Tuesday, 30 October 2012

The creation of modern day Gomorrah

CORRUPTION SOCIETY
 
For many years, the public has endured increasing levels of corruptions in Uganda. By international standards, Uganda has one of the most elaborate anti-corruption laws but this has not deterred corruption. This article reiterates that corruption is the very function of the NRM regime but distinguishes old forms of corrupt practices from organized crime that has transformed Uganda into modern day Gomorrah!

The 2009 Anti-Corruption law may as well have become an instrument not worth the paper on which it was written on. Corruption is widely defined to include the tolerance or acceptance of influence, let it be material, monetary or otherwise, for personal gratification, that may lead to acts of or omission of the duty for which one is an authority (Anti-corruption Act 2009 Part II: 2(A)(a-i). Ugandans know the simple, basic and functional definition of corruption, as “the lack of opportunity for have-nots”. In this sense, most Ugandans look at those with money, power and guns as those who are corrupt. The 2009 Anti-corruption Act does not describe moral corruption, an aspect that makes corruption pervasive in our society. To an extent, corruption has become a sub-culture in every society.

This article argues that Ugandan’s problem is no longer corruption but organized economic crime. Corruption has transformed itself from the infinite to the finite and it manifests in every walk of life. It embodies the very opposites of what society should be. The government which should act as mediator for distribution of public good, under the influence of corruption, has become the agent provocateur of widespread inequalities. Ugandans no longer experience the life of sanity; they thrive under insanity like it was in Gomorrah. Uganda has become a state equal in stature and character as the Biblical Gomorrah with some components of “Soddom” in it!

Every day one opens the online version of the Ugandan Dailies; there must be a stunning revelation about new acts of embezzlement. Each story which appears on the subject out compete the previous one in the amounts and the sophistication of rubbery of taxpayer’s money. Corruption has now grown to full maturity and has become organized crime. What we read now in the media about Pension scum, Prime Minister’s office siphoning of billions through network of technocrats and others, have in character outcompeted what we knew already in Gavi and Global Fund, which in turn, had outcompeted previous scums involving government agents.

So, how did we reach here and where are we headed? The transformation of what would have passed as sheer negligence of duty into fully blown corruption was facilitated by the NRM ideologies. In the early 90s when Parliament fought corruption, Museveni complained that Parliament was on vendetta against his Ministers and his economic plans. His cadres went on radio to argue that the rampant corruption acts were indicators of economic growth. The establishment treated anti-corruption agencies, groups and experts as enemies of the state and members of the opposition who were inclined at diverting their revolution’s pathways.

Not long after that, the men who came broke from the Bushes of Luwero started appearing in the media for wealth accumulation as super rich. All of the NRM top cadres and so-called “governors of state affairs” had embarked on primitive accumulation of wealth at the expense of the so-called liberated. Through their wealth, they were certain that they had enough to procure significant portion of the public will to govern. In combination with the use of state instruments of coercion to secure the rest of they will, they became too insensitive, arrogant and indifferent to the plight of the ordinary Ugandans. Assured of their strength, they returned Uganda to Multi-party elective politics. Ever since then, corruption and coercion have become the two most famed methods of securing tenure for the President and his henchmen.

Today, this corruption has entrenched its roots into the very soul of the system like the grasp of the weed called Wondering-Jew. Because, at the nucleus of this organized crime is situated the Ugandan political class as enablers and profiteers. This is also the reason that Museveni may be an astute tactician in guerilla warfare, but the war on corruption is one which he cannot defeat without self capitulation. President Museveni has tolerated corruption for so many years as a beneficiary, whether directly or indirectly. After all, the most corrupt people are members of the ruling elite or of the First Family.

