Sunday, June 19, 2016

THE PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE IS HAPPINESS NOT A BURDEN IF YOU MAKE GOOD USE OF IT


Life is happiness, not a burden if make good use of it


Life is happiness, not a burden, if you make good use of it.


Life always has a story to tell. As children before adulthood, we were fortunate that our parents toiled for us in both hard and unique ways. But do we sometimes take into consideration how our parents suffered for us to give them the respect and love they deserve?


Well, many had it rough in life because they were neglected by their parents, yet be thankful to God, because that bitter experience of neglect gave you the courage and motivation to carry on daily in life, and that will and determination you embraced were the keys that shaped, molded, and educated you to success.

We are positive because we believe in being strong when everything seems to be going wrong. We are hopeful because life never stops dreaming of wonders in spite of the blunders.

She sings of happiness because there is always someone out there at any moment who loves you, who prays for you, who wants to thank you for something, or because you played a significant role in their life.

Thus, it is only proper that you live purely, patiently, and peacefully. Free yourself from the slavery of ‘fitting in,’ for you are more blessed than you look, more amazing than you appear, more intelligent than you sound, more spirited than you seem, and exquisitely precious than you think.


You are God’s masterpiece, rise to every occasion. As a gift to the world, refresh our sensations. If anyone misunderstands you, let them wallow in their ignorance; to be great is to be misunderstood. That’s part of life if you fully understand the aspects of life.

Friday, June 17, 2016

Joseph Hill: The Reggae Legend Who Helped Stop a War


The Great Joseph Hill of the Group Culture

The Great Joseph Hill of the Group Culture

To anyone who loves reggae, the name Joseph Hill needs no introduction. As the lead singer of the iconic group Culture, Hill stood among the greats, Jimmy Cliff, Gregory Isaacs, and other pioneers who shaped the global sound of roots reggae.


His voice was rich, his lyrics prophetic, and his presence unforgettable. But beyond the music, Joseph Hill carried something even more powerful: a deep commitment to peace.

 

For more than three decades, Hill was not only a musician but also a peacemaker, using his songs and his presence to calm tensions in some of the world’s most troubled regions. His activism was not symbolic. It was real, physical, and courageous.


A Reggae Messenger in the Middle East


During the long and painful Israeli-Palestinian conflict, when violence between Israelis and Palestinians claimed countless lives, world leaders struggled to make progress. Diplomats failed, negotiations collapsed, and hope often felt distant.





Yet Joseph Hill did something extraordinary.

Despite the danger, missiles, mortar fire, and political tension, he traveled to Israel to promote peace between the two communities. His visit was seen as bold, unexpected, and deeply symbolic. Hill believed that music could reach hearts where politics could not, and he acted on that belief.

 

A Brave Journey Into War-Torn Sierra Leone

 

But perhaps the most astonishing chapter of his peace mission unfolded in Sierra Leone during its brutal civil war. The conflict, marked by child soldiers, mass amputations, and widespread terror, left the nation devastated. Tens of thousands were killed, and entire communities lived in fear.

 

When Joseph Hill arrived in Freetown, the capital, the war was still raging. Rebels of the Revolutionary United Front were notorious for their violence, yet Hill walked into this environment with nothing but his voice, his message, and his courage.


Upon landing, he delivered a simple but powerful message to the rebels:

“I will only go if you put down your guns.”



Two Giants Clash: Bob Marley and Joseph Hill

Two Giants Clash: Bob Marley and Joseph Hill


What happened next became part of Sierra Leonean legend.

The rebels obeyed. They laid down their weapons.

They even sent a message to the president:

“You are lucky that Paa Joe Hill is in Freetown, or else we would destroy the city within 24 hours.”


It was a moment that showed the extraordinary influence of a man whose music carried spiritual authority.


A Song Born From a Bird’s Morning Call


Near Hill’s hotel in Freetown stood a tree where a bird sang every morning. From the bird’s chirping, Hill composed a song—proof of his creative genius and his ability to find beauty even in a war zone. His artistry was effortless, natural, and deeply connected to the world around him.


Related post: The secret of how we used reggae as a survival tool in Africa


Prime Minister Miller once described him as “a towering representative of our homegrown idiom, reggae.”


It was a fitting tribute to a man whose music carried both cultural pride and global impact.


A Legacy That Lives Beyond His Years


Born in St. Catherine, Jamaica, in 1949, Joseph Hill began his musical journey in the late 1960s as a percussionist. By the 1970s, during the rise of Rastafarian influence in reggae, he formed Culture, eventually releasing more than 30 albums.


