Monday, February 15, 2010

Northern Ireland Adopts African-Style Politics

Great story in the Indo,

African politics works a lot like this. Every conceiveable interest group, tribe, and political faction must get their share of the pie before any sort of government can be formed. Jacob Zuma in South Africa recently managed to get this done by doubling the number of cabinet ministers, and increasing the number of those suckling at the public teat by inventing some new departments for them. That is Africa.

This is Ireland, however, and in fine Banana Republic tradition, so much money is being thrown around to get the Northern process back on track that soon there will be more public servants than citizens. Ain't democracy grand.

"Gordon Brown promised £20 million for development of the Irish language during the Hillsborough Castle talks, Gerry Adams has revealed.
Most of the money will go to the Irish Language Broadcast Fund, which provides over 75 hours of television for the BBC and others.
Culture Minister Nelson McCausland welcomed the investment and said another £5 million would also be made available to promote Ulster Scots. 
A draft strategy to protect and enhance both languages should go to the ministerial executive by the end of March."

read the rest here.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Things I DON't Miss about George W. Bush

by the excellent Michelle Malkin :





Sorry to be a wet blanket, but someone has to do it.
The “Miss Me Yet?” billboard (inspired by Jonathan Maney’s t-shirts) is cute. But let’s not get carried away with nostalgia.
President Bush put America on the proper war footing after 9/11 and deserves much credit for doing so, but he also:
1) joined with open-borders progressives McCain and Kennedy to try to force shamnesty down our throats;
2) massively expanded the federal role in education;
3) championed the Medicare prescription drug entitlement using phony math;
4) kowtowed to the jihadi-enabling Saudis;
5) stocked DHS with incompetents and cronies;
6) pushed Hillarycare for housing;
7) enabled turncoat Arlen Specter;
8. nominated crony Harriet Myers to the Supreme Court;
9) pre-socialized the economy for Obama by embracing TARP, the auto bailouts, the AIG bailout, and in his own words:


“I’ve abandoned free-market principles to save the free-market system.”
George W. Bush

No, I don’t miss having a corporate socialist Republican in the White House any more than I like having a corporate socialist Democrat in the White House now.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Call for Ban on FGM in Ireland

Here's one those stories that shows just how far we have come from being a country that has had a limited number of problems to deal with to a truly multicultural one with multicultural problems.

Not that there is any shortage of those, but this story just shows how much money and effort is spent solving a problem we should really not have to solve.


One presumes that Female Genital Mutation is already illegal. But it cannot just be illegal, it must be a "violation of human rights" as well.


Of course it is, and so are a lot of other things. But we all know that labelling something as such is not mere posturing on the part of an elite who believe such labelling reinforces their sense of moral superioriy, but a segway into a whole new area of government control.
Why a "specific legislation" to ban FGM? Does it not fall under a number of other prohibitions, such as Assault, Child Abuse, and Sexual Abuse?

Just look at what that legislative distinction requires - endless "campaigns", "committees" and the inevitable "community-based initiatives". Why can't appalling, barbaric practices just be illegal, or even just morally reprehensible?
Do not mistake this for lack of sympathy. FGM is an inhuman (no, not "inhumane"), brutal and horrific practice and should be punishable by punishments we don't even have in our legal system (although maybe in Saudi Arabia's). But more "steering committees" we do not need.

What we need is more punishment for parents who carry out such acts, preferably including immediate deportation, while their victims can remain in Ireland.
Politely asking them not to mutilate their children is not the answer.
****
According to a report in the Irish Times, a number of participants at an event held by the National Steering Committee on Female Genital Mutilation to mark International Day of Zero Tolerance to FGM called for a stepping up of the campaign for a new law banning the practice of FGM in Ireland.
During the event, serious concerns were expressed about whether the current legal framework in Ireland served as an effective tool for addressing the practise of FGM. While Government advice has indicated that female genital mutilation constitutes an offence under assault laws, speakers at the seminar said distinct legislation was needed.

According to the Irish Times report, a spokesman for Minister for Health Mary Harney said: “The question of introducing specific legislation to ban female genital mutilation remains under review. However, we cannot be specific on a timeframe for this review at this stage.”

The Irish Steering Committee came together in early 2008 to develop the Plan of Action to address Female Genital Mutilation, which was finalised in late 2008. The report is a valuable source of information on the practise of FGM in Ireland and elsewhere. The document highlights that ‘a proactive and coordinated response is required to prevent the establishment of the practice [of FGM] in Ireland and to provide care for women and girls living in Ireland who have already undergone FGM in their country of origin’.