END

Thursday, 4 October 2012

How transportation system contributes to maternal death

TRANSPORT & MATERNAL-CHILD HEALTH
In my previous elicitation I argued that Uganda’s healthcare system is one that could be fixed with political will to enforce intersectoral collaboration at governmental levels. I educed that the healthcare system requires leadership, ideology and funding. This article is a continuation of the articulation of the Delay Factors responsible for high maternal-child mortality in Uganda.  It is premised that the persistent failures of the healthcare system is attributable to general system wide failures in public the public transportation that impede access. In evaluating the efficacy and efficiency of the public healthcare system we must include the contribution of other functions of governments that provide social security and enhances equity. The healthcare system is part of the fabrics of what constitute social services and a driving force for a robust economy that does not function in isolation.
The health of pregnant women and children largely depends on mobility potential. One of the delay factors that lead to the death of pregnant women and children is the delay to reach healthcare facility. The World Health Organization estimates that 40-60 percent of the people living in developing countries live more than 8kms from healthcare facilities. Poor roads and mobility resources including high transportation costs are the key delay factors that facilitate mortality among vulnerable children and pregnant mothers. When a pregnant woman experiences complications, she has between 6-12 hours before she can access qualified emergency care and yet most perinatal deaths occur during labor and delivery or within the first 48hrs.
The timely access of healthcare services is predicated on availability of emergency means of transportation, good acess roads and ready reception at the point of care. Transportation facilitates access to health care facility and determines well-being of maternal child dyad. Moreover, one’s ability to be mobile comes with power and prestige. The World Bank recognizes that mobility, power and well-being are closely link to gender inequalities. The ability of the male to own and control modes of transportation also controls the mobility of members of the family and that determines the health of that family.
No matter how well resourced a healthcare facility is, if it is not accessible the people will not use it. There grows apathy and sense of alienation between the people and the facility. This is why most hospitals operate ambulance services at a minimal access fee, to consolidate community connection and bridge the service gap. The Millennium Development Goal recognizes that a robust healthcare system is a critical and fundamental social service necessary for the attainment of economic goals. However, the slow trends in achieving MDGs in sub-Sahara Africa are premised majorly on access to healthcare facilities.
Further, a robust healthcare system is key driving force to any economy and therefore integral to the very functions of the state. Healthcare system’s failure is then not the organic dysfunction of the system itself, but the capitulation it faces from the mainstream - that is how well integrated it is, in the economy. To appraise Uganda’s healthcare system we must pay due regards to issues of access, public health policies, government funding priorities, leadership and underlying ideology. There is need to appraise the healthcare system within the performance context of the incumbent regime.  A failed healthcare system signifies failures on the part of that administration as a whole, not of the system per se.
There are crucial areas that a twenty-first century healthcare system can fail; when the system adheres strictly to outdated biomedical models which views health as the interplay between infirmities or lack thereof and; when the system selects downstream approaches to healthcare and neglects the fundamental upstream aspects. Investment in public health systems and deliberate focus on social determinants of health poses the greatest opportunity for strengthening the healthcare system in Uganda and lessens the burden of downstream biomedical care.
To improve healthcare service delivery to the population, the government must enforce and encourage all sectors to place health thinking in its planning agenda. When building roads, the driving force is not how much to be made in profits per kilometer, but rather, how useful the road will be in facilitating access to nearby social services. The obsession for highways and superhighways underscores the needs for rural access and at local levels. There must be increased mapping of mobility entitlements and accessibility patterns as recommended by the WB. Improvement of information technology in the meantime could tremendously fill gaps poised by distance.
I have established that there is a strong relationship between transportation and maternal-child mortality in Uganda and by extension in sub-Sahara Africa. The world over, governments have invested in infrastructure to kill “distances” and to avert from “womb to tomb” episodes that characterize the experiences of reproductive women in Uganda.  Healthcare is integral and primal aspect of the functionalities of the government. Its failures reflect the failure of the system as a whole.
END.

