Anti-Capitalist Forum Opens in Kenya

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>

Anti-Capitalist Forum Opens in Kenya</font size></center>



KENYA_WORLD_SOCIAL_FORUM.sff_NAI110_20070120071823.jpg

People dance during the opening of the World Social Forum,
Saturday, Jan. 20, 2007 in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. More
than 80,000 people gathered for an annual anti-capitalist
conference in Kenya's capital on Saturday, hoping to network
with other activists and protest global policies they say hurt
the poor.(AP Photo/Karel Prinsloo)



Jan 20, 11:39 AM (ET)
Associated Press
By ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - More than 80,000 people gathered for an annual anti-capitalist conference in Kenya's capital on Saturday, marching on Nairobi's largest slum to protest global policies they say hurt the poor.

Showcase Africa's Struggle. The World Social Forum will be a chance to showcase "Africa and her unbroken history of struggle against foreign domination, colonialism and neocolonialism," according to a statement on the event Web site.

To begin the forum, thousands of protesters marched from Kenya's sprawling Kibera slum to downtown Nairobi. About a third of Nairobi's total population, at least 700,000 people, is crammed into a single square mile in Kibera, with little access to running water and other basic services.

The slum stands in sharp contrast to Nairobi's many elegant homes and hotels. Kibera residents are mostly squatters, with no legal claim on the land even though many families have lived there for generations.


Former Zambian President Kenneth Kaunda flagged off the march, telling the crowd: "We must fight poverty together."

Among the participants in the march was Philip Kimani, an 18-year-old homeless man.

"I was working at a car wash and I was told to come here today, I was told I would learn something," he said, wearing a new World Social Forum T-shirt and a New York Yankees cap.

Demonstrators waved placards, many with a portrait of President Bush and the words, "World's Number One Terrorist." Other signs read, "Another world is possible, even for slum dwellers," and "Women are not property."

There also were reminders of Nairobi's serious social problems; dozens of children were seen sniffing glue on the streets and beggars were out looking for money and food.

"I think it's important to show the world that there is a very dynamic world movement that has players in Africa," said Paul Van Wyke, who works for the British charity Oxfam.

The World Social Forum was first held in Brazil in 2001 and coincides each year with the market-friendly World Economic Forum of political and business leaders in Davos, Switzerland.

http://apnews1.iwon.com/article/20070120/D8MP4BL80.html
 
And I suppose you think socialism is gonna help an already "poor" country solve its soci-economic problems....

I think something of a little more interest is gonna be Venezuala and how Hugo Chavez is now trying to nationalize some its major industry as he also seeks to become "El Presidente" for life.

Perhaps he thinks its all a good idea... but the people who actually own private companies don't.
 
bromack1 said:
And I suppose you think socialism is gonna help an already "poor" country solve its soci-economic problems....

I think something of a little more interest is gonna be Venezuala and how Hugo Chavez is now trying to nationalize some its major industry as he also seeks to become "El Presidente" for life.

Perhaps he thinks its all a good idea... but the people who actually own private companies don't.

It is better than the one company monopoly we have in many American industries. People have to be free in order to have free markets otherwise you will have unequal wealth distribution. That is why the crap China is doing is not capitalism but slavery. The people are not completely free to form unions or negotiate wages.

I don't see nothing wrong with the state taking over industries that are natural monopolies. Even our country has to set prices for some industries like electricity, water, and phone with PUC. I just hope he doesn't get greedy and abuse power or steal money.
 
COINTELPRO said:
I don't see nothing wrong with the state taking over industries that are natural monopolies. Even our country has to set prices for some industries like electricity, water, and phone with PUC. I just hope he doesn't get greedy and abuse power or steal money.

What you're saying sounds like "outdated romanticism." Just because it sounds "all good" doesn't make it practical. Socialism is just another blind attempt at taking from the rich and giving to the poor.

In the long run... it does not work. Socialism has only proven itself to make the "lazy" even more lazier and while at the same time stifiling the desire and motivation of the ambitious.

Socialism operates under the guise that "existing" resources and their by-products should be taken from the owners to be equitably distributed amongst the citizens. Thats fine at the beginning. But in the end..... it kills off any new and innovative techniques that might ultimately refine products and services because any new idea has to go through an extensive government approval process.

Its like in Cuba right now.... you will never see an annual showcase of new automobiles by private manufacturers. Why.... cause the one you "own" right now works just fine.... besides and it would cost the government too much money to "give" you a new one.
 
Last edited:
bromack1 said:
And I suppose you think socialism is gonna help an already "poor" country solve its soci-economic problems....
Were you addressing that to me ???

QueEx
 
Back
Top