In 2006, while touring Europe, Hill suddenly fell ill and passed away. His death shocked the reggae world, but his legacy remains unshakable.


Joseph Hill was more than a singer. He was a messenger, a peacemaker, and a cultural ambassador whose bravery and compassion touched nations.


His music lives on, his message lives on, and his story continues to inspire those who believe that art can change the world.

Saturday, June 11, 2016

The Ugly Truth About Mold Toxins Tied To AIDS Epidemic


Poisons produced by fungi that grow on moldy peanuts and corn may be worsening Africa’s AIDS crisis


Poisons produced by fungi that grow on moldy peanuts and corn may be worsening Africa’s AIDS crisis


Culled from The New York Times: By Donald G. McNeil Jr.


Aflatoxins — poisons produced by fungi that grow on moldy peanuts and corn — may be worsening Africa’s AIDS epidemic by helping suppress the immune systems of newly infected people, a new study has found..


The study, by researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and published recently in the World Mycotoxin Journal, measured blood levels of aflatoxins and H.I.V. in 314 Ghanaians who had never taken antiviral drugs.


The more aflatoxins they had, the more likely they were to have high blood levels of H.I.V. — even those with higher levels of CD4 blood cells, meaning they had not been infected long and were not yet eligible for triple-therapy cocktails under the latest World Health Organization guidelines.


The toxins, produced by Aspergillus fungi that grow on damp grains, nuts, and beans, are so common as to be almost unavoidable in humid climates, but so dangerous that federal law limits concentrations in food to 20 parts per billion. American peanut-butter makers are always on the watch for them. Ground peanuts are a staple food of West Africa.


In high doses, aflatoxins can be deadly. The 2004 outbreak in Kenya killed 125 people; samples of moldy corn had up to 8,000 parts per billion. Regular exposure to low doses can cause liver cancer.

The authors suggested that aflatoxins either contribute proteins that help H.I.V. reproduce or somehow lessen the numbers of the white blood cells that the virus targets, making its attack on the immune system more potent.

Thursday, June 09, 2016

HOW THE FEAR OF SPEAKING THE TRUTH HAS RUINED SOCIETY


To some people, lie is a perfume they need to use every day



To some people, lying is a perfume they need to use every day



.
The ‘Truth’ is not a commodity sold at the shop; it’s just an act of not lying about something but giving an accurate account, yet only a few can afford it, and those who can afford it often find themselves in a very tight corner, not easy to free themselves.


In John chapter 8:32, Jesus said, “Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” How often do we ponder or reason over Jesus’ Biblical quotes? Jesus knows that the truth exists, but people will never rely on or depend on it.

The reason our society is torn apart today because it’s in the hands of people under the influence of Satan, so the need to lie is necessary to please both Satan and the people they serve. And since many are not ready to be ‘ruled’ by the doctrine of the scriptures, they join Satan’s company.

Romans 6:23 reveals that: “For the wages of sin are death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” This means that death is inevitable because of our sinful nature, yet we need to live in the truth.

Speaking the truth at the moment is not only costly but deadly. Worldwide, many have been assassinated for speaking the truth about something heads of churches, leaders, and politicians wouldn’t like the public to know. Thus, instead of speaking the truth, many prefer to lie.

Jesus knew already that physically the truth would not set you free, that freedom he was talking about was spiritual freedom. Just as He suffered for speaking the truth, the fear of speaking the truth haunts many people.

Who is ready to lose his friends, relatives, and job because of the truth? Who is ready to pass through the mental torture of neglect in society because of the truth? Finally, who is ready to face the hostile opposition and pure hate from an empire of deceitful enemies and a brood of vipers because of the truth? 

However, what many people forget is that, like a house that collapses because of its weak foundation, society can never thrive, prosper, and be successful on a foundation of lies, hypocrisy, and the persecution of those who live on the truth. 

You may think you are on top and successful, then suddenly you’ll see yourself once again at the same place you started. That is life, you can’t change that until you live clean.


And for those who are facing all kinds of intimidation, suffering, and persecution because of the truth, stand firm with endurance and perseverance. Even though the pain you are going through is hard to bear sometimes, be happy because of the truthful path you’ve chosen.

If those who live by the sword die by the sword and gun by the gun, then liars will not have a happy ending, too, because God hates lies.

Saturday, June 04, 2016

GOD, SATAN, AND MAN: WHO IS RESPONSIBLE FOR EVIL?


Hungry men during WWII.


Hungry men during WWII.

I hear many times people who commit serious crimes, during an interview, often say that they heard voices in their head telling them to commit such serious crimes, or often blame Satan.