Thursday, 20 September 2012

Challenges and opportunities in reducing maternal-child deaths

Pregnancy, pregnant women, maternal- child health

In my last article, I attempted to discuss the three delays in the maternal-child health discourses. I offered insight into their implication in practice and research. In this article, I will share briefs of some of the outstanding issues from my scoping review for a research project.
I have chosen to expound on the issue of maternal child health as stipulated in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) to elicit public debate. The purpose of which, is to shed light on the predicament of pregnant women in the inaccessible and deteriorating antenatal and emergency services in Uganda. The health of a woman is a key determinant of the health of the household. Undermining the health of women equally diminishes the society’s pursuit for economic prosperity.
MDG goals four and five are specific to the reduction of maternal child mortality rates among expectant mothers.  This topic interests me because in many studies and prevailing literature, Sub-Sahara Africa (SSA) has been found to be a commonplace for women to die during the course of pregnancy (54% of all global annual maternal deaths due to pregnancy). There are many causes for the malignancy of this problem, but what is important to note is that most of the underlying causes of these deaths are easily avoidable or preventable.
I have carried out an extensive but preliminary literature review on this subject of maternal –child health dyad. Out of the over 600 peer reviewed research articles, I found common and recurring themes. Top among these are; lack of political will to prevent, arrest or reverse deaths associated with pregnancy; that although fertility among poor and rural SSA is high, pregnancy related complications and deaths are associated with conditions of poverty. Communities that are isolated due to lack of infrastructure (Roads and telecommunication) and those that lack access to professional Emergency Obstetric care (Emoc), incur more deaths whether due to pregnancy or any ailment and; certain cultures, traditions and customs are enablers in facilitating these deaths.
Success stories have been registered where women have been able to generate household income and to support their pregnant peers to seek professional care. Other areas of success recorded involves rural communities indulging in cost sharing for public health services, where minimal membership fees is paid at village and sub-county levels, like in Rwanda which promotes performance based financing to healthcare. In some places, women incentivize Gaenecologists and Midwives to frequent their local health centers, like it is in Zegoua town of 22,000 people, situated 500 miles south of the Capital Mali, Bamako. Groundbreaking works have been reported in Bangladesh, Sri lanka, Tamil Nadu in India, South Africa and Egypt.
The high maternal-child mortality rate in Uganda is one that is very shameful. Our neighbor Rwanda, with functional 395 peripheral health centers, 40 district hospitals and three referral hospitals, have registered far better health outcomes than Uganda and they could inspire us to suceed.
I contend that Uganda has capacity to contain and eliminate maternal child deaths through its elaborate health institution structures. The problem which undermines the efficiency of the healthcare system is chronic lack of political will to invest in area of the economy that matters the most. Our healthcare system is easy to streamline and to strengthen, especially under the local government system. Lack of funding, poor leadership and lack of political will remain the key impediment to healthcare service delivery.
If all local authorities were encouraged to place health as priority on their political agenda, most of the health problems could have been eliminated. Most of the ailments in Uganda are primarily associated with poor hygiene and poverty as a consequence of lack of resources at the rural and peri-urban Uganda. If these fundamental components of health were addressed, the pressure on the healthcare system would be significantly alleviated.
According to WHO studies, on the average, a rural SSA woman spends 4 hours of the day looking for water and requires same time to collect firewood for preparing meals. The woman has no time to attend to her own health, such that when pregnancy comes, it finds her body already weakened. Unfortunately, the plight of the ordinary Ugandan woman of child bearing age will never be addressed until tragedy befalls a daughter or wife of a politician while giving birth at home or abroad.
END

