I am glad that the Internet has given me and other average people a chance to express our opinions on issues that concern us. This medium also allows an audience of hungry readers to read the opinions of commoners like me. I am grateful to the inventors who came up with this important mode of communication, which now engulfs the entire globe, including Africa. . For many Americans, Africa is irrelevant; it is therefore the less-learned-about continent in the world in this part of the world. Non-disastrous developments in Africa are not news worthy in the USA, if any thing is found to be newsworthy, it is on reported in a sentence or two. Many elements in today’s western media make it seems as if the continent of Africa were as primitive as she was some 400 years ago. This is very far from the truth. And some Africans like me find it very hard not to say anything about this gross unfairness in the coverage of Africa. The sad truth is that some of the tainted minds that report erroneous accounts on Africa have never been to Africa. So, my advice to you is to forget the staged images on TV that pollute the minds of investors. These images are influenced or manipulated by biased “journalists” whose only intents are bent exclusively on ameliorating sales.
These so-called journalists and their paid local artists present images that attempt to recreate Africa’s past. However, they do it so poorly because their scenes are embedded with prejudices and insults for the portrayed cultures and overall human decency. It has been hundreds of years when the early Portuguese explorers landed in Sub-Sahara Africa. Gradually, they introduced some type of civilization to the inhabitants there. They sold salt and garments to the people and took back gold and other valuable things from the people. They navigated the people’s land by using its rich fresh waterways, naming them in the process. The Portuguese, for example, named most of the rivers in my native country, Liberia. Every corner of this globe, especially my part of Africa, is aware of civilization now. So, I don’t tolerate the displaying of offensive reports as entertainment, especially when such insults generate millions of American dollars without benefiting the exploited or insulted African people. The only news that Americans get on Africa is one that is related to horror and indecent images. We see half-naked people using machetes to chop off the heads of their neighbors, civil wars here and there, coup d’etat, scenes of hungry people searching rubbishes for food, corruptions, blown-up statistics on AIDS, and the likes… Granted, I get it! Africa is nothing like America or any western country, but it would be fair to get objective reporting sometime.
The Essay on Africa People Evolved Make
American tradition and culture is based around the concept of free speech. One can say what he likes, make any point he chooses, and express any opinion he desires in America. Anyone, from the homeless person, to the workingman, to the President of the United States himself is entitled to have an opinion, and to discuss it without impediment. It's considered a god-given right to speak what's on ...
Is it possible that there is no good news in Africa, especially while these reporters are there? I don’t believe that is the case every time. These so-called journalists don’t go to Africa with the images of the slums of Manhattan (Harlem), Jamaica Queens, Flatbush Brooklyn or the South Bronx. Africans do not see the images of homeless people in the subway system in New York City; they do not see these extremely disadvantaged people as they dig deep into the scatter trash bins for food. So, why do you think it is okay to avoid the beautiful images of African, such as the cities of Bamako, Yamoussoukro, Abidjan, Tunis, Abuja, Maputo, Banjul or Dakar (to name a few) and report only the negatives? When will these reporters ever realise that they are creating less intelligent minds when they do this kind “investigative” reporting? Because of this way of covering the world, especially Africa, some college-level students think Africa is a single, unified country with one president. A fellow student once asked me when I was attending City University of New York, “So, who is the new president of Africa after Nelson Mandela?” Africa is not a country with a president. Africa is a continent with more than fifty independent countries.
The Term Paper on Aids In Africa Hiv Virus People
The AIDS epidemic has reached disastrous proportions on the continent of Africa. Over the past two decades, two thirds of the more than 16 million people in the world infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), which causes AIDS, live in sub-Saharan Africa. It is now home to the largest number of people infected, with 70 percent of the world's HIV infected population. The problem of this ...