The question is, who is Satan? In my opinion, Satan doesn't live in heaven, but people are living with us on this earth, yet people commit crimes and blame Satan for it. 

Since people have different views or opinions, I wish I could hear a few voices or reactions on this topic. If interested, you can write to me through the provided e-mail address. Thank you.

SEND YOUR VIEWS AND OPINIONS TO ghanacrowdsourcing@gmail.com FOR PUBLICATION. PLEASE, ADD YOUR NAME AND LINK TO YOUR WEBSITE.

The Secret Of How We Used Reggae Music As A Survival Tool In Africa


A major figure in world music, Jimmy Cliff has painstakingly crossed many rivers to become an international superstar.


A major figure in world music, Jimmy Cliff has painstakingly crossed many rivers to become an international superstar.


Life is very tough and full of lessons. In Africa, during our school days and darkest periods, to avoid social problems, we fought to stay focused. On Sundays, we listen to whatever the preacher tells us, but away from the pastor's sight, we use reggae music as a tool to direct us on the right track and express our emotions.


In the sixties and seventies in Ghana, we listened to the songs of reggae pioneers, such as John Holt, Desmond Dekker, etc., but the musician whose songs played a significant role in our lives is Jimmy Cliff. 

His music was encouraging and inspiring.  It educated us and made us tough in our environment with the desire to succeed in life. Below are some of the selected tunes of Jimmy Cliff we dwelled on.

Hard Road To Travel

We listened to reggae from dusk till dawn, and the lyrical encouragement helped us let go of suppressed feelings.

“It’s a hard road to travel and a rough, rough way to go, but I can’t turn back, my heart is fixed, my mind’s made up, I’ll never stop, my faith will see me through,” sings Jimmy Cliff. The hope and faith we had from such songs became our tool for survival.


Jimmy Cliff and Peter Tosh

Jimmy Cliff and Peter Tosh


Every man has a right to live. Love is all that we have to give. Together we struggle by your will to survive, and then together we fight just to stay alive. A struggling man has got to move
Struggling man, no time to lose, I’m a struggling man, and I’ve got to move on.

I am born to win. Been lost and found, turned upside down, yeah, yeah, yeah. Been cast aside and despised, uhm, uhm, uhm, but I’m Daniel in the lion’s den and Jonah in the belly of the whale. I’m not alone, so I cannot fail, no, no, no. And I’m born to win.

Sitting here in Limbo, Waiting for the tide turn, Yeah, now, sitting here in Limbo, So many things I’ve got to learn, Meanwhile, they’re putting up a resistance, but I know that my faith will lead me on.

You can get it if you really want. You can get it if you really want. You can get it if you really want, but you must try, try, and try, try and try. You’ll succeed at last.

While we listen to such encouraging lyrics, we are inspired in such a way that we don’t feel the pain we go through in our daily hustle, often eliminating boredom and depression. 

Even though reggae music is not much promoted commercially by MTV, the power of the music can’t be denied.


Jimmy Cliff and Peter Tosh were both against apartheid in South Africa. In the picture, Jimmy Cliff wears a T-shirt with the picture of the murdered South African hero, Steve Biko.

Your world is plastic; you can see through to the other side. Your cities are made of wood; Antiques are what you’ve got inside; Houses are paper, but folks don’t hear a word you say
Friendship’s like acid; it burns, burns, burns, as it slides away.


Jimmy Cliff sings 'Synthetic World.'


There’s a day of feasting and a day of famine, a day of sadness and a day of joy. You could see on the day of feasting that life isn’t just a little play-like toy., 

So the day arrived when you least expected it, because you always thought you were well protected. Now you feel like a fish out of water, so now you’re wondering what’s the matter.

“You can change the style of playing reggae, you can change the rhythm of playing reggae, but never change the message,” sings Lucky Dube in Reggae Strong, because it’s music that carries the message of truth and the light. If you don’t like the truth, you can never be a friend of reggae.


The renowned Jamaican reggae singer and actor Jimmy Cliff passed away at the age of 81. On Monday, November 24, 2025, his wife Latifa Chambers announced his death, citing pneumonia and a seizure as the causes. On Monday, November 24, 2025, Jimmy Cliff passed away from pneumonia that followed a seizure.

Wednesday, June 01, 2016

Daddy, Wherever You Are, Remember Me- Lucky Dube


Lucky Dube of South Africa: One of the world’s greatest reggae legends


Lucky Dube of South Africa: One of the world’s greatest reggae legends


Many great people die and fade into silence. Their achievements disappear with them, their names swallowed by time. However, Lucky Dube is not one of them. 