Thursday, 13 September 2012

Blinding loyalty to NRM is recipe to Societal Poverty

ELECTIVE POLITICS & POVERTY
This week presented yet another onslaught of NRM from a by-election in Butambala.  The DP Party has made a significant inroad in a place once considered a bastion of ruling NRM. Butambala is a remote district where every elected person claims to be NRM. The tales of Butambala also illuminate a relationship between supporting NRM and increasing economic disparity. People in Butambala are among some of the poorest in peaceful Uganda and Butambala stands as a replica of places with blinding loyalty to the NRM.
The victory of a former UYD firebrand and the founder of Popular Resistance Against Life President (PRAP), Mr. Muwanga Mohamad Kivumbi in Butambala is a defining moment for the NRM.  It illustrates a growing consciousness that in the last 26 years of monopoly of power, the NRM has not been honest to its followers. The NRM treated those that opposed it with much contempt and detestation and considers any forms of opposition as an act of rebellion. In retaliation, opposition figures are harassed, arrested in a manner not befitting of modern human treatment and jailed without charge, just to humiliate and disengage.
What has also been evident is that most of the areas that have offered blinding allegiance to the regime have remained in perpetual state of poverty. The areas that have been actively engaging the regime have attained better results in reducing their poverty levels and self-sustenance.  Many cases are there to illustrate this; take for instance Karamoja, Busoga, Bunyoro and Toro. These areas have been the poorest and most neglected regions in Uganda. Had it not been for the recent buzz in oil exploits, Bunyoro would remain a neglected region of Uganda. What Bunyoro has shared in common with Busoga are the stunning number of people living below the poverty line; those demobilized by jiggers and other adverse living conditions. Moreover, these regions have been very peaceful for the most part of the last 26 years and they have supported the NRM overwhelmingly for the same period of time.
What then are the theoretical underpinnings that can explain the similarities in regional decadence if it is not closely associated with the rather deceptive and exploitative nature of the NRM regime? There are few explanatory models to this dilemma; first, we could advance the theory of Acquired Helplessness to explain the presumed relationship between variables “supporting NRM” and “increasing levels of poverty (societal decay). Secondly, we can advance the theory of resilience to explicate the ability for self-sustenance and sporadic socio- economic growth in those areas that have maintained a mixed blend of anti/pro NRM methodology.
The theory of Acquired Helplessness is prevalent in health sciences and more so in rehabilitation sciences especially among the seniors, those recovering from illness or those enduring prolonged illnesses such as stroke and so forth. This theory posits that to provide all round support to a person in need only helps in his/her deterioration of functional abilities. It urges caregivers to promote functional skills for self-help among those whose functional abilities have been impaired by illness. The typical “NRM society” is presented in this model as one that has been demobilized by many illnesses, most importantly, corruption, injustice and impunity. The NRM is the causal agent in society that wreaks havoc on society’s functional ability to exercise their will and rights. By stealing votes, it impairs that faculty of society that should be making competent choices, thus leading to marginalization. Just like a sick body, a society riddled with such malaise, cannot function. Given the patronage, these societies quickly acquire a mindset of helplessness, the conviction that no amount of self-exertion can produce results - their true voices will never be heard and they have nothing to do about it. Their allegiances are therefore manufactured and their functional abilities thwarted remorselessly. So they are conditioned to support the regime at a cost of sheer negligence.
To the contrary, the regions that have utilized mixed methods by tolerating both NRM and opposition among its ranks have fared much better. These communities like Buganda (Luwero), Acholi, Teso, Lango etc., have developed competent faculties upon which they regulate their aspirations and strategize for national resources as serious contenders. One would assert that these regions are more conscious politically and economically to understand the true nature of the NRM. These regions have also endured the worst forms of vertical violence in the last 26 years to become resilient. Resilience is the ability to bounce back from adversity. Generally, these societies have illustrated self-reliance, independence of thought and higher levels of accountability.
END