It identifies a number of strategies ‘as being essential to addressing FGM in Ireland and in other countries through Irish development policies’, focusing on actions under 5 strategy headings: legal, asylum, health, community and development aid. From a legal perspective, the report quotes earlier research carried out by the Women’s Health Council which, amongst other things, highlighted the shortcomings and the inappropriateness of existing legislation in terms of prosecuting FGM.





According to the Plan of Action and the Women’s Health Council, both the levels of prevalence and incidence of FGM in Ireland are relatively low. However, it is highly regrettable that steps are not being taken at this stage so as to proactively prevent future cases of FGM in Ireland, rather than waiting until the state may find itself in a ‘reactive position of having to deal with the more problematic eradication of a practice already established in a new context’ (Women’s Health Council).

There is no question that law can, in and of itself, serve as an absolute deterrent to or panacea for FGM. Indeed, international experience demonstrates that the legal prohibition of FGM unaccompanied by community-based initiatives focussing on health and education will not result in a significant reduction in the practice. However, it is arguable that bringing about the legal prohibition of FGM is relatively easy and can certainly be achieved more quickly than the changes in societal attitudes and other factors affecting practitioner communities that are necessary for the practice to be discontinued.


In addition, a strong legal framework can strengthen the ability of agencies to protect children at risk and provide them with appropriate care (‘Plan of Action’), as well as providing support to members of communities who are under pressure to subject their children FGM and are reluctant to do so. Given the egregious impact that FGM has on the human rights of girl children, a failure to take the step of establishing an effective and watertight legal prohibition on the practise is inexcusable.

In 2001, the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly passed Resolution 1247 calling on the governments of member states (including Ireland) ‘to introduce specific legislation prohibiting genital mutilation and declaring genital mutilation to be a violation of human rights and bodily integrity’. It remains to see when Ireland will respond to this call.

In January of this year, Viviane Reding, EU Commissioner-Designate for Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship declared her commitment to taking “concrete action on FGM” and outlined a series of steps that she would take, including working with the with Commissioner-Designate for Home Affairs to harmonise criminal offences and sanctions in criminal law.

There is thus a growing awareness and concern about FGM throughout Europe – a fact that is reflected in the development of the END FGM European Campaign. This Campaign is run by Amnesty International Ireland, in partnership with non-governmental organisations across the European Union. A new document was launched at yesterday’s seminar entitled, “ENDING FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION: A Strategy for the European Union Institutions” as part of that campaign.

While developments at the EU level are to be welcomed and encouraged, they do not serve to absolve Ireland of its obligations to take measures to address FGM under Article 24 CRC, Article 3 ECHR and the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (for more, see the statements of the Committee responsible for monitoring CEDAW here, here and here). It is therefore incumbent on Ireland to take action now to provide support to current victims of FGM and to prevent the creation of new ones.

Fiddling While Rome Burns - More Wasted Cash

 What a huge joke at the taxpayer's expense.

Foreign embassy revamp defended

Sunday February 07 2010

The Foreign Affairs minister has defended a multimillion-euro revamp at the residence of the Irish ambassador to Canada.
The taxpayer is understood to have forked out 4.4 million euro to refurbish the luxurious home in Ottawa.

Fine Gael said the figure was outrageous and unjustifiable and said work on the 24,000 square foot building included a whirlpool, sauna and a chandelier that cost 20,000 euro.
Minister Micheal Martin said it was important Ireland be properly represented overseas.


"The embassies play a very key role actually, both in helping to win inward investment and in supporting the work of Enterprise Ireland and IDA by utilisation of the embassies for economic purpose," he said.

More than 15 million euro has been spent over the past two years on refurbishments to diplomats' residences worldwide.

Mr Martin told RTE's This Week that the amount spent in Canada, where Ambassador Declan Kelly lives, was a very significant sum.

"There will be very little enhancement or upgrading of facilities in the next couple of years because we don't have the same resources that we had in previous years," he added.

Fine Gael's foreign affairs spokesperson Billy Timmins said there was no way the amount could be justified while the country is mired in recession.


"Those bearing the brunt of the recession at home are entitled to feel infuriated at the Government's decision to prioritise funding for a 'palace' over special needs assistants, hospital wards and social welfare payments," said Mr Timmins. "This is nothing less than an insult to every single taxpayer," he added.

