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Elevated Consciousness


 The Facebook Fast: Day three
 

I never realised how much time this facebook was taking up in my life. I can't even believe how much time I have on my hands now that I'm not on facebook. I kind of expected it to happen but not so quickly and certainly not so dramatically, and yet here we are...gawsh...anyway...yeah...ok..
Posted by MluhyaUprooted at 6:49 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 The Facebook Fast: Day two
 

One of the things I do most frequently on facebook is find articles that are of interest to me and tag people on the notes to share the information with them. Obviously I can't do that any more so I put the articles up here and do my little break down for y'all later on.

Kula hepi! Enjoy...

WHAT OTHERS SAY: How we lost our money on Kenya and Chad

Story by CHARLES ONYANGO-OBBO
Publication Date: 2/7/2008
As rebels laid siege to Chad President Idriss Deby’s palace in N’djamena on the weekend, the BBC introduced the story with the words; “another African country is in turmoil”.

The “other” African country whose crisis has been in international media headlines for the last month is Kenya, which has been shaken to the bone by the worst violence in it’s post-independence history, following the disputed December 27, 2007 polls.

The BBC’s expression “Another Africa country is in turmoil” implies that political chaos is the order of the day on this fair continent. However, one also reads in it a tone of despair, a resignation that Africa is incomprehensible.

THE BBC WON’T BE THE LAST TO BE confounded by Africa. Many of us too thought we had Africa figured. How wrong we were.

Kenya in 2002 seemed to validate an analytical point of view that I subscribed to. There are many ways you can divide African countries.

One, between those that are aid-dependent and would bleed badly if the donors tapped off all the taps (like Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda) and those that are resource-poor, but nevertheless almost self-sufficient and can pay their way (like Kenya).

The thinking went that leaders of aid-dependent could afford to be more undemocratic because they did not have to make political deals with other political actors to rule. All they had to do was follow donor conditionalties, get enough aid to run their countries, and all other local interests could go and hang.

For that reason, in these countries, elections were more likely to be stolen than in self-sufficient nations.

Countries like Kenya, on the other hand, which financed most of their budgets from own revenues, had to be more sensitive to various local interests. They needed to have a minimum level of elite consensus and support from the business community for them to continue paying the taxes that kept the State afloat.

In these countries, therefore, the presidents are more likely to accommodate wider interests into government; to hold more honest polls; and therefore the long-term prospects for democracy and stability were much better. Kenya in the last years of Daniel arap Moi, seemed to confirm a lot of this, with the very significant Inter-Parliamentary Parties Group reforms of 1997; and East Africa’s freest election in 2002 that resulted in the first loss of a ruling party to an opposition in the region.

The second view in thinking about African politics is that resource-rich countries like Angola, Nigeria, Libya, Gabon, DR Congo, were more prone to instability because the governments didn’t have to grant democracy to govern. They got all the money they needed from selling the natural resources, and did not need to have local support.

Also, the pickings from selling oil, diamonds, and gold were so rich, the rulers would die to cling on to the power, and rivals would take the most extreme measures to kick them out so that they also get to “eat”.

However, by the same token, the resource-rich countries had the potential to be very stable because the rulers could bribe the country with goodies from the natural resource wealth (build roads, housing, electricity and water for all, and large university student allowances). Thus, you have your Botswanas, Libyas, South Africas, and so on.

The third view was limited to what determines victory or loss for incumbents in elections. I was sold firmly to the view that a president, like Mwai Kibaki, who took over a collapsed economy and was presiding over high growth rates, even if as in Kenya it didn’t percolate enough down to the majority of the people, is unlikely to lose an election.

A year ago, going by that projection, I thought Kibaki’s re-election would be a walk in the park. Whether you believe that Kibaki won the December poll or that the victory was rigged for him, his return to State House was definitely not a walk in the park.

IN DIRT POOR CHAD, MEANWHILE, two years ago after it completed its new pipeline, the country posted the highest growth in the world. Over 50 per cent!

Here we are, in Kenya a president presiding over a growing economy and brought his country the dignity of not living on donor handouts, faced electoral revolt from nearly half the voters in the country. In Chad, the government has been unable to buy stability with its newfound oil health. Why?

The answer lies in the political discourse in the 1970s. The Marxist called it the “nationality question”.

In recent years, the men and women who dissect third world politics have called it “identity politics”.

Put inelegantly, for the African representation is so critical, he will revolt against a government that is presiding over a growing economy if there are not enough people from his tribe represented in high enough positions in it, and support a regime that has done absolutely nothing for him as long as it is dominated by people from his ethnic group.

Honestly, I don’t understand it.


Posted by MluhyaUprooted at 10:13 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 The Facebook Fast: Day one
 

I have decided to give up facebook for lent. I know its going to be tough and extremely difficult but I think its for the best. I feel like I've let this thing take over my life and quite frankly, I want it back. At the end of the day, I had a life before I had facebook and the time has come for me to recall what that's like.

Its not just that you know. My priest said something that resonated with me. Giving up something for Lent is not about showing off and proving to people that you can do it. Its about making space in your life for God and I think that's something that I need desperately to do. I think sometimes you just get so used to being busy that you forget to just be, and this is what this fast is all about.

More than that however, you think that facebook is a tool for managing aquaintances. But even my aquaintaices don't seem to want to use facebook. I guess the people I know just aren't the type of people who would be on facebook all the time, and yet I seem to be precisely that type of person. What does that say about me? Am i just totally sad and pathetic for wanting to use facebook so much? Well, enough. From now on if I discover an interesting article or something cool, I post it here. I know that its just substituting one addiction for another but going cold turkey is hard, and this will be like the methadone to my crackbook addiction. Ha ha ha...

Otherwise, life is good. Not great, but good. On ne peut pas complain...franglais...
Posted by MluhyaUprooted at 4:44 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 George Orwell was right
 

All animals are equal but some are more equal than others...

Kenyan politicians suck.
Posted by MluhyaUprooted at 2:47 PM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 

 Not So Happy New Year...
 

I am in a state.I mean really, I can't remember the last time I was like this. I haven't experienced this level of anxiety since I started university and its causing me a great deal of grief.

I am Kenyan, and in case you didn't get the memo, Kenya is in a bit of a fix. I hate the word trauma and the way its bandied about but I am starting to wonder if I am somehow traumatised by all the stuff that I've seen in my country, and all the stuff that's happened in my life. To take you back a few paces, a few days after I wrote my last post I developed a nasty ear infection AND I was compelled to go home because someone close to me had fallen ill and needed my help. Then a guy that I had attended a conference with the week earlier developed meningitis and was in a coma. As far as I know he is still in a coma but it freaked me out because I actually got an email from the German Public health authorities warning me that I may catch meningitis. EEK!!

Then I go home and my country has perhaps the most disastrous elections in the history of elections in the world. I can't say much in these pages but suffice it to say that things are getting completely out of hand. Then my computer crashed and I lost a draft of my dissertation. Then I tried to change the topic of one of my essays, due in two weeks and the lecturer won't see me. Then I got back and had a tiff with my flatmates. And then my new computer doesn't have half the software I thought it would. And finally, to cap all this off...someone has the cheek to accuse me of not being Kenyan enough.

I've been in the library for almost two days straight and I haven't accomplished anything. I'm like a deer caught in the headlights and its making me freak out even more. But I can't get an extension because I need a letter from my doctor proving that I have "stress". I know I have stress, I can feel it in my fingers and in my toes ok?

Anyway, that's the status...keep me in your prayers...
Posted by MluhyaUprooted at 10:25 AM - No Comments   Add a Comment  
 
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