Thursday, 30 August 2012

Maternal Mortality: The Three Delay Model and maternal “near-miss” concepts


Maternal Health

On August 22, 2012, the New Vision Newspaper, also the government’s mouthpiece, published an optimistic overview of the 5th Uganda Demographic and Health survey, 2012 released by the Uganda National Bureau of Statistics (UBOS). This report cast a surprising appraisal of the health sector that disputed the increasing apathy among Ugandans towards healthcare services.
Of particular interests were maternal health and mortality rate. According to UBOS, there are more pregnant women visiting antenatal clinics and are receiving preventive care such as immunization against tetanus and regular monitors of vital signs such as blood pressure; more women delivered in public health facilities in 2011 than the previous years and; a decline in the number of women who delivered from home or in transit, were recorded. Most notable is the reported decline is maternal deaths - from 550/100,000 in 2001 to 438/100,000 in 2011. By any standards, this report exceeded expectations and should be received with much delight.
The United Nations’ 2012 “The Millennium Development Goals Report”, indicates that the antenatal care for pregnant women has improved significantly across the world and that for Africa; Southern Africa continues to lead in achieving concrete gains in this aspect. Despite general improvement in antenatal care across the world, Sub Sahara Africa’s achievement in all the Millennium Development Goals was the slowest.  For instance, in 2010, an estimated 287,000 maternal deaths occurred worldwide, which is 47% decline from 1990. Of these maternal deaths, Sub-Sahara Africa (SSA) accounted for 56% and Southern Asia 29%. This is 85% of global burden of maternal death (245,000 deaths) between SSA and S. Asia.
Given the colorful status of the 5th Uganda Demographic and Health Survey report, many Ugandans who have endured challenges to access basic health care services will have to ask many questions. Such baseline demographic reports are often not very representative. Attaining credible statistics that is representative of maternal status in Uganda is nearly impossible because of adverse culture of record keeping; most deaths in Uganda are not reported, and even those that are reported, may not be accompanied by exact cause of death. Obtaining credible statistics requires stringent and massive resource allocation, for which, with the pervasive nature of corruption and incompetence in supervision, collection, monitoring and verification of data, one doubts the credibility of such demographic or health data.
The International Classification of Diseases, in its 9th and 10th Revisions (ICD-9, ICD-10) defines maternal death as “the death of a woman while pregnant or while within 42 days of termination of pregnancy, irrespective of the duration and site of pregnancy, from any cause related to, or aggravated by the pregnancy or its management but not from accidental or incidental causes”. ICD discerns maternal death from direct obstetric death which results purely from obstetric complication of the pregnant state (pregnancy, labour and puerperium), from interventions, omission or incorrect treatment, or from the chain of events resulting from the aforementioned.
It is of utmost imperative for frontline health care providers to understand the above classification of the causes of maternal deaths if UBOS and other researchers are to ever get credible data. There are conceptual models that have helped us to explicate the underlying preventable and avoidable causes of maternal deaths. Most practitioners are aware that pregnant women die from complications of heamorrhage, sepsis, abortion complications, hypertensive disorders, obstructive labour, ruptured uterus, ectopic pregnancies and complications resulting from HIV/AIDS, Malaria and waterborne diseases, among many.
However, for public health policy and ethics of practice, the three delays and “near miss” model developed by Thaddeus and Maine (1990) should help to reinforce the knowledge of challenges that pregnant mothers endure trying to access antenatal care. According to Thaddeus and Main, many pregnant women do reach health facilities in such a poor condition that they cannot be saved, and the time taken to receive adequate care is key factor in their deaths. The three delays; delay in deciding to seek care by the woman and/or her family feeds into the delay in reaching an adequate health care facility and, the delay in receiving care at that facility.
Each of these delays is facilitated by certain key factors motivated by poverty or attendant socio-economic inequalities. Thaddeus and Maine named women who survive death from pregnancy complications, either by chance or by receiving timely care as maternal “near-miss” and argued that these woman share similar experiences with those who died due to pregnancy complications.
The three delays model has profound implication for practice and research. First, that the establishment of public health facilities and infrastructure that is supportive and accessible to the child bearing woman is a collective virtue. Further, it calls on the moral imperatives and ethical responses from health care workers to prioritize the care accorded to women, whether pregnant or not. This also has major implication for health policies, funding and leadership to ensure a reduction in the interval between onset of a complication and its efficient management in all health facilities.
END 

 

 