Press Association

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Immigration and Human Rights

Yesterday's post ended abruptly, largely because I like to make sure I have the facts in hand before going off on a potentially false tangent.
Having leafed through the digital pages of the Irish Human Rights Blog I encountered the following story, which in many ways illustrates some of the points I was clumsily trying to make.

****
On Monday, the Irish Times reported on a new operation which has been undertaken by the Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) to detect and prevent what they believe to be marriages of convenience for the purpose of securing EU residency rights. A Pakistani man, Muhammad Shafi, was recently convicted of offences related to the possession of ‘false instruments’. Gardai also intervened to halt his marriage to a Lithuanian woman. The Irish Times reports that marriages designed to circumvent certain legal obstacles to residency in Ireland are an important informal feature of  our immigration regime, with the Minister  for Justice estimating that  ”30 per cent of all our applications for recognition under the EU directive on freedom of movement and residency involve persons who were illegally present in Ireland or on a temporary or limited permission when making their applications”. The Times explains:
These marriages are typically arranged by failed asylum seekers or former students from Asia who no longer have permission from immigration authorities to stay in Ireland.
Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern told his EU counterparts at a meeting in Spain at the weekend that there was evidence of growing abuse of immigration laws with a growing number of non-EU nationals marrying women from the Baltic states.
Some 110 of the 384 residency applications made by Pakistanis in the Republic in 2009 were based on marriages to Latvians.
A further 50 applications were based on marriage to Polish nationals while 47 applications were based on Pakistanis marrying Estonians.

RTE claims that marriages of convenience have become a sort of industry in Ireland, involving experienced marriage brokers who pay EU citizens to marry non-EU partners. You can see a Prime Time report on the topic, which features interviews with Pakistani men living in Ireland here. Further RTE reports are available here and the Irish Independent carried reports along similar lines in 2008. Nevertheless, even if marriages are being arranged for immigration purposes in some circumstances, and even if questions arise over associated criminality, the government response must be measured, proportionate and tailored to specific abuses. As Hilka Bekker of the Immigrant Council of Ireland observes in the Prime Time report, we should be concerned that couples who genuinely wish to found a family together in Ireland will be hindered by an increasingly punitive regime founded on suspicion.

At EU level, the Irish, UK and Danish governments form  a bloc within Europe which is lobbying for a redrafting of  the EU Residence Direactive. Since the decision of the ECJ in Metock (see a House of Commons Research Briefing here and a Monckton Chambers briefing here), the government may not require that the non-EU partner was lawfully resident in another Member State prior to claiming residence in Ireland and may not restrict residency rights with respect to the time when the marriage took place (ie before or after arrival in Ireland) or the country where it was solemnised.

The Government has some plans to legislate to address the issue of marriages designed to circumvent the immigration regime. s. 126 of the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill, 2008 is designed to regulate and control marriages in Ireland where one or both parties are foreign nationals. S. 126 (1) states that ‘[t]he marriage of a foreign national and an Irish citizen does not, of itself, confer a right on the foreign national to enter or be present in the State.’  In order for a marriage where one or both parties is a non-EU citizen to be valid, the non-EU citizen(s) must give notice to the Minister for intention to marry at least 3 months prior to the solemnisation of the marriage. They must also be ’the holder of an entry permission issued for the purpose of the intended marriage or a residence permission (other than a protection application entry permission or a non-renewable residence permission).’ If they do not already have such a permission – this is important  not only for those who have been refused a residence permission but for asylum seekers and those on the types of permission specified in the Bill –  the Minister may exempt them, subject to certain conditions outlined in s. 126(4).
Persons involved in the solemnisation of a marriage, such as religious ministers or civil registrars, are required to check that either or both ‘foreign nationals’ possess the resulting documentation at the point of marriage, and may not proceed with the ceremony unless it is produced. Under s. 126(6), anyone who solemnises or permits solemnisation of a marriage without this documentation, ‘facilitates it’ or is party to it, will be guilty of an offence. This section would add to the provisions of s. 58 of the Civil Registration Act, 2004 which allows people who do not fall within this range of roles to lodge an objection to the registration of a marriage. The Immigrant Council of Ireland correctly argues that s. 126(6) is indicative of a government preference for involving service providers in carrying out immigration functions.