Like Bob Marley and Peter Tosh, his legacy refuses to die. His voice still echoes across continents, his message still heals broken spirits, and his music still stands as one of Africa’s greatest cultural gifts to the world.


I have studied musicians for decades, but Lucky Dube captured my heart in a way few others ever did. His lyrics were not just words; they were truth, courage, and compassion woven into melody. Among his many unforgettable songs, one remains deeply personal to me:


“Daddy, Wherever You Are, Remember Me.”


That song carries me back to the day I stood beside my father’s hospital bed at age nineteen, watching him take his final breath. Lucky Dube’s voice became a companion through grief, a reminder that music can hold our pain when we cannot carry it alone.


A Voice Against Injustice


Lucky Dube was not just a singer. He was a messenger. His songs confronted injustice, corruption, discrimination, and the wounds of apartheid. He spoke for the oppressed, the forgotten, and the broken. His music was a mirror held up to society, honest, fearless, and healing.


Every track he released became a hit because his songwriting was brilliant, sincere, and spiritually charged. His fusion of reggae with mbaqanga, the traditional Zulu sound, created a unique rhythm that touched listeners across the globe. He didn’t imitate reggae; he expanded it.


A Legacy That Refuses to Die


Lucky Dube’s death was a shock that many of us still haven’t fully accepted. I interviewed him once, and that memory remains one of the most meaningful moments of my career. His humility, his wisdom, and his gentle spirit left a lasting impression on me.




When he died, it felt as though the world had lost a prophet of peace. His absence created a void that can never be filled. But his music, his message, continues to live, breathe, and inspire.


Lucky Dube sang for unity. He sang for justice. He sang for humanity, and even though he is gone, his voice still remembers us, and his songs still comfort the grieving. 


His lyrics still challenge the unjust, and his spirit still walks with those who believe in a better world. Lucky Dube may have left this earth, but his music remains eternal, a reminder that true greatness never dies.


Tuesday, May 31, 2016

6 Things That Will Never Let You Underestimate Cleaners In Society

Ziggy Dust: The dancing street cleaner from Poland

Ziggy Dust: The dancing street cleaner from Poland



Growing up in Africa, what I realized earlier in life is that because of poverty, parents always encouraged children to study very hard to avoid being a cleaner or a driver. 


They also pray so that their sons or daughters may marry a highly learned person in society, perhaps a doctor, because that will give them honor and also bring some money home.

In Africa, society sees those in the cleaning and driving professions as uneducated or school dropouts, and many times, I see the problems a woman in love with a driver or a cleaner faces. Surprisingly, when I arrived in Europe decades ago, I noticed that some people looked down on those who worked as cleaners as well like Africa.

What is actually wrong with being a cleaner? If everyone wants to be in front, who will be behind to help the blind? And if everyone wants to be a doctor, engineer, pilot, captain, etc, who will be the cleaner to clean the offices of the pilot, engineer, etc, for them to enjoy a happy, healthy life?

As a matter of fact, I think people who look down on cleaners are not clean themselves. If one considers the role of cleaners in society, they will give them every respect they deserve equally, like a scientist or a pilot. Many hate to clean because it’s a tough job. 

This is the reason many can’t clean, but then why do they look down on cleaners when they are doing the job they wouldn’t do?

I live in Belgium, a country many hate to clean, thus, foreigners have taken over the cleaning industry, yet they complain that foreigners have taken their jobs from them. 

There are work agencies that usually send cleaners to do domestic and office cleanings. Surprisingly, some people discriminated against those cleaning their houses, demanding white cleaners, and the media hit back.

If someone is cleaner, doesn’t mean that the person is stupid or lacks intelligence? Here are

SIX FACTS THAT WILL CHANGE THE WAY MANY VIEW CLEANERS IN SOCIETY

1. Cleanliness is next to godliness because being clean is a sign of spiritual purity or goodness.

2. A clean environment is essential for a healthy living.

3. Cleaning the environment prevents an epidemic.

4. People litter on the roads and public places even though there are dustbins. Imagine what our society would look like without cleaning.

5. Without cleaning, there will be a flood because of the blockage of the drainage system.

6. We shall be facing the threat of climate change and global warming.

Sunday, May 29, 2016

BELGIAN JEHOVAH WITNESS COUPLE SHARE THEIR EXPERIENCE OF A VISIT TO KENYA


Foreign Jehovah witnesses share the gospel in Africa


Foreign Jehovah's Witnesses share the gospel in Africa



I have known Daan and Hilde, a married Belgian couple, for about seven years, serving Jehovah and helping many foreigners in Belgium, including Africans, for better integration, learning the language, knowing Jehovah, and being useful in society. 