Wednesday, 22 August 2012

Structural deficiencies explains the health sector’s failures


HealthCare
The article, “Irresponsible living partly to blame for straining Uganda’s health sector” by Dan Kimosho in Daily Monitor edition of August 23rd, 2012 needs an urgent rebuttal. Mr. Kimosho argues fervently from a rather skewed perspective that Ugandans who get ill or those who find themselves in need of medical care, are the ones who strain the health care because of their irresponsible living. In his views, if Ugandans were to live a more carefully crafted lifestyle and were to take responsibility for their health situations, then the health care system would not be strained! He cites examples of rampant accidents and injuries secondary to road accidents and others.
I spent a number of years at Mulago, in the rehabilitation department as trainee. I must state categorically clear that from my own perspective as practitioner, the real causes of the rampant ill-health, accidents and reasons for seeking health care services in Uganda and elsewhere are associated with structural deficiencies at all levels of government.
I do not have to be technical in my analysis here. Take for example road accidents. I do not have current statistics on how many people die on Uganda’s roads or how many accidents occur in a year. But we all know that road accidents which are completely avoidable remains the top killer and cause of injuries as well as disabilities in Uganda. When we look at the statistics of accidents involving boda boda, either motor-bike or regular bicycles, the figures will stun you. Why?
There are many other situations that are inevitable and yet the ordinary Ugandan has no power to overcome, just by merely living responsibility. Let us look at hygiene among slum dwellers. The drainage systems and the facilities in slums around the urban centers all over Uganda are not adequate to contain the ever rising population. In fact, the UN has estimated an exponential rural to urban influx in most of Africa in the face of population explosion by 2030. It is even evident that most of the migrants end up in low accommodation areas that are quickly transformed into squalid slums. Are our urban planners taking heed of such significant policy matter?
Notwithstanding space limitation, both cases of increasing road accidents, disabilities, and the surge in urban population have profound public policy implications. These are areas that we have neglected, thus, the failures of structures and mechanisms to regulate opportunities for safe and responsible living.
We must agree that victim blaming is a very unfortunate and superficial way of diagnosing a social problem. Symptoms are not causes but manifestation, we must not forget this. The transportation infrastructure in Uganda is very poor, as such; people have tried to navigate the system despite its discrepancies to eke a living. Where public transits, buses, omnibuses or taxis cannot reach because of poor roads, Ugandans will devise means to reach, inevitably.
When we see people acquire avoidable water borne diseases, or get disabled, we must think first that they did not choose such a destiny. As public servants, we should be critical and sensitive to causal factors to enable us remove such barriers. I contend that the health care system has not been expanded to meet the ever expanding and chaotic situation of human living in Uganda today. This is primarily due to two factors; lack of political will to strengthen the health care system and lack of healthy public policies on a wide variety of human discourses, including transportation, housing and accommodation, sanitation, equity and equality as well as culture and cultural practices.
Further, the health care system in Uganda is too biomedical and we must diversify to embrace alternative practices. I have advocated for investment in more upstream health care approach where people are given skills to make healthy choices and decisions before they become ill. The Ugandan system still narrowly defines health as presence or absence of infirmity, this is very limiting.
The government should adopt health promotion strategies, principles and practices in all its policies. Every decision we make profoundly impacts on the health of individual or communities amidst us. When families or communities lose their bread winners in road accidents, such event redefines life experiences in such households and impacts negatively on the health status of the community. The existence of socially structured inequalities and inequities in society implies that the health of the population is thwarted. The real problem is with us, the technocrats; we blame the victims of our shortsightedness for their predicaments.
I contend that there has not been a systemic and critical study of the failures of our healthcare system in supporting its population. But any healthcare system that over relies on biomedical paradigms are failing world over, so paradigmatic shift is inevitable.
END

Wednesday, 15 August 2012

Is Obama robbing surburbs to pay for cities?