The Immigrant Council of Ireland has argued that s. 126 represents a disproportionate infringement on the right to marry, and that, in addition ‘[t]he Government runs the risk of criminalising ministers of religion who consider the right to marry members of their congregation as essential to their religious beliefs and, in addition to infringing the fundamental right to marry, this constitutes a potential infringement of the right to freedom of religion as protected under Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and Article 44 of the Irish Constitution.’ The Council also suggests that the provision will likely not survive constitutional challenge – in all probability it infringes the constitutionally protected right to marry, rights of religious freedom and the constitutional equality guarantee – but its existence indicates the approach of the Irish government to accommodation of family and religious life within the immigration system: both appear to be viewed with a certain suspicion, as chinks in the armour of immigration law.

*****

Now, there is little need to view the matter as a Human Rights issue. Crimes are being committed and the only real rights being violated are those of the Irish people, who have as much right as possible not to have criminals in their country, one would presume. In fact, the proposed restrictions are quite mild.

What is happening here is that the Human Rights industry feels the need to, at public expense, stick its oar into as many aspects of public policy as it possibly can. This, in reality, does not bode well for freedom, because governments are restricted from applying their own laws, which we can assume are there to protect citizens and -in this case - strengthen the country's borders.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

The IHRC, Open for Business!

I had given up hope of ever seeing any signs of economic recovery in
Ireland. After all, all Ireland's industries are in recession, and
people have been laid off all over the place. Imagine my feigned
surprise when I discovered that one industry seemed to be growing, and
in fact had an actual job advertisement on its website!

That organisation is of course, the Irish Human Rights Commission, who
have advertised here under "New
Internship and Professional Placement Opportunities".

Well, not really. They aren't actually planning on paying anybody, but
you can apply to work for them for free.

And not only that, but according to their Code of Conduct document,

"For the avoidance of doubt, the Intern acknowledges that she/he is not an employee of the Commission and has no entitlements to employment protection or benefits under statute, contract, common law or otherwise and the Intern undertakes not to make any employment related claim of any nature against the Commission during or after this Agreement, under statute, contract, common law or otherwise. Furthermore, the Unfair Dismissals Acts 1977-2001 shall not apply to the termination of this contract either on the cessor of the term or otherwise."

Aha. So not only must you work for the Commission for free, you not
under any circumstances have any actual rights.

So, I wondered to myself what sort of person would lumber themselves
with such a responsibility. Someone with an Arts Degree perhaps
(that's me!). More likely someone with an Arts Degree coupled with the
desire to pursue a career in the Human Rights industry. That's not so
much me.

In fact, I can't imagine anything worse that working for what is
essentially, the Irish thought-police. I imagine staff at the IHRC
sitting in a batcave-like office, waiting for word from around the
country that someone's Human Rights have been violated, causing them
to spring into action to liberate someone.

I always thought we had police and courts for this sort of thing, but
now we have an new tier of protection against misbehaviours of all
kinds. But do they always protect the right people, and which side do
they take when Human Rights collide (as they inevitably do when the
list of them gets longer)?

Take a recent case.

A new Bill, which the IHRC "is still in the process of examining"
(must be short staffed), wants to make it possible for Gardai to 'move
beggars on' where they are in certain locations, such as near private
home or, interestingly, near ATMs.

Now, any fool can see what this law is about, but for a certain type
of person, it is a human rights issue, i.e. the rights of beggars. The
IHRC, in spite of the fact they haven't read it yet, claim the Bill
"could result in criminalisation of vulnerable people". It may be
worth asking, but, at 3am on a Saturday morning, when a lone woman
stands at an ATM on O'Connell street next to a drunk 30-year-old man
with an outstretched hand, who exactly is the 'vulnerable' party?

Now, from a Libertarian point of view, there is nothing criminal about
an individual walking up to another individual in a public place and
initiating a conversation, even if that conversation involves request
for money. It's a free country, we might say. (The law is, however,
curiously not broken when money received ostensibly for the purchase
of a sandwich is instead spent on Dutch Gold - and yet if I were to
extract a euro from you "for Haiti", say, and instead spent it on a
sandwich, that would constitute fraud. hm.)

The free-country argument, however, rests on the assumption of Individual
Freedom, which has traditionally been understood as the basis of all
human rights, "we hold these truths to be self-evident", etc.

But the modern concept of Human Rights as embodied by the IHRC does
not mention that. Their concept seems more of a juggling act between
different sets of 'vulnerable groups', be they beggars or anyone else.
Human Rights rather takes the place of freedom, even when, in this
instance, an argument based on individual freedom is what best serves
the interests of the vulnerable.