I have invited them many times to my residence to share their profound knowledge of the Gospel with me. One of the burning desires of the Belgian couple is to visit Africa, learn how the people live, communicate, work, and also to share the gospel with them. 

Thus, a month ago, they left Belgium to Kenya with the intention to live with the people for about a year. In Kenya, Daan and Hilde are facing challenges, confronted with different customs and traditions. They share their interesting accounts of their daily activities in tropical Africa.

After my first talk in the Mtwapa East congregation, they told me that I need to watch out not to stretch my arms high up because of the ventilators, but still, I had all my fingers.” Daan shares his experience as a tall man in Kenya.

“We start to know our way in the village. Important to find our return visits. This is where the streets have no name. Tuesday, we met at 8.45 AM, at the mango tree for service. We had a nice morning, but after 5 hours, we were soaked."

“Feels like 44gr, but the small breeze makes it bearable. Love to do the laundry together in the African way on your wedding anniversary. This is a very nice example for a married couple, but I prefer my washing machine.”

“A common action in the field service, showing videos to those who are interested. Not only Caleb and Sophia, but also about the resurrection and what happens at the Kingdom Hall." 

"In the supermarket, at the department of paper and pencils, you can find Bibles for about 10 Euros, the same as wages for three days' work. King James Version.”

“After service, we sometimes take a jump in the water. If we are not too tired, it is not too hot, only 30gr but the humidity is 85-90 percent. Lots of talking and teaching in this weather can make us feel very tired." 

"I was too chicken to drive the motorbike. We always take ‘piki piki’ to move around, with two people on one bike, plus the driver, we are three in number. Quite a spectacle to see us in town.”

"A leaf fell from the tree in our garden. It is good that it happened during the night. Nothing better than a refreshing bath. We study with his mother and a sister. Makes me remember my infant days, love it." 

"People try to earn some money in many ways. This boy sells boiled eggs. He cuts them in half, adds some tomato, salt, and masala, and sells them for about 15 cents.” 

“We are happy to follow our dreams and share our experience with Jehovah in a foreign country, Kenya, a continent far from our home.”

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

GREED IS YOUR WORST ENEMY THAN A GOOD FRIEND


Greed is the cause of violence, crime and killings tearing our society apart today.


Greed is the cause of violence, crime, and killings, tearing our society apart today.


It’s now very common to read in the newspapers that ‘Man murders his wife for life insurance,’ or a woman kills her husband for the same purpose: life insurance. 


It’s unbelievable that years after marriage, because of greed and the love of money, the minds of people change to commit such a heinous crime.

Human beings by nature have the potential for greedy tendencies, but the strong desire of some people to possess at all costs wouldn’t mind killing or shedding blood to achieve whatever they are looking for. That’s the dangerous part of greed.

In a documentary film I watched recently, a drug dealer was successful in his first and second attempts to transport narcotics to Asia and earned thousands of dollars. 

Despite becoming a millionaire overnight, greed propelled him to make a third attempt, and he was arrested and jailed. Had I known, it would always be at last.

Greed, the tendency to selfish craving, hoarding, and grasping, is responsible for the violence and crime tearing our society apart today. 

Greed plays a major role in all fields, including politics, sports, and administration. In both developing and developed countries, greed leads to corruption and the amassed of wealth.

It’s shocking to see the present condition in many African countries, while some African leaders take state money and keep it in foreign accounts. 

Greed is not a problem in Africa alone, but everywhere because it’s a man’s problem; the reasons advanced countries are equally corrupt as Africa.

Money taken from Africa is classified as corruption, and that of Europe and America is classified as ‘misappropriation of funds’ because they think corruption is a word that suits Africa, but the act is the same. Some people believe that to be successful in life, the need to be greedy is necessary, but living on greed is like gradually digging your own grave.

As a matter of fact, greed makes people unhappy, stupid, corrupt, and restless because the lack of satisfaction, which urges you to crave more, takes control of you both physically and psychologically. If the heart wants it and there aren’t any means, what follows next is usually a crime. The reason desperate people do desperate things.

Some people ask if we can get rid of greed, and if possible, how can we do it? As a matter of fact, greed is like a common sickness that can be controlled but can never ever be eliminated because it’s impossible to get rid of it completely.

Even in public transport, some people take two seats, one for him/her and the other for their briefcase or handbag, while others are standing. What do you benefit if you gain the whole world but lose your own soul? These are some of the Biblical quotations we need to use as a guide to refrain from greed.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

UNDERSTANDING THE BACKGROUND OF THE WISDOM OF BOB MARLEY


BOB MARLEY: His words and prophecies through his music are taking place

Bob Marley: His words and prophecies through his music are taking place


A couple of weeks ago, I wrote an article captioned “Is Belgium’s Royal Family Proud Of The Horrible Crime Leopold II Committed In Africa?”