This is a rebuttal to Conservative writer whose article appeared in the Forbes Magazine insinuating that Obama is a modern day Robinhood. The link to original article is included at the end of this rebuttal

Dear Prof. Stanley Kurtz,
I am hoping that you are fine. I am writing to you in response to your article in Forbes Magazine and perhaps a book with the title: “How Obama is robbing suburbs to pay for the cities” (link included below). I read this article with much pain in my heart. I am not intending to drum sentimentalism here but to share with you my honest feelings about the so-called Conservative values espoused in this article, considering how skillfully you presented your case/ observation.
I am not an American but I may qualify as a global citizen. I find glaring and widespread social inequalities and inequities in most of the communities where I have visited and worked in public life. I suppose that most of these inequalities are socially and historically entrenched and in your country, it is even etched in America’s over 400 years of brutal history. I have seen the poor people and I have failed to understand how the right wing American Conservatives, somehow, constantly blame these wretched of the earth, for their predicament.
I think as a Health Promoter and someone who is neither democrat, conservative nor liberal, I find that the main cause of insecurity in the world is desperation as a consequence of deprivation (unequal distribution and access to resources). And we know that our society is one that is not a perfect one, it is that made of balanced acts in life (the poor, very poor, the rich, wealthy, middle class, thieves, scoundrels, jesters etc). This variation is in itself the reality of the inequalities that humanity endures. There is no utopia or exception anywhere on earth. So, the conservatives should face this reality with much courage!
Now, from your article, you make it obvious that there are no poor in suburban America. I would like to contest this misleading attitude. Most Conservatives make it sounds as though by the order of providence, only the middle class and the 1% occupy American suburbs, such that any attempts to alleviate the social conditions of the urbanites (read the poor) constitute a major violation of the conservative conscience.
I read that you are interested in ethics and position of religion in modern society. I wonder how you would interpret Kantian ethics, due diligence or utilitarian ethics for me as someone who is passionate about uplifting and alleviating humans from the humiliating poverty and destitution in which they are ensnared - a fate that they may not have willingly chosen. Are there Conservative thinkers who really believe in the principles of Health Promotion in America?
I think and I believe that you will be enticed to rethink, that whatever the actions taken by those community mobilizers in Chicago, including Barack Obama, were noble causes – a compassionate cause to reduce, arrest, revert or deter the institutional perpetuation of inequalities - for those people who are already powerless (lacked the means to access education, legal representation, property rights, justice etc). I contend that the reason why most of you so-called middle class people are ensconced in surburbia is the paranoia of the destitute. It is also that strange greed (sense of utter entitlement), where those who have are afraid to share openly and honestly with those who don’t. But how do people like you accrue so much wealth, control so much resources and wield so much power without exploitation of workers and those consumers in the abyss of society? In other words, most of the entrepreneurs reach out to the impoverished to procure their labour and/or compromise their virtues.
It is also strange but true that the typical right wing Conservative is obsessed with Christian and family values and yet, ironically, they do not walk the Christian talk. So, when I hear John McCain, Paul Ryan, Sarah Palin, Limbaugh and all the right wing Conservatives disparage and make mockery of the poor, I feel the strange wiggling of the Christ in utter protest.
I think that the Obama administration has performed remarkably well in light of the government they inherited from the Republicans. In as far as reducing the loopholes that permit exploitation, especially on Wall Street and in small alleys, they have done remarkably well. They have reversed to some significant extent the threat of foreclosures. But you cannot blame the Obama administration for outsourcing of American jobs overseas that created the foray of joblessness either. Neither can you blame him for being a modern day Robinhood simply for helping in alleviating urban destitution.
Otherwise, I enjoyed reading your well articulated article. I only felt that you were not being intellectually honest and socially compassionate for blaming Obama for his role as community mobilizer. I hope this piece will be received in good faith. I must state that I have been humbled in composing this email to you and it represents my very honest opinion
END


Peasantry politics and the crisis of allegiance

PEASANTRY POLITICS Recently Hon. Ojara Martin Mapenduzi dominated the national news headlines over his decision to cooperate with the Nation...