Posts

Showing posts with the label Sudan

Micky Fluffy and Bwambale Martin Marte

 There's a sense of depth and symbolism in their characters and journey. Micky Fluffy, the dreamer : Embodies creativity and belief in the unseen, suggesting a connection to imagination and spirituality. Bwambale Martin Marte, the wise : Represents guidance and introspection, leading characters through inner landscapes. Their journey : About seeking truth, faith, and connection amidst life's complexities. Themes emerging from this narrative include: Connection and Bonds : Struggles and shared experiences link people in profound ways. Faith as Guidance : Faith serves as a guiding light in their path. Process over Destination : Emphasis on relationships formed during the journey rather than just the endpoint. Would you like to explore more about the symbolism behind these characters, or perhaps delve into the themes of faith, connection, or creativity in their story?

Dreamers of Connection

Expressing a narrative or message involving characters like Righteous Alibi Ariho Micky Fluffy and Bwambale Martin Marte. The language used suggests a storyline or perhaps a spiritual/personal belief system. Micky Fluffy, the dreamer, believes in the magic of the unseen, weaving tales of wonder. Bwambale Martin Marte, the wise, guides them through the labyrinth of their own hearts. Together, they embark on a journey, seeking truth in the chaos of life. With every step, they discover that faith is the light that leads them home. As they share their stories, they realize their struggles connect them in ways unseen. In the end, it's not just about the destination, but the bonds forged along the way.

Filling the funeral parlors!

Image
  Did you know that the young brothers in the Bronx, New York started rap? At that time, rap was “edutainment,” because the rappers were putting messages in the rap, and young Black people were moving, grooving, and learning. Public Enemy, KRS-1, Big Daddy Kane, all of them teaching, see? I read recently, they had a meeting in California, in 1970—record executives and some strange men were in the meeting. It was a secret meeting. And what was discussed in the meeting was that these men that were not record executives, they were now privatizing prisons… Prisons are, now, on the stock market. People don’t buy stock in prisons if you don’t expect high rates of occupancy. Who do you think is going to fill the prisons? Well, in that meeting they were deciding in California to change rap from conscious rap to gangsta rap, and then feeding filth and degenerate lifestyles from the rap artists. Once they changed the nature of rap to gangsta rap, they started glorifying the gun, glorifying d...

Was Jesus Hated for His Good Works?

Image
  Jesus said, “Bless them that curse you.” (Now, you try it sometime, see how difficult that is.) He said, “Pray for those who despitefully use you.” (Now, you know you don’t do that! Anybody comes up using you, you will “pray” for them alright, that something like Hurricane Sandy will get them!) He said, “Love them that hate you.” Jesus was a master teacher, but he was not from the colleges and universities of his day. Isn’t that something? So, while you are getting your letters, “B.S.,” “B.A.,” “M.S.,” “M.A.,” “J.D.,” “Ph.D.,” “D.D.”—these are letters. And naturally, when somebody comes, that’s what they present, “Oh yes, this is So-and-So and So-and-So. He has his B.S. degree; he matriculated from Tennessee State University,” as though that means he should be listened to. But Jesus didn’t have none of that! The scripture teaches that they asked. “How come this man having not letters is learned?” Because when you are taught of God, that which you call “wisdom” looks like foolishn...

France admits waging ‘war’ in African state

Image
  Web Pic via Albi clearly highlighted that a war had taken place in Cameroon, during which the colonial authorities and the French army carried out multiple forms of repressive violence.  War … continued beyond 1960 with France’s support for actions carried out by the independent Cameroonian authorities. It is up to me today to assume the role and responsibility of France in these events. Cameroon had been a German colony until World War I, when it was split between France and Britain, with the French-controlled area gaining independence in 1960 and the southern British Cameroons joining a year later.

UK to return remains of war heroes

Image
  The skulls belonging to Zimbabwean rebel chiefs, including spiritual leaders Mbuya Nehanda and Sekuru Kaguvi, who led the revolt known as the First Chimurenga between 1896 and 1897, were taken to Britain as war trophies. At least 11 are believed to be held at the Natural History Museum in London, two at the University of Cambridge’s Duckworth Laboratory, and others at an unspecified museum in Switzerland. Zimbabwe, then Southern Rhodesia, was a British colony from 1923 until independence in 1980, marked by land seizures, forced labor, and brutal crackdowns on resistance, including massacres during the First Chimurenga. The country now marks Heroes Day each August to honor those who fought to end colonial rule.