The significance of the article is that no one in his right mind will build a statue of someone who maimed and killed over 10 million Africans, including women and children, when there is no statue of Hitler for committing a similar crime against humanity.

The article spread over all the social media including ‘NIUME,’ one of the outstanding social media platforms and someone made a comment. According to the reader called Sue Marlington: “Well I didn’t even know that there was a Royal family in Belgium, thank you for the insightful post.”

Yes, Sue is right, many people don’t know that there is even a Royal Family in Belgium, because the country even though it is very small, people know more of evil Belgium committed in Africa than a country known for its quality beer and chocolate productions. 

This is the result when evil overcomes good, you are completely denied and buried forever.

THE WISDOM AND PHILOSOPHY OF BOB MARLEY 

On May 11, 1981, one of the world’s greatest musical icons died, he was Bob Marley. There is no one on earth whose popularity and fame spread decades after his death like a bush fire in the dry season than Bob Marley.

Like Sue Marlington, a number of people don’t know there is a monarchy in Belgium, but people know that Belgium killed Patrice Lumumba because he fought for the independence of his country, Congo, and the Belgians were mad. 

Astonishingly, everyone including illiterates and remote villagers knew who Bob Marley was because of what he stood for which reflects on his music.

A lot has already been written about this little man from Jamaica full of wisdom and knowledge, so I’m not going to repeat articles already written. Today, I have selected 10 statements Bob Marley made in his music for readers, music lovers, and the so-called politicians who have destroyed this world to ponder over them.

1. Culled from the track ‘Natural Mystic’: 

There’s a natural mystic blowing through the air; If you listen carefully now you will hear.
This could be the first trumpet, might as well be the last: Many more will have to suffer,
Many more will have to die – don’t ask me why.

2. Culled from the track ‘Talking Blues’:

I – I’m a gonna take a just-a one step more ‘Cause I feel like bombin’ a church –
Now – now that you know that the preacher is lyin’. So who’s gonna stay at home, When – when the freedom fighters are fighting?

3. Culled from the track ‘Babylon System:

We refuse to be What you wanted us to be; We are what we are: That’s the way (way) it’s going to be. You don’t know! You can’t educate I, For no equal opportunity:
(Talkin’ ’bout my freedom) Talkin’ ’bout my freedom, People freedom (freedom) and liberty! Yeah, we’ve been trodding on the winepress much too long: Rebel, rebel!
Yes, we’ve been trodding on the winepress much too long: Rebel, rebel!

4. Culled from the track ‘Ambush In The Night:

(Ooh-wee, ooh-wee, ooh-wa!) See them fighting for power (ooh-wee, ooh-wee, ooh-wa!),
But they know not the hour (ooh-wee, ooh-wee, ooh-wa!),; So they bribing with their guns, spare parts, and money, Trying to belittle our Integrity now. They say what we know.


Is just what they teach us, And we’re so ignorant ‘Cause every time they can reach us (shoobe, doo-wa) Through political strategy (shoo-be, doo-wa); They keep us hungry (shoobe, doo-wa), And when you gonna get some food (shoobe, doo-wa), Your brother got to be your enemy, we-e-ell! Ambush in the night, All guns aiming at me.

5. Culled from the track ‘One Drop’:

I know Jah’s never let us down; Pull your rights from wrong (I know Jah would never let us down) Oh, no! Oh, no! Oh, no! They made their world so hard (so hard): Every day we got to keep on fighting (fighting); They made their world so hard (so hard): 

Every day the people are dyin’ (dying), yeah! (It dread, dread) For hunger (dread, dread) and starvation (dread, dread, dread, dread), Lamentation (dread, dread), But read it in Revelation (dread, dread, dread, dread): 

You’ll find your redemption And then you give us the teachings of His Majesty, For we no want no devil philosophy; A you fe give us the teachings of His Majesty, A we no want no devil philosophy:


6. Culled from the track ‘Time Will Tell’: 

Jah would never give the power to a baldhead Run come crucify the Dread. Time alone – oh, time will tell: Think you’re in heaven, but ya living in hell.

7. Culled from the track ‘Redemption Song’: 

Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery; None but ourselves can free our minds.
Have no fear for atomic energy, ‘Cause none of them can stop the time. How long shall they kill our prophets, While we stand aside and look? Ooh! Some say it’s just a part of it:
We’ve got to fulfill the book.