This nicely illustrates a difference between a classically liberal understanding of Human Rights, and that of the IHRC - or what I tend to refer to as the Equality Industry. The Equality Industry in Canada for example, which is far more advanced down the thought-police path  than is Ireland's fledgling Commission, routinely ignores Supreme Court rulings, see here,

More on this later :)

Monday, February 1, 2010

Jonah Goldberg: Capitalism Fingered as Fiend of the Past Decade

Readers are likely to find the name of Jonah Goldberg, author of Liberal Fascism, frequently on this site, alongside others like P.J.O'Rourke, Mark Steyn and David Boaz. Here is a recent article from his column at the National Review.


Reducing “capitalism” to its alleged sins.


On the last day of 2009, that awful year, I was listening to a report on National Public Radio (yes, I’m a listener). Reporter Tamara Keith presented a by-now-familiar recap of the worst financial and corporate scandals of the decade, from Enron and Martha Stewart to Tyco and Bernie Madoff. It was a depressing slog of greed, venality, and theft. When the report was over, Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep summarized the report with a tart: “The decade in capitalism.”  

I don’t want to single out Inskeep, since he was doing what pretty much the entire media establishment has done, particularly of late: reducing “capitalism” to its alleged sins.

And that’s the point. There are few areas of life where a thing responsible for so much good gets so little credit for it.

Imagine if I were to collect the most infamous deeds of African Americans over the last decade — say, Michael Vick’s dog-fighting scandal and O. J. Simpson’s most recent criminal exploit — and then put a bow on it with the phrase “the decade in black America.” What if I did the same thing with Jews? Bernie Madoff, the face of Jewish America! Do the scandals of Rod Blagojevich, Charlie Rangel, and John Edwards define the Democratic party from 2000 to 2010? Do Abu Ghraib and the balloon boy sum up America?

Consider NPR. As a brand, it claims to be standing athwart capitalism because it’s “public.” What that means exactly is a bit unclear, since it still allows corporations to fund its programming in exchange for audio endorsements none dare call commercials and relies on the kindness of listeners to keep it afloat — listeners who, one way or another, make their money from you-know-what.

Indeed, speaking of the decade in capitalism, National Public Radio failed to mention that Joan Kroc, widow of Ray Kroc, the founder of McDonald’s, left more than $200 million to NPR in 2003. Mrs. Kroc’s generosity of spirit was her own, but the wampum is all capitalism’s, baby.

In a similar vein, the decade of capitalism saw one of the world’s richest men, Warren Buffett, pledge more than $30 billion to a foundation created by another offspring of capitalism, Bill Gates, for the purpose of aiding the world’s poor. Surely capitalism should get some of the credit, since the book on philanthropy in non-capitalist systems is shorter than the guide to cities without Starbucks.

Capitalism doesn’t just create generous wealthy people, but generous poor people, too. Americans give twice as much to charity as the most generous European nations, and the most generous Americans are, in fact, poor Americans.

But forget philanthropy. Since 2000, hundreds of millions of people in China and India — home to a plurality of the world’s poor — have lifted themselves out of poverty and illiteracy thanks to capitalism.

China started to embrace markets as a last resort in the late 1970s. And by last resort, I mean last resort. First they tried murdering tens of millions of their own people through collectivism and oppression. When that didn’t work, they embraced markets, and the poverty rate dropped from 64 percent to around 8 percent today.

As it always does, capitalism drove innovation over the last decade. The BlackBerry was introduced in 1999, but the iPhone didn’t exist in 2000, nor did the iPod. YouTube was a fantasy, and no one could even imagine why you’d ever need something like Facebook or Twitter (in fairness, some people still ask that question). iTunes was launched in 2003, and five years later it was outselling Wal-Mart as the No. 1 music retailer. Government-funded basic research in medical science deserves some credit for breakthroughs, but it’s worth remembering that lots of countries invest in basic research. America, with its markets, stands alone as the leading, arguably sole, source of medical innovation. Breakthrough drugs are as American as apple pie.

Every good thing capitalism helps produce — from singing careers to cures for diseases to staggering charity —  is credited to some other sphere of our lives. Every problem with capitalism, meanwhile, is laid at her feet. Except the problems with capitalism — greed, theft, etc. — aren’t capitalism’s fault, they’re humanity’s. Socialist countries have greedy thieves, too.

