*Comrade Kalyegira, Fraternal greetings, and a wish that our ancestors continue looking out for your good health.
And know that we are always most grateful for the stellar work you do for our country. If we had three/four Kalyegiras we would be about to seize liberation just around the corner. My point today is to point out that between now and the 'election' it is imperative that we crisscross the country focusing and articulating policy options to the masses of our people. Again and again I have pointed this out to Compatriots Jack Sabiti and Augustine Ruzindana. The point is not to demand that Museveni must go. Let that be assumed, and we point out how, say, Universal Primary/Secondary Education is going to be improved. Not closing m7's dysfunctional schools. How to put cash in the pockets of Wananchi. Where m7 is sponsoring three farmers in a gombolola, we should promise financing to all that wish to start small enterprises. Some of our MP's, like Nampijja of Lubaga are totally confused and lost in hoping that there are some good Samaritan whites out there that will bring health and development to our people. How come they are still exterminating Canadian natives here today today in New Brunswick, Manitoba and Alberta. It is only Ugandans that will develop their country. Already the British are waging assault on us using socalled "soft power in the Education Sector". Comrades, soft power is more dangerous that military assault. We have to be very alert. We cant allow them to steal the minds of our youth. The Economy of the Western world, with the exception of Germany, is broken. (USA economy is gone for ever). They have abandoned both the youth of colour and the white youth. It is sad when you look at the fear in the faces of these youths that have no future. The ruling elite have thrown them on to a garbage heap. Instead these Western elite are in a scramble for Africa's resources as their only salvation from doom. We have to fight their mercenaries and their running dogs. The slave master have all their hopes on sellouts like Mandela, Mbeki, Zuma, Museveni, Kufour etc..... So, before we march to grab our State house from imperialism and their agents let's use this time to sensitize the people. Thank you, and all the best, Comrade. Mitayo Potosi Toronto ================= * America endorses Museveni. What should the opposition and civil society do <http://www.ugandarecord.co.ug/index.php?issue=69&article=866&seo=America%20endorses%20Museveni.%20What%20should%20the%20opposition%20and%20civil%20society%20do?> On the surface of it, the statements by U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Johnny Carson on July 27, 2010 --- in which he went back on his 2005 criticism of President Yoweri Museveni and virtually declared him the beacon of democracy --- are a major setback for Uganda's opposition. The bomb blasts in Kampala on July 11, 2010 give Museveni a renewed relevance to the United States in its "war on terror". The usual American blind eye can now be turned to his political repression at home and the heavy handed way his security forces are dealing with opposition leaders, party officials and peaceful demonstrations. However, that is as far as it goes. The United States is rapidly on the decline. Closing in fast on it is China which is starting to overtake America in fields that were once creations of and symbols of national pride and power for the Americans --- the car industry, the Internet, manufacturing, global trade, currency reserves. The mistake Ugandans and many down-trodden people in Africa and elsewhere make is to still view America as the great and sole superpower it once was. It would be more factually accurate to view the United States today as the world's second most-powerful nation after China. What does this mean for the Ugandan political scene? First, it means that America is in the middle of a serious national crisis. The economy is still stuck in a recession or has risen just above it. It is fighting two major wars that it shows no sign of winning now or any time soon. President Barack Obama's approval ratings are now at 47.3 percent, a new low for him and the saviour he was supposed to have been to the world has not happened. This explains the increasing fickleness of U.S. foreign policy, as they lurch about for direction and a grip on a situation getting out of their control. The United States, in a nut shell, no longer knows what to do about most things. Just to fix a broken seven-inch oil pipeline in the Gulf of Mexico took them three months. What Uganda's opposition needs to do is not be overwhelmed by the false image of a powerful America propping up Museveni, but of a beleagured giant grasping about for straws and swinging from policy to policy. The opposition, civil society and the rest of Ugandan society need do only one thing --- bring the country to a standstill in the months leading up to and following the 2011 general election, a little like what happened in Kenya in 2007. With the situation getting out of hand, the same Johnny Carson will be hastily dispatched to Uganda to urge Museveni to hold talks with the opposition, order his troops and police to show restraint in handling demonstrators. The weak President Obama --- who is proving to be one of the most disappointing U.S. leaders as far as Africa is concerned --- will pressure Museveni to share power with the opposition. Simple formula. It will work. END
_______________________________________________ Ugandanet mailing list Ugandanet@kym.net http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/ All Archives can be found at http://www.mail-archive.com/ugandanet@kym.net/ The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way. ---------------------------------------