Mr. Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine thrilled the crowed at Rebel Salute Festival on January 18 and 19, 2019, at Grizzly's Plantation Cove located in St Ann Parish, Jamaica. The event, considered one of the biggest music festivals in Jamaica, is organized by Jamaican Reggae and Dancehall songs, Tony Rebel and its focus is on Reggae roots and deliberate music.
Because of his educational music and the lyrical speech, during his performance one of the unspoken rebel salute pioneers had come to come and congratulated on how the music was performed and for what he is doing for Africa and Uganda in particular.
Tuko pamoja: be confident of our fellowship .........
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46:54
Africa: The Voice of President Museveni - another rap
M7 a true african legend, no matter what don't be the same, be better.
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2:39
Africa: The Voice of Professor Patrick Lumumba
It's deep and fills Africa with hope, the hook is on the point with words that motivate: this man is a role model
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1:56
Africa: nuclear for Africa
Nuclear for Africa by: President Yoweru Kaguta Museveni : Why nuclear energy should be part of Africa’s energy mix ?
Africa has the least nuclear power of any continent in the world. All the largest economies in the world have nuclear power as part of their energy mix.
There are three reasons why African countries should pursue the nuclear power option as part of their energy mix. The first is the continent’s dire energy crisis. Secondly, Africa derives most of its energy from fossil fuels. These are finite and nonrenewable and dwindling in supply. Thirdly, nuclear energy can help countries meet targets under the Paris Agreement to reduce carbon emissions. Nuclear can help them reach that goal because carbon emissions linked to nuclear-powered energy are relatively small. In addition, supply is reliable and prices stable and predictable.
Energy supply on the continent is critically low. There are also the challenges of lack of access, poor reliability and high costs. A rising population, growing middle class and growing urbanisation would mean more energy is needed for domestic and industrial purposes.
Energy is also critical to the socioeconomic well-being of the majority of poor Africans and Africa’s agenda for sustainable development. Nuclear energy has the potential to mitigate these burdens by contributing to the continent’s energy mix.
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4:14
Africa: Goodbye, university
In 2018, Bryan Caplan wrote the book "The Case Against Education: Why the Education System Is a Waste of Time and Money". What makes new technology and education due to skills from our own time experience? Bryan Caplan is concerned about the disruptions in human capital development, and the inability to think a thought longer than five centimeters.
After several years of discussing brain drain and black vs white education gap - as if it wasn't enough to think for family, relatives and students in Africa struggle to fund all the years of study: a lot of money is needed to achieve an intellectual university degree, is it worth it? But it is a question that will always remain unanswered: why is it so? Such questions can be crucial to almost everything related to the culture and quality of universities. Yet, a new world order has emerged that looks at the current university system with deep skepticism, and in 2003 Robert Kagan wrote about "Paradise and Power" how the elite in some countries of the world invest their money in Panama Papers and send their children to prestigious universities, to get the best education.
Social anthropologist Marcel Mauss article (1926) ,'Critique interne de la"Legende de l'Abraham' influenced Africa, but he never published a book, Mauss especially challenged a racist anthropology of African societies known as the "Hamitic hypothesis" and well-known to students of Africa; it states that everything of value ever found in Africa was brought there and linked it with the agitation of the Jewish question that still applies around the world - a basic argument in his essay is that the social category "race" is not a category that denotes vulnerability, but a categorization system derived from an analysis which he believes is "unforgettable." And what about Claude Lévi-Strauss ? The founder of Structuralism – he published a lot, but not in the beginning, because then he sat and thought and read and noted; it took him four years before anything bigger come up. In return he then published a book that changed the way we think about kinship. He would have lost money today if he had global funding, or from a research organization: "yours is empty", they would say about his research.
The needy ones for human rights, take action, so say the Asian, the Hispanic, the Jew, the African, the European, the American, the Catholic, the Muslim, the French, the Greek, the Irish, the Rabbi, the Priest, the Sheikh, the Gay, the Straight, the Preacher, the privileged, the homeless, the Teacher, the needy ones. They hear, they all hear the speaking of the human right, the freedom, the females, the trader, the empowerment, the money, the poverty and PEP Forum join the discussion.