A call for nation building:
Address and Message To The World Youths Over Diplomatic Relation And Professionalism In Dispute Resolution.
World youths we are very much delighted as Kenyans for this urgently needed debate, because it is far much better to debate and discuss, agree or agree to disagree on sharing power, resources and how to exploit them for the common good, than go to war. And as a revolutionary I’ll kick off the topic of discourse like tornados ready to strike and address issues of war, violence and terrorism, which have now turned to be the greatest enemy of human being? We are gathered daily to learn, dialogue, bargain, link each other, communicate effectively since we’re all equal and to bring solutions to the most fundamental topic of discourses which is largely needed with most continents paupers who are tired of this. Most of has listen to our respectable leaders daily for their respectable wise words to guide them in the global existence, and I thanked them for their resilience. While most of us don’t listen to their rulers since their rulers are not saints, at their backs are written in metallic, “I’m not a developmentalists but war minded, racist, terrorists, tribal, undemocratic, undiplomatically, tyrants and corrupt”.
Without much ado, ladies and gentlemen, men of women and women of men. First I would like to pass a glowing attribute by echoing the late former USA president honourable John F. Kennedy, on his landmark speech while addressing state of the union message of May 25,1961, when he told the congress that “But we talk of sharing and building and the competition of ideas, while others talk of arms and threaten war”. This was the brightest point full of facts and realism.
In the same breathe, my strong message to the world youths, our current leaders have been unable to lead appropriately. They say that the in their country needs more aid, yet they are the contributors of the war, it is not wise. In this cosmos, nothing is impossible on regardless how dangerous it is, and since we have wisdom and knowledge we are not going to leave any stone unturned, because we’re tomorrows leaders and we want to lead appropriately. Therefore my main discussion will focus in Africa, which has been a continent of conflict and violence. The violence of slavery, civil strife and colonialism compounded the violence of our pre-colonial past. Indeed, the cycle of violence makes Africa a continent with many unhealed memories and feelings, including those inflicted by conflict between many nations and even the religious communities represented.
In the present decades, conflict has continued to cause intolerable human suffering and undermined prospects of better future, which has stagnated the powerful rich African nations like Nigeria, yet it is the Opec’s fifth largest oil exporter ranking in tens billions of dollars annually but with nothing to show of it. Sudan with its potent oil cores and the largest country in Africa only came to know semblance of peace earlier last year. Even now the on going Darfur pogroms, which has killed many God’s infants and left many in disarmaments hostile situation and displacing utmost more than two millions of people still their destine are still in disarray. Democratic Republic of Congo, which even now as I speak their quest for peace knows no bounds, is just a great a blot. This is a country with vast reserved resources such like diamonds, bauxite and cobalt, gold, copper and perhaps others which only their thorough exploitation will pioneer, yet it is the leading light in the on of Africa with local termed endless civil strife and the legendary looting of its former despots. Ivory Coast, which recently invented its hostile atmosphere by coup, dismantled her giant economy, which has been sustained by cocoa for decades and decades is in the line of civil strife. Ethiopia with its potent fertile highlands, its epic history as the African country that was never colonized, and a 70 million plus population should have made it an economic powerhouse, yet it is still rated as one of the poorest nation in the entire Africa society, and among others.
In that regard the presence of this piece is not to applause, make people laugh, and thunder but to contribute in the need of a nationhood, by carrying the greatest issues affecting world and African societies more so the war torn civil strife in Sudan, and among others.
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