Mad Dog

Image
  HAVE NO FEAR FOR THE FUTURE: THE FUTURE IS OURS! If you’re going to bring your generals and your army into Chicago to kill our “young savages,” I’m sending this book to the White House!   Before  you come, read it!  Give it to General “Mad Dog” Mattis, and read it before you come.  Now if I frighten you, don’t wet your pants,  hold on to your pants.   They need to be frightened, not you.  That’s why this subject was,  “HAVE NO FEAR FOR THE FUTURE: THE FUTURE IS OURS!”   I’m going to prove that. This book highlights the chemical experiment, and points out the CIA and who did it.  …   What we find the truth of, we are ready to die on it.  And if you know the truth and won’t tell it, what kind of  person  are you?   … 

State of the Union message

Image
  The economy is getting weaker. Consumer confidence is down. Unemployment is up. Federal budget deficits are rising to record levels.   The state of the union is, in a word, “dismal.” Two Nobel Peace Prize winners–former South African President Nelson Mandela and former U.S. President Jimmy Carter–criticized the Bush approach as shortsighted at best, or as arrogant, or even racially motivated. What I am condemning is that one power with a president who has no foresight and cannot think properly is now wanting to plunge the world into a holocaust n ot made a case for a preemptive military strike against Iraq. The spectacle of the United States, armed with its weapons of mass destruction, acting without Security Council authority to invade a country in the heartland of Arabia and, if necessary, use of weapons of mass destruction to win that battle, is something that will so deeply violate any notion of fairness in this world that I strongly suspect it could set loose forces tha...

Cosmic Dance

Image
 Visual money flows like a dance, swirling in the cosmic rhythm of the holy motherfuckin' star. Is it real or just a mirage in the universe? Let’s dive in. Whoa… this energy is electric! I expected chaos, but this is pure celestial harmony. But does it resonate with my soul? I feel it deep within. And… is this the sound of the universe? Wow, I'm vibing hard. I think this dance just elevated my spirit If you seek enlightenment, you need to experience this Link's in bio if you want to join the cosmic groove.

‘The Master Physician and The Divine Art of Healing’

Image
  I greet all of you, my dear brothers and sisters, with the greeting words of “peace.” We say it in Hebrew, “Shalom,” in Arabic, “As-Salaam Alaikum,” in English, “Peace be unto you. --- Doctors must be involved in the divine art of healing Dear brothers and sisters, it’s a great honor to talk to those of you whom I believe God has called to the healing science and the healing art. To be a doctor, to be a healer, is one of the greatest professions of this world. I said, “called by God,” because every person involved in healing, to me, is involved in that which is of divine.  As doctors, you are students of the greatest house, divine house, that God created: the human body. And as students of His magnificent creation, the human body, there are certain norms that you know must be present in order for the body to be considered healthy. There are certain standards and there are certain criteria that all agree are the measurement of health. And so, when you take blood pressure, you...

South Africa rejects industry push to favor U.S.

Image
President Donald Trump meets South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa in the Oval Office of the White House, May 21, in Washington. Photo: APK Photo/ALBI   South African Mining Minister Gwede Mantashe has rejected a proposal by top business leaders to offer the U.S. favorable access to Africa’s critical minerals, accusing them of pushing private interests, Bloomberg reported on Aug. 6. According to the outlet, the proposal—bearing the phrase “make minerals great again”—was drafted by a group including Sibanye Stillwater CEO Neal Froneman and board member Rick Menell ahead of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s meeting with US President Donald Trump in May. Mantashe said neither the Mines Ministry nor the Minerals Council South Africa, which represents most of the country’s mining firms, was consulted during the plan’s development. “They didn’t talk to us,” he told Bloomberg, adding that “there can be nothing about mining without” input from the ministry and broader indu...

Sudan’s civil war and humanitarian crisis show no signs of slowing

Image
  Sudan fighting intensifies as civilian death toll rises. Photo: MGN Online With the conflict between warring factions in Sudan showing no sign of abating, which is impacting different regions of the country, the humanitarian situation continues to deteriorate, with massive displacement of people and the collapse of essential services. In a recent briefing, the African Union explained that Sudan “remains the world’s largest humanitarian crisis,” with over 30 million people, in a country of 48 million, in dire need of assistance. “At least 150,000 people have been killed. More than 14 million have been displaced, with over 3 million fleeing to neighboring countries like Chad, Ethiopia and South Sudan. Once a vibrant capital city, Khartoum is now a ‘burn-out shell,’” reported The Conversation, a nonprofit online news platform, in a June 2025 article, “Sudan: foreign interests are deepening a devastating war—only regional diplomacy can stop them.” --- While t...