Each of the countries has a leader, such as a president, king or head of state. An African-American, in an attempt to justify her citizenship as an American, tried to disassociate herself from African people. But she tried to paint a picture that Africans repudiated their cousins on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. She asked me, “What will they [the people of Africa] do to me when I go to Africa?” She added, “Are they going to kill me?” Well, since we don’t educate the people of Africa, many of them do not know about the massive slave trade that rooted millions of blacks from Africa and brought them here in the Americas. So, if you are black, you will have a lot of explaining to do, especially how are you an America, for many Africans, Americans are “white people.” So, don’t worry about being killed on sight. They are not carrying out all-out killings; no one wants to kill you. But I am very sure they will doubt your claim to America. And who can blame them for that? Illiteracy average for the entire continent (not country) is not impressive at all. Be ready to explain how it is you, as a black person, claims to be an American IF you ever go to Africa. Will you tell them that you are citizen by paper since the United States’ Constitution grants citizenship to all who are born in the United States? I hope you will convince an African with that cheap claim to USA.
If you want rural Africans to consider you an authentic American, your best bet will be to go to a doctor and undergo plastic surgery in the USA prior to your departure for Africa. That Constitution explanation is considered “citizen by paper.” It is a cause for laughter in other parts of Africa. In Liberia, for example, this kind of citizenship is considered bogus and unreal. In Liberia’s Constitution, one who is not black cannot be a Liberian citizen. It doesn’t matter how you sliced it. It doesn’t matter how much percentage of blackness you claim. I also had to respond to naïve inquiries: “Are there homes in Africa?” Yes, during the colonization period, western powers rushed to Africa and lay claims to many blocks of African lands. They built the same styles of homes that were in their native homes on their newfound lands. They taught the Africans how to build the same styles of homes. The French people built very beautiful cities in French West Africa. Some of the countries that are in this once French sector of Africa are today’s Mauritanian, Ivory Coast, Niger, Benin, Togo, Senegal, Mali and Burkina Faso (formally Upper Volta).
The Term Paper on Comparing Two African Countries
Comparing Two African Countries The purpose of this paper is to compare the ways two African countries gained independence from their colonizers. Within the conceptual framework of this report, we will see how Nigeria and Zimbabwe became independent from the British rule, and see what events accompanied that independence. In order to illustrate how independence was gained, we will analyze the ...
I was fortunate to travel to some of these countries before coming to the USA. Those countries I did not go to, I was fortunate to read about from sound historic literature. All over these countries, especially in large towns, are French styled structures. The only French speaking country in Africa that is not as developed as it counterparts is the Republic of Guinea because it refused to assimilate French cultures and values system. The first Guinea President Sekou Toure once said, “We prefer liberty in poverty than riches in slavery.” British people did the same for the places they claimed in Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Nigeria, etc. So, it is insulting when a college student in the USA asks me, “Do the people in Africa live up in the trees?” The Boeing 747 that brought me to the United States could not possibly land up in a tree, could it? No, it landed on three beautiful African airports (Abidjan, Bamako and Dakar) before departing for JFK International Airport in Queens, New York City. People are the same everywhere. Without any prejudice, the only groups of people that I know to build tree houses are the natives of Papua New Guinea. This place not in Africa; it is located not very far from Australia.
Still, another student at Hostos Community College (South Bronx, NYC) asked me, “Do Africans use words to communicate or do they use wildlife-like sounds to speak?” One has to be short on brains to even ask such a question. Look, here’s a college student asking another college student (who happened to be an African) a question if the people in Africa use words to talk among themselves. I couldn’t help but used sarcasm: “I am using words to talk to you, right? Do you think I started using words two years ago when I got here and will, therefore, surprise millions of Liberians when I return a year or two from today with newfound spoken words?” I told him, “We the people of Africa are not some type of unique creatures that lacked the spoken words.” Sometime I don’t blame these people for asking their less-than-meaningful questions because the thoughts that gave rise to their weird inquiries are routed from the images they see on the television. The best way to avoid this level of biasness on the continent is to have a worldwide all-about-Africa television channel. Stop the madness! Leave your brains at home (not your common sense) when discussing Africa!
The Essay on Sobering Studies Students Drinking College
A new study found students who doubt their abilities to handle bad moods or bad situations are more prone to drinking. This is just the latest in a number of alcohol studies coming out in relation to college students. College students are always easy targets for these surveys, since many students are finally away from their mother's nest for the first time and feel free to go out more times than ...