Free markets are in disrepute these days, particularly by the people running Washington. For them, government is the solution and capitalism is the problem. If they have their way over the next decade, they won’t cure what allegedly ails capitalism — people will still steal and lie — but they will impede everything that makes capitalism great. And that will be bad for everyone, even NPR.

Africa's Comparative Advantage is Poverty.

Here is an article I wrote for South Africa's News24. I've tidied up the typos (oops) and inserted the original links that managed to get lost in transmission, along with some updates as well.






****
The Law of Comparative Advantage is one law of economics that is easily understood by everyone. Everyone should produce goods they produce best and most efficiently, and delegate the production of other goods to others, which insures the most efficient goods are always produced and wealth is maximised. Easy.

A friend of mine in the financial industry recently said to me that South Africa has no Comparative Advantage and he is only partly correct. The entire continent of Africa is at a disadvantage because it cannot produce anything more efficiently than at least somewhere else.

Africa's trade with the rest of the world has declined steadily since most of its countries became independent in the 1960s, and that decline began immediately after World War II. It may never recover.

Why? Africa has been undercut consistently by other parts of the world and this trend is likely to continue. Latin America in particular has become a favoured trading partner of the West, even though Germans, for example, are still choosing to pay more for African bananas at the expense of Central American ones.

Coffee, fruit, and other exports are more easily and cheaply available elsewhere, most notably in Southeast Asia and Central America. Industrial production, needless to say, has never been an issue.

Two industries are available to Africa. Tourism and raw materials. These are the same two industries that Australia relies on. Spot the difference? Australia, foolishly in the view of many economists, exports raw materials to Japan, particularly timber, and then imports paper, even though they have the capacity to process it themselves.

Australia thus acts like an African country, but the difference between Australia and Africa is huge. Australia has both the culture and the supporting infrastructure to stave off what is known as the Dutch Disease. It is also Pro-Western, and does not carry the baggage of "post-colonialism" which glorifies traditional structures and abhors globalisation.

This difference cannot be underestimated and results in stagnation for almost all of Africa. Even Libya, probably Africa's "richest" country, is a desert in every sense of the word.

What does Africa have to offer the world?

In an age of Globalised free trade peoples have been forced to accept that they must trade for what they want, rather than try to take it by force. As a result (see link), death by war is at its lowest level for years.

But Africa has nothing to trade.

The Western aid industry has succeeded only in replacing revenues from lost trade since the War with handouts, turning Africa into the world's largest Welfare State.

If the West is no longer demanding products from Africa in exchange for money, which is the arrangement almost everywhere else in the world, what is it we are demanding?

The answer is absolution. What Africa exports to the West is alleviation of guilt (real or imagined, but I suspect the latter) and the proliferation of good feelings. This falls under the category of tertiary industry, as it is a service performed for money.

As a result, Africans have become the modern-day sellers of indulgences, peddling salvation to guilt-ridden foreigners, and their industry is in full swing.

As a result, to support this industry, Africa must do what it does best, which is to produce and almost endless supply of poverty, helplessness, squalor and destitution to meet what seems like an inexhaustible demand.

This may sound cynical, but it is a reality. And it is a reality that do-gooding Westerners are helping to perpetuate. By demanding nothing, we are creating limitless supplies of nothing, and this is making an economic disaster even worse.

Those who use Africa in this way are no better than the dealers of blood diamonds, as they need a constant supply of the resource was can call absolution, which is turn relies on an endless supply of misery.

****
The article was favourably received, bar a couple of commenters who challenged my understanding of Comparative Advantage. So let me reiterate. There is nothing that African nations can do better than at least somewhere else.

Except attract aid.

If the reader is interested and has 22 spare minutes, it is worth watching this BBC interview with Dambisa Moyo and Alison Evans. Moyo is one of Africa's finest experts, and lays out why aid is a hindrance, not a help, to the African continent.

My point in referring to Africa's comparative advantage as Poverty, is rather to suggest that Aid represents a trade of sorts, and in lieu of reciprocal exchange of goods, Africa provides another commodity in the form of redemption - in the same manner as African American author Shelby Steele, jnr. speaks of in relation to Affirmative Action in the United States.

Aid is a drain on Africa's economy in many more ways than described above, not least in having the Dutch Disease effect on their currencies and other industries. That is not to say that Africans cannot do anything; they can, but are being paid not to.

Africans may not ever develop to the level of the West, due to harsh climate, lack of infrastructure or other reasons, but it is also entirely possible they may not want to. But that's a subject for another discussion...