8. Culled from the track ‘One Love’:

One Love! One Heart! Let’s get together and feel all right. Hear the children cryin’ (One Love!); Hear the children cryin’ (One Heart!), Sayin’: give thanks and praise to the Lord and I will feel all right; Sayin’: let’s get together and feel all right. Wo wo-wo wo-wo!

9. Culled from the track ‘Coming In From The Cold’:

It’s you – it’s you – it’s you I’m talkin’ to -Well, you (it’s you) – you (it’s you) – you I’m talking to now. Why do you look so sad and forsaken? When one door is closed, don’t you know other is open? 

Would you let the system make you kill your brotherman? No, no, no, no, no, no! No, Dread, no! Would you make the system make you kill your brotherman? (No, Dread, no!) Well, the biggest – biggest man you ever – ever – see was-a once a baby.

10. Culled from the track: ‘Pimpers' Paradise’:

She loves to party, have a good time; She looks so hearty, feeling fine; She loves to smoke, sometime shiftin’ coke; She’ll be laughin’ when there ain’t no joke. 

A pimpers' paradise: that’s all she was now; A pimpers' paradise: that’s all she was; A pimpers' paradise: that’s all she was now; Pimper’s paradise: that’s all she was. (Every need got an ego to feed; Every need got an ego to feed.)

Bonus- Culled from the track ‘Stiff Necked Fools’:

Stiff-necked fools, you think you are cool To deny me for simplicity. Yes, you have gone for so long With your love for vanity now. Yes, you have got the wrong interpretation Mixed up with vain imagination. 

So take Jah Sun, and Jah Moon, And Jah Rain, and Jah Stars, And forever, yes, erase your fantasy, yea-eah! The lips of the righteous teach many, But fools die for want of wisdom. The rich man’s wealth is in his city; The righteous’ wealth is in his Holy Place.


Bob Marley sings 'Africa Unite.'


Conclusion and opinion

Black history has been tampered with and facts have been swept under the carpet by one race to portray another race as inferior. 

Many times, I hear people saying that ‘I am ashamed to be a White man,’ due to the evil things committed against other people on this earth’s surface. But nobody needs to be ashamed. 

Instead, let’s pray for those who have bitter hearts towards others because bitterness will only promote your health to disaster.

Saturday, May 21, 2016

CLEAR AND UNBIASED FACTS ABOUT AMSTERDAM WOMEN POLICE


A policewoman in Holland


A policewoman in Holland



Reflections of bitter experience had made me not like the police, soldiers, or any law enforcement officer, because instead of keeping the peace and preserving social order, many used the uniform to dominate, intimidate, and abuse the power bestowed upon them.

Many people likely get enrolled in the police service to cause harm to other people or to steal from the weak and the vulnerable. As a traveler, adventurer, and writer, I traveled extensively in Africa.

A VISIT TO AFRICAN COUNTRIES

Every country I visited has its story. Painful stories and brutalities at the hands of law enforcement officers. In Nigeria, an immigration officer slapped me across the face several times and, at the end of it, took all my money from my pocket.

In Lagos, two armed men in police uniform kidnapped me just to steal my money. After the plan failed, they beat me up mercilessly and pushed me out of a moving vehicle. 

Instead of protection, I suffered at the hands of law enforcement officers to the extent that I lost confidence in them, but an incident that took place in Amsterdam changed the negative perception and thinking I had about the police to like them forever.

A WONDERFUL EXPERIENCE WITH A POLICEWOMAN IN AMSTERDAM

It was winter, and very dark. On my way to work, I was stopped by a group of traffic police officers who were arresting cyclists with faulty lights. They have arrested over a dozen, issuing them fines to pay. I couldn’t escape when one of the officers, a woman, stopped me. I got off my bicycle, and she inspected my lights. The front light was faulty.

She looked at my face, then said something I wasn’t expecting: “You know? I don’t want to issue you a ticket. Try to fix it tomorrow before passing on this route.” While she was interacting with me, her colleague, a male police officer,  was watching us and wondering what we were talking about instead of issuing me a fine to pay.

The policewoman asked me to leave as quickly as possible, but by then it was too late; her male colleague was catching up to us, so I told her, “Your curious colleague is coming; there is no way I can flee because he is now close behind us.” The male police officer  asked her why the a delay in issuing a fine because my front light is faulty.”


The ‘Good Samaritan policewoman’ said to him, “His rear light is in order, but the front one, he is not aware that is faulty. I asked him to fix it tomorrow.” 

Her male colleague didn’t say anything, and he walked away. Then the policewoman told me to leave, but I shouldn’t ride the bicycle.

