Last Sunday, the Toronto Star ran a column that said in the referendum that will make Southern Sudan independent from the Muslim North, "there is no crisis and no war looming." That observation alone seemed curiously unwarranted, considering that this has been Africa's longest running civil war.
#1
actually north Sudan looks to be the more likely disaster
the north has a massive, corrupt, inefficient govt including a number of militia that don't get along very well(which is one reason they lost a lot of soldiers during their attempts to control the south) --- without the south's oil and food production they are in trouble
Posted by: lord garth ||
01/16/2011 0:23 Comments ||
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#2
All the data in the article contradicts it's conclusion.
#4
Southern Sudan has, or at least has had, some unusual allies. Remember that there have been arrests of individuals trying to smuggle weapons in to support them against the North. These include a Priest, a Nigerian woman, the Israelis, the CIA, etc.
#5
Southern Sudan may not be the shining economic engine of Africa, but it is poised to grow rapidly because of oil and food production. Given a decade or two, it will be a country capable of feeding its own and exporting much needed food to its neighbors, sort of like Rhodesia did back in the day. The only way for the Northerners to stall or damage that possibility is to turn loose their Jajaweed genocide troops again.
#9
Shieldwolf Hi !; I like your train of thought. Great promise and left alone perhaps. Greed and fear my wreck your train of thought. It is truly something to be hoped for.
#2
I'm not so sure. Some of the North African lands were far enough away that their development of Islam was somewhat different in character. They are nested in Libya, if that's any cue.
My free speech matters more than the feelings of anyone on the left. You don't like what I say? Tough.
We don't often link other blogs here at the Burg; we figure you can get there and pro'ly read those blogs anyway.
But this rant is truly righteous. Mr. Surber wrote what a lot of us are thinking. The Left has behaved like the proverbial monkey at a zoo this past decade, and now they lecture us on civility?
As Mr. Surber says: bite me.
Posted by: Frank G ||
01/16/2011 17:43 ||
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#1
Like their brethren in North Korea, the Lefties have finally played out a bad hand and didn't get the meek and avoidance response they've gotten for all their life. They're declaring the rightful response they got back a 'threat' and denouncing their targets actions to push right back. They really don't know what to do cause they look upon themselves, as all their sycophants tell them, as the chosen. How dare they be challenged. Intelligent creatures at this point would pull back and reassess the situation they've place themselves into cause the other guys aren't backing down anymore. They're above rational acts. They're running towards their Sarajevo moment.
#2
Maybe the tide is turning. Last week, after receiving criticism from the NAACP, the governor of Maine was quoted, "Tell 'em to kiss my butt. If they want to play the race card..."
#6
My comment was entirely serious, and I think this is essentially PJ's funeral dirge for the Times. I don't know that it's late so much as final and unrecoverable. I tend to agree with him. Just odd to see it from him devoid of humor, but wholly on point. Very appropriate.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.