At the core of this group will be the Fourth Estate and an exhausted civil society. 
You can see aspects of this in Uganda whose opposition has played it cool for long but is beginning to experience an exhaustion. 

The youth will begin to realize that they do it stand a chance against the machinery of the state and a manipulated legislative and judicial arm. 
In some regards you will find a nameless faceless group with absolutely no links to power and it's trapping but with a realization that they have a stake in the governance of their nations. I they are unable to force their governments into exhaustion but their demands and drive the bureaucracy to a halt. They will begin to think about creative ways to turn their plowshares into swords. This is as we all know a largely agrarian economy.