I obeyed her instructions and went away. Luckily enough, I was just a few meters from the  workplace, ‘The Okura Hotel.’ What transpired shocked me both physically and psychologically, so that I have loved the police till now. 

Whenever I see any policewoman, this bicycle story not only comes into my mind, but I also love them too.

Many times, people judge the police wrongly and say all sorts of dirty things against them, but some are very nice indeed.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Bioweapons Expert: Ebola Weaponized To Spread Like Flu- Obama’s Administration Under Pressure


Mark Twain

Mark Twain


European and American leaders, including the CIA and the FBI, are under pressure and sorely afraid that they will soon lose the battle of the cover-ups of the Aids and Ebola medical crimes. 


There is time for everything, and no matter how long it takes, their nightmares will force them to come out clean.

Apart from terrorism, the mere mention of Aids and Ebola scares America and Europeans to death, because the two deadly diseases were man-made and used as bio-weapons, and since the disease engulfed Liberia, the Republic of Guinea, and Sierra Leone, only a few in the medical field are brave enough to speak openly that Aids and Ebola were indeed medical crimes against humanity.

Even Belgium’s top scientist, Guido van der Groen, who said in an interview to ‘Humo Magazine’ that “The U.S. military laboratories slated for Ebola and HIV, to develop into a biological weapon in the early sixties,” on October 13, 1994, had to change his story to save his life, and said two years ago that “Ebola was invented in the 1960s in Fort Detrick in Congo.”

The fact is, the primary Ebola strain being spread right now (as there are 2) was bio-engineered by the US Department of Defense (via USAMRIID) & Tulane University with the knowledge/help from pharma/biotech giants such as Monsanto, Alnylam, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Merck, Pfizer, and a much smaller pharma company based out of Canada called Tekmira. 

A known Ebola strain from Central Africa was used as the base and was bioengineered to become a new hybrid respiratory illness (a combination of Ebola Virus & Lassa Hemorrhagic Fever, weaponized via Tulane University & USAMRIID at Fort Detrick), making it a genetic variant of the original strain.

This bioengineered hybrid allowed for airborne human-to-human transmission, an extended incubation period (to increase spread/threat), and a slightly toned-down virility (to have the ideal initial mortality rate (~40%)).

Now the question on the lips of many people is: How long will America, Europe, and the media remain silent?  “You can fool all the people some of the time, and some of the people all the time, but you cannot fool all the people all the time.”– Abraham Lincoln.

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

10 AFRICAN REMARKABLE PROVERBS WITH A MORAL LESSON


The gentle monkey


The gentle monkey


1. Allowing the monkey to wear clothes doesn’t guarantee the animal to join the dining table. Meaning: Some people abuse their trust if you are kind to them. Don’t take a friend for a fool if he helps you every time. 


2. A man who hangs around a beautiful lady without saying anything, yet he likes her, will end up serving the guests on her wedding day. – Just be bold to tell a lady you like her if you’re interested in her. 

3. A beautiful girl without any intelligence ends up abusing herself. Her private part suffers the most. – You need to be intelligent too if you are beautiful, else you will end up sleeping with thousands of men to ruin the ‘golden box.’ 


4. Whoever presents his own head to break a coconut would not be able to partake in eating it. – This is a warning to be careful in whatever you do because some kindness may put you into very big trouble. 

5. There is no way a chicken will pass corn or maize without swallowing it. Even if the corn is too big to swallow, the beak will break it into pieces. If a friend offers you a place, be careful not to get closer to his wife because of temptation. 

6. The buttocks are like a married couple. There is constant friction between them, yet they still love and live together. – There is no marriage or relationship without a dispute. If misunderstanding comes, settle it amicably before planning to divorce.

7. Never let negative people rent a space in your head. Raise the tent and kick them out. – You have the power to resist evil influence. Don’t follow bad friends to put you in a place you never wished to be. 

8. If one finds a wallet on the road and takes all the money in it before he finds the owner, there is no reward or blessing for you. Giving the owner all his money back will reveal your honesty, for the owner to do something extraordinary for you. “This is what I did, and the owner helped me to be employed. I’m still at the same place after twelve years.” 

 9. When you are doing well in life, climbing up with success, remember to help those you are leaving behind. One day, if things go badly for you, they will remember what you did for them, and they will help you, too. – Be kind to the less fortunate ones, because no one knows tomorrow.

10. The heart of a rich man lies in his wealth, and that of the poor man lies in the faith of God. The reason poor people sleep better than the rich because they always think of their wealth. Jesus confirmed it.” It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of the needle than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.”